Asking a Billionaire Investor How to Turn $10,000 into $1M ft. Mohnish Pabrai - podcast episode cover

Asking a Billionaire Investor How to Turn $10,000 into $1M ft. Mohnish Pabrai

May 09, 20251 hr 22 min
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Summary

Mohnish Pabrai shares his value investing strategies, focusing on finding anomalies, understanding risk, and the importance of simplicity. He discusses learning from others' successes and failures, and using a long-term approach to investing with conviction, while illustrating key principles with stories about Warren Buffett, Sam Walton, and his own experiences.

Episode description

Episode 705: Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) sits down with Mohnish Pabrai ( https://x.com/MohnishPabrai ) about how to turn $10K into $1M.   Show Notes: (0:00) Simple = Genius (28:00) Never over-leverage (30:30) Risk vs uncertainty (33:00) Too hard pile (35:30) Be 1 inch wide, 1 mile deep (39:00) Learn from losers (43:30) A case for napping (48:00) Having an owner’s manual (53:00) Dying with zero (1:10:00) India’s Greatest Investor — Links: • Want to invest like a Billionaire? Get Mohnish's investment playbook: https://clickhubspot.com/mnp • Value Investors Club - https://www.valueinvestorsclub.com/  • Japan Company Handbook - https://tinyurl.com/489czpkp  • Dakshana - https://www.dakshana.org/ • BJ21 - https://bj21.com/ — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: Need to hire? You should use the same service Shaan uses to hire developers, designers, & Virtual Assistants → it’s called Shepherd (tell ‘em Shaan sent you): https://bit.ly/SupportShepherd — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by HubSpot Media // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano

Transcript

How would I take 10k and turn it into a million? What we're looking for is something that hits you in the head with like a 2x4. We don't need to know many things about many things. We need to know a lot about a little. Why do you think most people don't do that? Buffett always says, the most important question to ask is, and then what? Does he use Excel? Warren wouldn't be caught dead using Excel.

usually the best ideas when you finally figure it out they're very simple you should be able to make your thesis office dog in about four or five sentences to a ten year old. Where do you even know where to look? I'm going to lay it out for you. It's going to be so easy. All someone has to do is Okay, here we go. Onish, welcome back. Round two. Sean, it's always a pleasure. So let's play a game. You're my coach. You're my investing coach, let's say. And I have $10,000.

And I want to turn it into a million, right? Podcast called My First Million. I want to go from 10K to a million. So that's 100X. How would I take 10K and turn it into a million? The thing about investing is that opportunities are not going to show up.

Just because you have the cash so i would make some tweaks to your thinking first about the 10k so i would say okay the 10k is a good starting point but i what i also want you to do separately from that is have a day job yeah okay and i want you to spend less than your earning and i want you to take the 10k and i also want you to take your annual savings maybe that's five ten thousand a year or whatever it is and Normally I would say put it into an index, right?

The index, like the S&P, is overheated. We can't go there right now. Circa 2025, we cannot go into the S&P. Okay, maybe 2035 we can, but not 2025. So what I would do is I would treat Berkshire Hathaway as the index. so i would just say the default currently is you put it you know dollar cost average into the into berkshire class b shares okay and you keep doing that day in day out and if we did that

The math is really simple. Even if we were doing 10% a year, which I think is pretty reasonable for Berkshire, rule of 72, we would double every seven years. Life is all about doubles. Okay, let's say we had a 20 something guy with 10,000 and you go for 50 years or 49 years It's seven doubles, right? Okay, seven doubles is 128 Okay, it's 128 times your money. I gave you more than 100x. I gave you 128x.

in 49 years. Without having to be a genius. Without doing anything. Right. So this is just plan B. Right. Where we put the 10,000 in, it becomes more than a million, 1.3 million with no taxes paid. Right. There's no dividend, there's no taxes, there's nothing. And we haven't even gotten to plan A yet. This is just sitting there. Now, the other thing is that every once in a while, there'll be opportunities that show up.

