FREE CAPITAL: HOW 12 PRIVATE INVESTORS MADE MILLIONS IN THE STOCK MARKET - YouTube

Channel: The Swedish Investor

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I guess that many of you dream about retiring as full-time private investors.
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To have enough capital to live a comfortable and fulfilling life by just deploying your money
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into various stocks of your own choosing.
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Following the 4%-rule, perhaps $1 million would be enough to retire from the daily grind?
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For those of you not familiar with the 4%-rule, here’s a quick story that will serve as an introduction.
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This is Tom.
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Tom is a 43-year-old dad and husband.
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Tom has invested in the stock market for 20 years, while working full-time as an engineer.
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Tom's yearly living expenses amounts to $37,000.
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Tom has saved and invested his money continuously,
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so that he is now the proud owner of a $1 million stock market portfolio – great job Tom!
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Say that Tom can net 4% from his investments per year, an assumption which isn’t too wild.
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That would provide him with $40,000, which would cover his living expenses by some margin.
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Knowing this, on his 44th birthday, Tom retires from his engineering 9-5.
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He will now spend more time doing what truly makes him happy: investing in the stock market,
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going on hikes, playing tennis, and especially spending more time with his family and friends
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and being an even better dad!
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This video is based on 12 successful private investors that, just like Tom, retired from employment
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somewhere mid-life, to spend more time on the things that really matters to them
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while also continuing to accumulate their wealth through stock market investing.
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What I find especially inspiring about these individuals is that they don´t seem
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like super humans – and if they made it, so can we!
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This is a top 5 takeaways summary of Free Capital:
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How 12 Private Investors Made Millions in the Stock Market, by Guy Thomas.
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And this is the Swedish Investor, bringing you the best tips and tools
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for reaching financial freedom, through stock market investing.
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Takeaway number 1: Don’t Dig too Deep
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Let´s return to Tom from the intro.
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Being somewhat experienced, Tom has developed a knack for identifying the key metrics of certain investments.
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Let´s say Tom is intrigued by a company that produces and sells plant-based
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beef directly to restaurants – let´s call the company DeBeef.
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When analysing DeBeef, Tom doesn´t waste too much time looking behind every little rock.
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Once he has determined that the company has an attractive valuation compared to last year’s
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earnings and cashflow, he buys the shares, and then focuses on keeping
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tab on the key drivers of DeBeef.
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Those that will make it or break it for the company in the long run.
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In this case, he decides that the pricing power of DeBeef will tell him a good deal
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about the competitiveness of the product.
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The average price is something he finds and can follow in the annual reports.
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Secondly, his investment thesis expects that DeBeef
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will be able to keep up its historically high growth of earnings.
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In addition to the pricing, he will therefore monitor how many restaurants that the company
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is able to add to its customer base, in connection with its highest expense
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– which happens to be its cost of sales & advertising.
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If it is getting costlier to grow, Tom wants to be the first one to know.
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Even Warren Buffett applies this strategy.
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In the 1998 Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholder meeting he mentioned that figuring out
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how Coke will do in the future is essentially figuring out two variables
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– number of cases sold and earnings per case.
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Buffett said that the same holds true for GEICO.
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It’s just insurance policies in force and underwriting experience per policy.
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A common denominator among the investors in the book Free Capital, is that they often
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skip details to focus on the few trends and figures that they believe are the ones that really matter.
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If you try to keep tab of everything that is going on, chances are that you start giving
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equal weight to the different parameters, even though only a few of them are crucial.
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Also, additional knowledge always comes with an opportunity cost so one must continuously
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question if it’s worth it to keep digging.
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The devil is rarely in the details!
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Takeaway number 2: Enjoy the Hardship
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It is very common that even investors who are now experienced and wealthy
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had some major setbacks early on in their investing careers,
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which is also true for the investors in this book.
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Investing is hard.
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After all, it’s a game with extraordinary rewards if you become good at it,
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so it makes sense that there’s some competition.
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Our world is complex and to try to foresee how companies will do in the future,
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and then decide if their shares are priced on the low-end or high-end based on that,
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well, let’s just say that there are easier job descriptions out there.
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If you haven’t realized how difficult this can be, you might be in the early stages of
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the Dunning-Kruger curve.
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The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias which makes you overestimate your ability initially
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when you take up a new interest.
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Only after facing some hardship, you start to realize your inability.
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The Dunning-Kruger effect is common among stock market investors, as you can be lucky
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for a while and make a lot of money, even with an investment strategy that is filled
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with as many holes as a Swiss cheese.
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You know what they say: “Don’t confuse brains with a bull market”.
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And do you know what Charlie Munger says?
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“It's not supposed to be easy.
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Anyone who finds it easy is stupid.”
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The talk when they should listen.
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The investor should focus on learning as much as possible early on, not chasing or expecting great returns.
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Before you are at least decent investor, you cannot achieve a good risk-adjusted return
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– which is what it is all about.
