The idea of excessive diversification is madness. Wide diversification, which necessarily includes investment in mediocre businesses, only guarantees ordinary results.
If you get into the mental habit of relating what you're reading to the basic structure of the underlying ideas being demonstrated, you gradually accumulate some wisdom.
Step by step you get ahead, but rarely in fast spurts.
If you always tell people why, they'll understand it better, they'll consider it more important, and they'll be more likely to comply.
I did not succeed in life by intelligence. I succeeded because I have a long attention span.
Develop into a lifelong self-learner through voracious reading; cultivate curiosity and strive to become a little wiser every day.
It's a good habit to trumpet your failures and be quiet about your successes.
Intelligent people make decisions based on opportunity costs.
I try to get rid of people who always confidently answer questions about which they don't have any real knowledge.
Most people are too fretful, they worry to much. Success means being very patient, but aggressive when it's time.
Investing is where you find a few great companies and then sit on your ass.
Whenever you think something or some person is ruining your life, it's you. A victimization mentality is so debilitating.
The more hard lessons you can learn vicariously rather than through your own hard experience, the better.
Knowing what you don't know is more useful than being brilliant.
To the man with only a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.
Great investing requires a lot of delayed gratification.
The big money is not in the buying and selling but in the waiting.
Meditation more than anything in my life was the biggest ingredient of whatever success I've had.