And what we're looking for is something that hits you in the head with like a 2x4. So the best investments are ones that make no sense. You cannot make sense of the numbers. It's too good to be true. It's just weird. And all of those things. So when these kind of unusual things come together where things don't make sense, that's when we want to dive in. Give me an example of...

A great investment is one that doesn't make any sense. The numbers just seem wrong to you in the moment. Well, I'll give you one example where it was a moneymaker for me. I didn't make even 3% of the money I should have.

okay you know i mean it it was like uh it was given to me on a platter and i blew it i still made money right but you know usually the best ideas when you finally figure that out they're very simple So in the year, I think this was around 2001 or 2002, I had encountered this shipping company. called Frontline and Frontline was a company that owned a fleet of about 75 VLCCs, very large crewed carriers.

These are giant ships that transport crewed from like Saudi Arabia to the US. And they're just huge. The entire global fleet at that time was 300 ships. 300 VLCC 75 of them were owned by Frontline, 25% of the market. The guy who ran and was the founder of Frontline, John Fredrickson,

had put the entire fleet on the spot market. So there are two ways he could have dealt with his fleet. He could have done time chargers, kind of one year three year deals where he's guaranteed cash flows per day and all that or be a gambler put it on the spot market and play it whatever the price today is right i'll take it so he had put it on the spot market the entire fleet

Now these VLCCs, they have a cost with the crews and all of that of around $15,000 per day to break even. And at that time, we had like the Iraq war and different things going on. So oil demand fell.

a lot and there wasn't enough need for VLCC so the shipping rates collapsed to the point they went to 7000 per day okay so now you have frontline losing 8 000 per day times 75 ships okay and they're levered okay and so basically the stock got taken out back and shot like a 90% drop okay and most of it was valid because basically you know when we are making investments or when equity markets look at a company, they want to see consistency of cash flows. They reward consistency of cash flows.

Here what we were seeing is consistency of losses. No one could tell you when these losses will abate. そう The the dynamics were the stock I think was down to like three dollars per share and When I looked at it, I noticed two things. Okay, the first thing I noticed is all that debt was non-recourse that that was tied to individual ship

there was no debt at the parent. So basically, if they defaulted on the debt of a ship, the bank could just take the ship. They couldn't really take the company, they could just take that ship. They would take a car loan. And the second thing I noticed was that there's a very somewhat liquid market to buy and sell these ships. So even when the rates went to 7000 per day the ships had dropped in price by something like maybe a third.

25-30% drop from where they used to be. So what I realized is that if Frontline got into a crunch where they were having cash problems, they could just sell three ships. If they sold three ships, paid off the debt, they'd have enough cash left over to keep sustaining operations for six to nine months, they could sell three more ships after that.

So I felt like there was really no way the company was a candidate for bankruptcy. And there was really no way. And the other thing is I could look at the entire company and say, okay, what if they sold all the shit? If they sold all the ships, paid off all the debt, you would end up with like $9 or $10 a ship. you're at three bucks right okay so you you make three times your money if they just liquidated the whole person so there was a arbitrage between the price of the stock

and the net price of the assets in a distress scenario, right? And so I said, okay, we really can't lose money here. So I put 10% of my fund into Frontline, right? Because I just couldn't see a way that we could lose money. After a few months, the rates start improving. The oil demand starts coming back up. The rates go to 15,000. Then they go to 20,000. The stock's at 10 bucks.

