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Peter Lynch: Outperform The Market With This Simple Strategy - YouTube
Channel: iValue Investing
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Markets gone up 10 foldÂ
since I stopped working at Magellan
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So, you make more money on the upside. The markets be a lot higher ten years from now,
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twenty years now, thirty years now. Trying to predict the market is really a waste.
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I donât know itâs gonna do. It can go down. When I ran Magellan 13 years declined
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Sir Peter, your investing philosophy is often summed up as "buy what you know" and thereâs some truth to
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that and itâs also often way oversimplified. Can you explain what you did mean by that and what
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you didnât mean. Well it bothers me that people are very dangerous when they invest.
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This word play the market. Thatâs a dangerous term. ButÂ
If you do some work , do some research, know what you own,
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look at the balance sheet ,
if you can eight and eight and get fairly close to
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16 you find this company has lots of debt, no cash â theyâre in trouble. You shouldn't own it. Â
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So, a little bit of research. People are careful when they buy a refrigerator, careful when they take a vacation
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and they they'll put five, ten thousandÂ
dollars some stock they hear on the busÂ
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or at a party, thatâs dangerous. So when you say buy what you know you also thought that the regular
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investor might be able to get an inside advantage by sticking to an industry heâs familiar with
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or seeing something that she realizes as a great product. Imagine if you were in a mall the last
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50 years, you would have seen Gap when it was hot,
you were seeing Limited when it was hot. You would have seen when it
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not hot. You would have seen when certain people werenât excited about Gap anymore or then
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you do some research say well gee, thereâs a lot of Limited stores, but they are only 20 you know and
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they can go to 400. So, you see a company, I did really well with Dunkin Donuts a local company. I
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did well with Stop and Shop. But people could see that thereâs a reason people are showing up or gets to the
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sunglass hut and no oneâs there anymore. So, I mean thatâs research, thatâs fundamentals â you donât
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leave the mall and buy that thing. You have to do some more work. Thatâs an important point.
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So today thereâs so much information everywhere information overload. Does that make it harder for
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active investors? The indexers say, âeveryoneâs got access to the same information at the same
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time you canât beat the market.â Well the way you beat the index is you avoid the stocks to
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go down, you avoid the steel companies and the oil companies and Sears and Penny and when
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companies deteriorate. I mean companies are dynamic. Behind every stock there is a
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company. These are not lottery tickets. So, youâre trying to find the companies within the S&P 500
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that are doing better, theyâre going from crappy to semi crappy to good. That might take a couple
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years or they going to grow for a long time. You are trying to avoid the companies that are
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going south. That is how you beat the market, or you find some companies outside the S&P 500 that are
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great companies. Carmax, that wasnât in the S&P 500 and it went up 200-fold. So, there are a lot of companies that enter and
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a lot of them have great performances before they go in. Now a lot of people when theyâre lucky enough
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or smart enough to get a company thatâs going up they then they take their profits and you Â
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made the case in a book that you should actually hang in there with the really great stocks and you
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even got a call from Warren Buffett as a result. In 1989 Iâm at home, the phone rings and those
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werenât my friends but one of my daughters, six-year-old Annie picked up and said,Â
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âthereâs a Mr. Buffett on lineâ. Thatâs got be a joke. I picked it up and this
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is Warren Buffett from Omaha, Nebraska. You know,Â
I read your book
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[inaudible] he said it all about seven seconds and I said thatâs great. Iâd love to do it.
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what you know, Whatâs the line? He said I love this itâs been waiting to do this. When you sell
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your great companies and add to the losers itâs like watering the weeds and cutting the flowers.
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He said I want to put it in. He said if you ever come to Nebraska you donât call me, youâll be
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[inaudible] all over Nebraska. So, did you call him? Oh yeah. Several times we play bridge together. Weâve had
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several meetings. Great guy. Another point youâve made and this is I think particularly relevant ten
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years into a bull market is that I think you said more money has been lost anticipating a
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downturn than actually in the downturn. Can you explain? Well obviously the markets gone up
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tenfold since I stopped working at Magellan. So, you make more money on the upside. The markets be a
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lot higher ten years from now, twenty years now, thirty years now. Trying to predict the market
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is really a waste. I donât know itâs gonna do. It can go down. When I ran Magellan 13 years declined
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10% or more nine times the market. I had a perfect record. I went down more than 10% every
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time. Whenever the market went down, I went down more. But over the long term the upside is more than the
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downside. So, you are gonna say to yourself. Do I need the money in the next month,
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do I need the money in next year when kids going to college, they have a wedding coming up, then youâre a bad investor.
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If you keep putting money, in have 5 10 15 20 25 years you should do well.
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