So long as predictions remain popular, and are so numerous as they are today – and so long as they receive notoriety through repetition in the press and on the radio – contrary opinions will increase in importance as thinking aids. “
As we walked back from lunch and stood outside the office building talking, I realized I had but a moment to say it. It was November 2012 and one of our research clients was about to return to his office. “Joe,” I began. “One last thing, I think you should sell Apple.” “WHAT!” he responded?
The stock...
The man sitting across the table suddenly stood up unable to contain his excitement. “Look,” he said. “We know how to open and run restaurants! We did it for years at Bennigan’s Steak and Ale. Only this time we will be doing it for ourselves.” Chris Sullivan was telling the story of how he started Outback Steakhouse, and...
Ben Gaines and I approached the front door of the Union Club of Boston. Ben was a political commentator from Washington with a heavy Yiddish accent. And I was a 25-year-old Irish kid from public housing with a bad Boston accent. A butler opened the door for us. The club was a total bastion of Boston investment Brahmins. These people...
It was a late summer day in 1955. Stamps and newspapers were three cents. A bottle of coke cost a nickel. That summer I was a 12-year-old caddy earning $1.25 for a round of golf plus, generally, a small tip. But on this particular day I would realize what it would take to make significant money as an adult.
The man I had...
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