Okay, I sell my shares. Well done, Monash. Okay, tripled my money. Yeah, in like eight months or something. Okay, and I said, okay, this was exactly what I thought, right? Rates then go to 300,000 a day Okay at 300,000 a day they're making something like 285,000 a day times seventy-five shifts okay That number is like infinity. Yeah, I was trying to do the math. Just assume it's infinity. The stock goes up in the next three years 80x. Oh, wow. Okay.

here's stupid Monish okay patting himself on the back with the double and I didn't even get a double I got like 80% return my money and that was that and so that was an example of where I did first order thinking but I did not do second-order thinking. So the second-order thinking was, you know, Buffett always says that the most important question to ask in investing is, and then what?

if I had been so smart as to ask the question and then what so you see that rates are terrible you see the scrapping you see that that fleets gonna shrink so even if oil demand doesn't come back the way it was it's gonna come into balance eventually that those losses are going to go away and then you do the next thing on 10 watt which is that when oil demand comes back it takes three to four years to build one of these things

so when the rates went to 30 000 or 50 000 and all these guys can see this is a great business now well when you go to the korean shipyard who are now inundated with orders, they're going to say, go to the back of the queue. I'll give you a ship in five years.

and by the way the ship is no longer 70 million the new price is 120 right okay because i got more orders than i can handle right so we had this dynamic if i had thought about it that once the demand became tight you really couldn't increase supply for at least three or four years. So what's 285,000 times 75 times 1,000 days? That's the minimum number of time and that price is not going to come down.

it's only after three or four years more ships start getting delivered and you start getting more balance and all of that but that's an insane amount of cash flow right so the thing is that There are always like you know our friend Jim Cramer says there's always a bull market somewhere. Okay, so basically If we are plan A, Berkshire Hathaway, plan B, looking for anomalies, right? every so often, not very often, every so often you will find something weird.

And we've got all the time in the world. We can research something for three months. It turns out it's not that great. Let it go. We've got Berkshire Shell cranking. So if you look at Warren Buffett, in his 2022 letter, he said, that in 58 years of running Berkshire, there have been 12 decisions that have moved the needle for Berkshire stock.

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The results were nearly 350 new signups a week and 300% database growth in just two years. Visit HubSpot.com to hear how HubSpot can help you grow better. All right, back to now in 58 years he made more than three or four hundred purchase decisions for stocks and businesses okay out of 300 if I take a conservative number it's actually more than that only 12 were exceptional And he said there was one good idea on average every five years.

This is Warren Buffett with a 4% hit rate. So basically, great investment ideas are rare. we're not going to run into them every week or every month or every year. So plan A, stick it in the index. Plan B, keep running a geiger counter over everything looking at different things

And when something doesn't make sense, drill down. And every so often, you're going to hit the mother load. Right. And when you find something that's a mother load, you peel off 10-15% of what you have in Berkshire. Put it into that. let it play out, then put it back into Berkshire. Right. Right. And just you keep doing that. And now your 100x is going to show up in half the time or last.

All right, let's take a quick break because I got a little freebie for you. So if you're listening to this episode and you like what Monisha's talking about,

You might be like me. You're trying to take notes. You're trying to remember these principles that he's talking about because the dude is just a wealth of knowledge when it comes to investing. Well, the fine folks at HubSpot listened to this episode. They took the transcript. They put down the nine principles that he talks about as well as the examples that he have.

And they put it all in a PDF for you. So you don't need to take notes. They did it all for you. You can read that, learn from it. That's the much better way to get more value out of these episodes. It's in the show notes below. Just go download that and enjoy. so you tell me the story about these ships and when you explain it I can see it just like you see it. That's the opportunity.

But the thing I don't get is, why are you looking at crude oil ships? How do I even know where to look? And so what is that process for you? Do you pick one industry and look at 100 companies in it? Do you read books on 50 industries? Do you look at what other investors are doing and try to reverse engineer? Where do you even know where to look? I'm going to lay it out for you.

