Warren Buffett: How Many Stocks Should You Own? - YouTube

Channel: The Swedish Investor

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If you are an investor and you want to optimize your stock market returns,
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it isn’t enough just to pick the right stocks.
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You must also know how to combine different stocks into a portfolio
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to maximize potential upside and minimize potential downside.
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You want to diversify – meaning reducing your risk, but you don’t want to diworsify
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– meaning reducing your investment returns.
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How many stocks that you need in your portfolio to accomplish this goal is a question that has
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tormented investors for centuries.
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Luckily, Warren Buffett has got us covered on this topic,
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but he thinks that most investors tend to get this one wrong, so listen up.
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We think diversification - as practiced generally - makes very little sense for anyone
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that knows what they’re doing.
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This is the Swedish Investor, bringing you the best tips and tools for reaching financial freedom,
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through stock market investing.
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First, let’s have a look at how many stocks Warren Buffett held in
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the beginning of his investing career and compare that to his current portfolio.
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In 1941, an 11-year-old Warren Buffett purchased his first shares.
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He bought three preferred shares of a company called Cities Service,
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for a total of $114.75.
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As his then net worth was $120,
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he went pretty much all in.
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Not much diversification to talk about.
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However, a few years late, when Buffett was 19, his mind would change a bit.
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This was the time when he read The Intelligent Investor,
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and later went to Columbia Business School
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to learn value investing from Benjamin Graham.
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Graham operated an investment partnership called Graham-Newman,
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and in 1951 this partnership had more than 100 different positions in its portfolio,
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although it was quite top-heavy.
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Buffett thought “maybe a single stock is too little”
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and so he diversified to seven holdings.
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And much like Graham, he decided to be top-heavy.
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You will find opportunities that, if you put 20% of your net worth in it,
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you’ve wasted the opportunity of a lifetime.
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You know, in terms of not really loading up.
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In January 1962 Buffett had recently become a millionaire through his own investment partnership
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– Buffett Partnership Ltd.
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Quite little is officially known about the positions of the partnership,
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but Buffett hinted towards his portfolio allocations a couple of times:
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In 1962 he stated:
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We usually have fairly large positions (5% to 10% of our total assets)
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in each of five or six generals
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[which was what Buffett called one type of investments in the partnership],
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with smaller positions in another ten or fifteen.
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In 1966 he said:
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We probably have had only five or six situations
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in the nine-year history of the Partnership where we have exceeded 25%.
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And also