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This is true simply because at the early stages of your Dunning-Kruger journey,
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you won’t even be able to perceive the risk part, due to a lack of experience and knowledge.
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However, this is a period which should be embraced and welcomed.
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To experience some major mistakes is good for the learning process
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– and it is much nicer to make the mistakes early on, when your portfolio most likely still is quite small
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than a few years later, when mistakes have become much, much more expensive.
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Are you having a hard time on the market, or recently had?
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Remember that it is normal and expected.
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This hardship is what will make you try evenmore.
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And if it wasn´t hard, well, everyone could do it, and the opportunity would be gone.
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Takeaway number 3: Reach for Freedom
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The first step to becoming a wealthy investor is to understand that consumption shouldn't be your main goal.
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Freedom should.
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One of the major things that can postpone your plan to live of your portfolio, is to interrupt the compounding
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by making large withdrawals for consumption before you have reached your goal.
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Munger again: ”The first rule of compounding is to never interrupt it unnecessarily".
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Even though consumption can grant some instant gratification, and satisfy some vanity-trait,
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remember that it will delay your ultimate goal to retire from your portfolio.
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When you see someone who drives around in their Lamborghini, realize that you are
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also witnessing someone who is a Lamborghini poorer.
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So … is it worth it?
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Perhaps counterintuitively, focusing on freedom initially will increase your chances to be able
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to spend more on consumption down the road anyways.
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So yes, it’s a way of having your cake and eating it too,
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if you have the perseverance to stay a little hungry for a while.
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Takeaway number 4: Focus Matters
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People who built their fortunes from stock market investments often run fairly concentrated portfolios.
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This is also true for the individuals in this book.
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The median person had less than 10 companies in his or her portfolio.
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Why do you think that is?
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Warren Buffett has his own theory: "If you have a harem of 40 women, you never get to know any of them very well."
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Constructing an investment portfolio really is a game of piling stocks
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which are likely to overperform the general market.
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Once you’ve added your 10 best ideas to that portfolio,
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what do you think the effect will be of adding an additional 30?
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That’s right. If your investment strategy really has an edge, this will reduce your expected returns.
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Critiques of the concentrated portfolio approach will often argue that you put yourself in too much risk
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if you only invest in just a few companies, that your portfolio will fluctuate too much.
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Even though I wouldn’t agree that volatility is a measure of risk,
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even the volatility of a stock portfolio will be greatly reduced once you’ve added like 7 different companies to it
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so this argument is just totally invalid.
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A word of caution though; even if an expert investor can concentrate even more than that
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– Warren Buffett has had 40% + of his capital in a single stock on a few separate occasions
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- a more concentrated portfolio can be harmful for the inexperienced investor.
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It is oftentimes more psychological stressful to handle, as volatility increases.
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The beginner should invest in a way that ensures that he says in the game, rather than shooting for the moon.
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Takeaway number 5: What Makes You Tick?
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Who are you, and what do you know?
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Depending on, for example, your skills, your personality, your profession, and your interest,
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you should construct an investing strategy that suits you.
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There are tons of strategies and methods to make money in the stock market.
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In order to maximize portfolio returns and minimize sleepless nights;
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you need to have a strategy that suits you.
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Yes you, not somebody else.
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If you have an engineering background like me, for example,
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perhaps more of a quantitative approach would suit you best.
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But if you, on the other hand, have a background from art or service jobs,
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perhaps a qualitative approach with a tilt towards the storytelling surrounding a company
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should be the focus in your process.
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Kind of following the mantra of Peter Lynch:
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“If you like the store, chances are you’ll love the stock.”
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If you are an extroverted person, attending a lot of annual shareholder meetings can potentially
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create a lot of value for you, and can contribute with a lot of insights.
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But on the other hand, if you are an introvert, that might just be discouraging and stressful.
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Or maybe you work 80-hour weeks at a prestigious job?
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Then skip attempts at stock-picking altogether, for now, and set up a fully automated index investing plan.
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No matter what, also spend some time thinking about what interests you.
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Don´t develop a strategy which you know from the get-go relies upon methods that bore you to death,
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because then you will never have the endurance to stick to it for the long run.
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To find out what suit you, you’ll probably have to explore a few different paths.
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Even though I certainly do not consider myself a trader these days, at one point in time
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I may have called myself an IPO-arbitrager.
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Or no, I take that back, an IPO loss-generator would have been more accurate.
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Anyways, chances are high that the method you start out with will not be the one that builds your future wealth.
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• All metrics are NOT created equal
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• We’re all beginners at some point – enjoy the learning process
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• Don´t sacrifice long-term happiness for short-term vanity
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• Be picky with your investments
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• Testing leads to failure, and failure leads to progress.
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Develop an investment strategy that suits you!
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Check out this video next if you want to see how Warren Buffett made his first $1,000,000 in the stock market.
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A huge thanks to my friend Richard Dykes who made this video possible.
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Cheers guys!