It's going to be so easy. But it takes a certain temperament. So first I want to talk about the temperament. So if we go back to Warren Buffett, when he was a teenager, he used to go to the racetrack in Omaha.

and one of the things he did at the racetrack he was like 14 years old or something is after all the races had been done he'd pick up all the tickets that people had left thrown on the ground right these are mostly losing tickets right they just kind of tossed them from the garbage cans he'd pull them on out then he'd go home and one by one look at every ticket

he would find, now sometimes a horse would come in second and the ticket was for win or place. It was actually a winning ticket but they didn't understand they were drunk or whatever. So he'd always find a bunch of tickets which were actually in the money. But they had been discarded. So now he was underage. He couldn't go to the counter to collect the money. So he gave it all to his Aunt Alice, his favorite aunt. She used to go to the counter, collect the money and give it to him. Okay?

so when warren when warren became older let's say when he was let's say 24 or 25 years old he went through the moody's manual and what he was doing with the Moody's manual and you know uh for nostalgia i bought these on ebay and i want you to see the movie's manual okay so so this is buffett was 23 years old this was his night time casual reading this was his so what he did now with the moody's manual there were there were a number of these that came out like in the year 1953 this is just

railroads, airlines, shipping, traction, brass and truck. I don't even know what this is. Is this the earnings reports of all of the companies? So this is the value line of that day. Okay. Okay. So if I open the Moody's manual to any random page, okay? what what it's doing is it's got like two or three companies per page you can see how fine the print is yeah okay all right it needs like a magnifying glass and it's basically giving you a summary of every company right

Now, Buffett went through... Now, this is just one of them in 1953. For 1953, there were probably about seven or eight of these books that came out in 1953. similar number in 54 55 so on so you're talking about a big stack of guys right he went through these books two or three times he went through what he did is he read each one page by page right and he was looking what he was looking for he was looking for anomaly

So he used to host these MBA students and actually he brought for them printouts from the Moody's manual to the ones that he made an investment in. So he would find something like Western insurance, for example. where the stock price was 15 and the earnings last year were 25. The stock is $15 a share, earnings are $25 a share, book value is $80 a share. That's what we call an anomaly, hitting you by a head with a 2x4. Makes no sense.

he would make a list of all these companies that made no sense in the positive direction. And then he'd study them. And then he would make investments. Now, in order for Warren to find Western Insurance, he might have had to spend 14 hours a day non-stop reading these for 3 months before he finds one or two of them. but he only needs very few of them and warren's mind uh you know he's he's a prodigy so his mind was programmed

to have this intense... The work never bothered him. Just like no other teenagers were going and collecting all those tickets on the floor and then going through each one with the optimism that I am going to find something that is... basically a free lunch, right? And so he went through the Moody's manual and basically started finding these anomalies and then started making investments in them and did well, etc. Now, we have a shortcut

Because I know that your listeners are not going to do what Buffett did. I cannot do what Buffett did. I do not have the wherewithal. and the ferocious intensity that warned almost no one does. I think that he's just extreme anomaly on that front.

so for example there's a website called value investors club okay now if you go to value investors club it's free you don't have to pay anything whatever if you give them your email you can see all ideas that are 60 days or older okay and if you don't give them your email you can see all ideas that are 120 days and older it actually doesn't matter because there's ideas and values in wrestlers clubs that are 10 years old 15 years old

It's very difficult to become a member of Value Investors Club posting ideas. So it's like a curated website. The members have to submit two ideas a year which get a decent rating in order to keep their membership. So you have, what I have found is the Value Universities Club has a lot of brain power. It has brain power coming out of the ears. Okay, it's all free. So all someone has to do is sit down and read the write-up.

on Value Investors Club. So there may be, I don't know, 600 or 700, 800 write-ups, maybe 500 write-ups in a year. each write up maybe around 10-15 pages max. Then there's comments and whatever. But what I'm saying is that

it's much easier than the Moody's manual because someone is actually digesting the information for you. And you could do one of those a day. You could easily do one. One of those a day is pathetic. I'm saying even you said if there's 300 total yeah but i'm just saying it will be easy for someone

without putting too much work into it to read four or five ideas a day. I mean, they could have a full-time job and easily do that. That's not a difficult thing to do. And you don't need to read the whole idea. What I would say is you read the first few paragraphs and see if this is something that's interesting you or not or something that's grabbing you or not. And what I do is i look at every idea that's posted right and i don't i don't

care to really look at them right when they're posted because they actually those ideas will work even five years from now. Like recently I started investing in a in a company where the original write-up was in 2021. Okay. It's 2025. Still valid. Okay. Now what you still have to do is you should use it only as an input to ideas just like the Moody's manual is not telling you what to buy and sell.