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We presently have two situations in the over 25% category
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- one a controlled company [Berkshire],
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and the other a large company [American Express] where we will never take an active part.
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From this, I think that we can safely conclude that, back then – Buffett liked to stay focused.
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However, if we fast forward to today, we wouldn’t get the same picture.
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Warren Buffett owns more than 40 listed companies and more than 50 wholly-owned operating subsidiaries.
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It is quite difficult to state what his current portfolio looks like,
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as most of these companies aren’t listed, but that won’t stop me from trying.
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According to my calculations, and you can find some assumptions in the description of the video,
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Warren Buffett’s current portfolio looks like this.
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Still quite top-heavy, but not at all as concentrated on a few companies as he was back in the days.
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Does this mean that Buffett thinks that a 100-company portfolio is better than a 10-company portfolio these days?
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That he no longer likes to concentrate his portfolio now that he is older and wiser?
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We’ll never get a chance to do that working with the kinds of money that Berkshire does.
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We try to load up on things.
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And there will be markets when we get a chance to from time to time,
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but very seldom do we get to buy as much of any good idea as we would like to.
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So, no, Buffett would love to operate a concentrated portfolio today too.
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It’s just that, when he is only looking at the elephants of the business world,
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he seldom finds that one of them is both understandable and undervalued.
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But you and I do not need to limit ourselves to the elephants,
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so let’s talk about four rules of thumb which Warren Buffett would use to determine
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how many (or how few) stocks you should have in your portfolio.
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By the way, the logic applies to other types of assets too, such as real estate or bonds.
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The first thing you should consider is this:
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1. Are you a know-something investor?
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Diversification is a protection against ignorance.
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I mean, if you want to make sure
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that nothing bad happens to you relative to the market, you own everything.
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There’s nothing wrong with that.
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I mean, that is a perfectly sound approach
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for somebody who does not feel they know how to analyze businesses.
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If you know how to analyze businesses and value businesses,
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it’s crazy to own 50 stocks or 40 stocks or 30 stocks, probably.
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Brokerage firms must inform their customers that: “Your capital is at risk”.
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Every company in the stock market is in no way a safe bet
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and it is possible to roll a few snake-eyes in a row.
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A know-something investor understands which die he is rolling when he is investing,
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or at least he has an idea of what it looks like.
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The know-something investor has done things such as:
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- Looked through the financial statements of the companies he invests in
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- Researched the management and owners of the companies
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- Understood who the main competitors of the industries he is in are;
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and - Compared the price of his investments to other opportunities in the stock market
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The more knowledge you have about individual companies, the less diversification you need.
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And conversely, if you don’t know these things about companies,
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it is better that you purchase a wide selection of securities, probably through an index fund,
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because you frankly do not know what kind of die that you are rolling.
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Note that this can vary from industry to industry or country to country by the way,
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you might be very knowledgeable about American stocks but not so much about Swedish ones.
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As introspection of this kind is really difficult to make, a good proxy for how much you know
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is how much time you spend on researching stocks each week.
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Index funds is the best option for people who cannot commit too much time to security analysis.
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As Buffett said in 1993:
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By periodically investing in an index fund, for example,
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the know-nothing investor can actually out-perform most investment professionals.
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Paradoxically, when “dumb” money acknowledges its limitations, it ceases to be dumb.
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2. Are you investing in risky assets?
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Even at the roulette tables, where the casino has a mathematically computable edge,
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diversification is needed.
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Therefore, there’s a limit to how much you are allowed to bet there.
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Casinos know that a string of losses can lead to bankruptcy – 0
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– and no previous outstanding returns can compensate for that.
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The riskier the bets that you are taking are, the more diversification you’ll need.
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Risk with us – well - it relates to several possibilities.
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One is the risk of permanent capital loss.
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And then the other risk is just an inadequate return on the kind of capital we put in.
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It does not relate to volatility at all.
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The stock market is obviously not as quantifiable as the casino.
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In terms of “riskiness”, what you need to watch out for are securities
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where if you are wrong, you are likely to lose everything in that holding.
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Here are a few such situations:
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- Startups - Bankruptcy cases
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- Industries with a lot of flux;
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and - Pretty much anything involving leverage
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You should also watch out for correlations between your holdings.
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For example, even if your portfolio consisted of 20 different horse carriage companies when the Ford Model T arrived,
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your diversification wouldn’t help you much, you would have been smoked anyways.
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3. Are some opportunities much better than others?
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And to have some super-wonderful business
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and then put money in number 30 or 35 on your list of attractiveness
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and forego putting more money into number one, just strikes Charlie and me as madness.
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If you are a know-something investor you should be able to judge the attractiveness of individual opportunities,
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not everywhere, but at least within your circle of competence.
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For example, say that you’ve found companies which you think are likely to return the following.
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Given this scenario it would make sense to load up on your top five ideas.
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Adding an equal stake of company number six through ten to your portfolio will reduce its expected returns,
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and you will be, as was hinted at in the beginning of the video, diworsifying, a term stolen from Peter Lynch.
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Moreover, you should invest far more in your best idea than the rest.
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Much like Buffett has done with Apple & BNSF today, or like he did in 1951 with Geico.
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4. Can you earn it back?
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You will see things that it would be a mistake if you’re working with smaller sums
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- it would be a mistake not to have half your net worth in.
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This is the fourth rule of thumb
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– the less capital that you are working with the fewer stocks you need.
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It depends on where you are in your investment career and how much you earn.
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For example, if you only have one month of salary to invest,
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you could go crazy and bet all of it on a single stock, heck, I wouldn’t even care much if you said
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you’d bet it all at the roulette table (although that is a stupid idea)
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but at least you will get it back the next month.
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When we are starting to talk about sums of money which takes a couple of years
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to earn back through your everyday work though, then you must really start to consider diversification.
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An extreme case would be if you’ve just inherited a large lump-sum of money.
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Alright, so you should concentrate your portfolio more if you:
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- Are a know-something investor
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- Are buying assets that have a low risk of adverse outcomes
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- Expect a large difference in returns among the opportunities you’ve found;
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and - Can replace your capital fairly quickly through income
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As you may have guessed – this is not a precise science.
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But an investor will have a distinct advantage when he is aware of what path his thought process is following.
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I’ll use myself as an example to illustrate how one can benefit
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from these rules of thumb practically.
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I think this will be more instructive if we start 
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I do have a list of opportunities that I consider for investment,
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and I do rank them quantitatively based on both quantitative and qualitative factors.
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I’m not sure that you must do something like this explicitly,
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but at least implicitly you need to have a ranking among your ideas.
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Around number 18 on my current list there’s quite a bit of a drop,
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so I’d probably only consider the top 18 companies for investment.
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I’m not a know-nothing investor, but I’m not a full-time investor either.
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Making these YouTube videos is something that I enjoy doing,
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but it definitely takes some time from the investment process
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I’d say that I can be fairly concentrated based on this, so let’s cut those 18 into 9.
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Next, there’s quite a bit of risk in the kind of opportunities that I invest in,
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but they are nowhere near that of a venture capitalist or someone buying companies in bankruptcy.
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I think the allocation should remain unchanged based on that.
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Finally, I’d say that the portfolio is still quite small compared to my current income,
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and potential income, but not insignificant.
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Therefore, I can probably concentrate a bit more,
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perhaps I should focus on 6-8 securities.
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Turns out that I have 12 currently,
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so I think I learned something myself by making this video.
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The video which I’ve learned the most by making is probably this one though,
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a video with lots of meat covering Warren Buffett’s 25 most important investments of all time.
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If you think that you could learn something from that too,
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then click on the video now.
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Cheers guys!