The Inelegant Investor Summarizes Munger's Comments to the LA Times. Munger derided compensation consultants, declaring that "I have always said that prostitution would be a step up for these people." Munger pointed out that the problem was not that CEOs were evil, but that..." envy-driven compensation mania... brings out the absolute worst in good people." |
| Get Sound Advice or Pay the Consequences |
| Written by John Bonynge | |||
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The most money I have ever lost was back in the days of "irrational exuberance" when every dot com stock seemed destined for the moon. I took a couple "hot tips," I am embarrassed to say, and promptly lost a couple thousand dollars.
Ouch! I didn't know what I was doing. I didn't even understand what the companies were doing. I think the only research I did was to read the message boards about the stocks on ragingbull.com. It took me awhile to gain perspective on those trades (I'd provide a link to the charts just so you could grimace, but the ticker symbols no longer exist). I look at it now, not in terms of losing money, but as a semester's tuition at The School for the Foolish Investor Who Invests Ignorantly on a Hot Tip. I have never forgotten this lesson. It must have been a good school. Doesn't Jim Cramer say, "If you can't spend an hour a week researching each of your stocks, then you should hand off your portfolio to a mutual fund." Cramer may or may not have been paid by mutual fund money managers to say that, but I understand what he is trying to say. If you don't know why you are buying XYZ stock you won't know when you should sell.
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