Once you see the idea, you do all your own work, do your research, do everything. Make sure it's something you understand well. Make sure it's within your circle of competence. whether you buy into the idea or not etc and buffett buffett is still doing this so his japanese

So there's another book called the Japan Company Handbook. Okay. And I'm going to bring the Japan Company Handbook. Okay. All right, here we have it. And I'm excited about this because you hear a lot about buffett's you know sees candy coke geico like those kind of well-known buffett's best bets yeah but as i understand it buffett made some incredible investments in japan so let me explain how no-brainer

the total no-brainer nature of that bat. So these five Japanese trading companies had a 8% dividend yield. Okay, so they were paying an 8% dividend. It was very cheap. Japan has, the index has not gone anywhere for like 30 years. And Warren actually got a insane return on these. So what he did is, he borrowed the entire amount in yen at half a percent a year.

and it was not a small amount it was like 5 billion yeah yeah he put 5 billion but he borrowed the 5 billion at half a percent the whole thing in yen yeah in japan right so now he's bought

Japanese company paying dividends in yen, which is bought in yen, right? The dividend coverage is 16 times his interest payment so he put no equity right and he's instantly making seven and a half percent on five billion which is like you know what about uh 350 400 million out of nothing right it's just coming to him now what happens is because these companies are so cheap in about three or four years, they all doubled in price.

So now the 5 billion has become 10 billion. The equity that went in is nothing. So it's infinite return. They all raise the dividend. the dividend based on the original purchase price is about 15%. And then after that what he did is he increased the bet. So he was under 5% of all of them.

he's now approaching 10% on all of them. And anyone could have looked at the Japan Company handbook. Basically, I think it's a matter of how hungry are you it's the same as any entrepreneur right i mean basically uh anyone who starts a business whatever they've they've got to go all in right now intense passion 18 hours a day all in very strong belief it's the same thing here if you

truly are focused on it, you can do very well. I mean the universe is going to conspire to help you with whatever your passion is. And it's just a matter of whether you want it. By the way, does he use Excel? Well, no, he does not use Excel, for sure. He uses his computer. Now he uses Google and all that, but he uses his computer mainly to print.

I mean, Warren wouldn't be caught dead using Excel. Because the thing is that he is looking for things that hit you in the head with a 2x4. So when he is going through a Japan company handbook or a Moody's manual, there is no Excel needed. What will Excel help you with when the earnings are $25 a share and the stock is $15? You don't need Excel. When the dividend yield is 8% and you're borrowing at 0.5%, you don't need Excel. In fact, if you need Excel, it's an automatic path.

Because it means that there's something complicated there, which is not fitting in. Did I need Excel for frontline? No, I didn't need Excel for frontline. I mean, I look up the liquidation price of the ships. I look up where the ships are at. I mean, the thing is, all these things are very basic numbers. You don't need Excel for it. Right. You know, recently I was talking to a friend of mine. He's looking at some international stock exchange, okay?

This international stock exchange trades at a trailing PE of like 30. It's growing at 15-20% a year, very rapid growth. 60% of revenue is profit. Okay, and as they grow that 60% might become 70% because they were operating average So if you just forward two or three years the P becomes less than 10 There is no need for Excel. You can just do it all in your head. It's got $10 of earnings today. It's going to have $12 a year from now, $14, $15 two years from now.

maybe 17 or 18 dollars 3 years from now stocks at 300 now when you're at 18 you're already at a 15 multiple You already cut it in half. It's growing. By that time, it may be trading. It should be trading at even more than 30 times earnings. So the stock may be at like, you know, $600 or $700. Just the math of all of that. So what I'm saying is that if you can't do the math in your head,

it's an automatic pass because that means there's something complicated. So another important thing is you should be able to explain your thesis of a stock in about four or five sentences to a 10-year-old. Okay, if you can't do that It's a pass. You can't sit down with a 10-year-old with an Excel spreadsheet. Okay? They're not going to like you and they're not going to be interested. Right. Einstein used to say there's like four levels of intelligence.

smart, intelligent, genius, simple. The highest level of intellect is simplicity. And the other thing about investing is that you have to have conviction. It's very difficult to have conviction if you need to go back and look at your Excel mark. Right. You need it in your head. So Buffett never needs to go anywhere. It's in his head. He knows what the dividend yield is. He knows what he paid. He knows what the yen is. He knows all of that.

It's pre-programmed. Right. So we have don't use Excel. Don't overcomplicate it is really what that means. And the second is leverage. So don't over leverage. And I think the story here that I like is There should be a third bust on this table next to us.

somebody's missing that was an original partner with them yeah can you tell that story i think i had his name to rick so actually uh warren charlie and rick goren Used to do deals together and they were all independent doing their thing But they used to share ideas and sometimes they'd go in together Rick found blue chip stamps for them and I think he also might have been the guy sees candy contacted and so on. After the early 70s we never heard about Rick.

he kind of fell off the radar so when i met warren for lunch i asked him just a very innocent question i said warren what happened You know, there used to be three of you and then we never heard from him after that. And Warren said that Charlie and I knew that we would get very rich and we were not in a hurry. And he said Rick was in a hurry. and so Rick was always using some leverage and then when the 73-74 downturn came

That was a very intense, that was a crash in slow motion, basically. Over a two-year period, the stocks went down like more than 40-50%. It was a big, big drawdown. And Rick got margin called. and Warren said that when he got the margin calls I bought his Berkshire Hathaway for $40 a share. the stock that's now 700 000 right so rick was forced to sell it

at a time when it was probably the worst time to sell. And so then Warren actually went one step further because he's always trying to add value to these lunches and all that. So he says, He says to me and Guy, he said, if you're even a slightly above average investor and you spend less than you earn and you use no leverage, you cannot help but get rich in a lifetime. Tell me about the difference between risk and uncertainty.

Yeah, well, that's an important concept to understand because Wall Street gets confused between the two. And in fact, when Wall Street gets confused between the two is where the greatest opportunities rise.

Okay, so we talked about frontline frontline was an example of a situation where uncertainty was extremely high and risk was very low right what wall street is looking for is certainty okay so if we look at a company like adp you know the process payroll right i don't know they've had some like 50 years of non-stop growth because you know your payroll your running payrolls is going to keep going up your cash flow is going to go up it's all in a straight line That's beautiful.

and Wall Street will reward you. extremely well for that. And it's priced accurately. it'll be priced for euphoria it'll be overpriced because they love that that's what they're looking for on the other hand that's their type yeah i mean that's uh that's music today yes on the other hand if a company exhibits high uncertainty it will be taken out back in shop And those are where the opportunities are. So one of the cues to look for is

Is this a business with low risk and high uncertainty? The combination of the two. And when you get to the combination of the two, low risk plus high uncertainty equals high rewards. I was looking at your portfolio and you have this company invested in Turkey. That's like a Coke bottling company.

Would you say that's a good example of kind of the risk and uncertainty mismatch? Yeah, we actually made money on it, but we exited. Okay. And the reason I exited is that, so the Coke bottler, Basically had a parent company which was the dominant beer bottler in Turkey and several other countries Their largest operations were in Russia, where they had their number one market share, 50-50 joint venture with Amembev.

And Russia has effectively nationalized that business. I see. And I think they did it because they were somewhat upset with Erdogan about something. So they went and did that about his support for Ukraine or something. And when that happened, it became

went in the too hard pile for us explain the too hard pile that's something i stole from you last time i was here it's a it's a warrant thing we'll get to that in a second but basically uh it was something i couldn't handicap sure so we were sitting at a gain And we have this event take place.

i get to get my bet back with some added return and we close it i said where do i sign right right i can go find something else to play with but the two hard pile is uh Actually a physical box on orange desk Okay, and so actually if you Google it, if you just Google Warren Buffett too hard, that image will probably pop up. Okay. So he has a box on his desk which he calls too hard and he says that 99% or more of investment ideas that you encounter should go into that box.

because we're not going to be able to figure it out. So one of the things to understand is that if there's 50,000 stocks in the world, we are not really going to understand more than a few hundred of them at the most after quite a while of studying them so most companies that we would encounter should go into that box Okay, so it's the one of the important things in investing is humility Humility to understand, I mean Warren has no issues with the humility to know

that he doesn't know most things right that most things are not going to be able to be figured out or handicapped or any of that

And we don't need to. If you can understand a very small sliver of things and you know when those things get overpriced and underpriced, that's all you need right you don't need anything else there's a guy who owns a bunch of real estate but like in a very small area yeah that's john ariega yeah what's his story because it sounds like it's it's a good example of this a very

thin kind of circle of competence but he knew the pricing and was able to so john ariega was a billionaire he passed away maybe like two three years ago pretty recent And his daughter's married to Marc Andreessen. That's right, yeah. You know, so it's billionaire to the power of billionaire. So anyway, John Arriaga basically had a very narrow circle of competence. He didn't understand most things, but he...

only invested in real estate within two miles of the Stanford campus. Okay, that's usually just right around the campus. And if you walked with him around the campus, every single building he could tell you the full history of the building. when it was built, what the current value was, what the rents were, who the owners were, and what the history was. He knew that about every building. So he was an inch wide and a mile deep.

And that is a really good trait for an investor, is to be very narrowly focused. Now, what John Arriaga did is he ran, generally speaking, a very under-leveled portfolio. His portfolio is always not much there.

when the downturns came he aggressively bought because all these distressed properties around i mean this is the most prime real estate you can think of yeah other than park avenue or something okay and so he would just buy these things up and everyone was getting foreclosed and bankrupt and go to the banks and buy it from them and all of that and then you know get them all least and fair value and all of that again take the leverage down and again next down cycle again the same thing

And he stuck to that. So the thing is, he didn't wander into, oh, let me go to Mountain View and do it. Or let me go to California and do it. He didn't do all that. I mean, he's basically, oh, let me invest in tech. something he didn't do any of that he stuck to real estate that's all he did and he did it extremely well and he died a billionaire

All right, folks, this is a quick plug for a podcast called I Digress. If you're trying to grow your business but feel like you're drowning in buzzwords and BS, then check out the I Digress podcast. It's hosted by this guy named Troy Sandage. This helped launch over 35 brands that drive $175 million in revenue. So if you want to get smarter about scaling your business, listen to I Digress wherever you get your podcasts. All right, back to the podcast.

we don't need to know many things about many things we need to know a lot about a little and that's the important thing right know a lot about a little right so like for example if i'm looking at frontline I should learn everything I can about shipping. I should learn everything I can about oil shipping, about tankers, about the history, who makes them and every nuance about it, right? The deeper I go,

the better it's going to be for me. Right. Okay, I shouldn't be spending time next week on airplanes. Okay, let's leave it alone, like one by one by one. Right. Why do you think most people don't do that? Because when I hear that, I think,

Ah, there's a blueprint. To just say, I'm going to go deep, and in this two-mile radius, I need to become super knowledgeable, and I don't need to get distracted by everything else, and I'll hold forever. That's a blueprint. If you think about it, I think it was Nick Sleep who has this this quote he said the best investors are Entrepreneurs who never sold so if you think about entrepreneurs that's what they are they are John Arriaga right so if I look at Sam Walton

Sam Walton is John Arriaga. All he did was retail. All he did was visit competitor stores. He never bothered anything else. Sam Walton, founder of Walmart. Tell me more about him. Sam Walton, he said that there is There is no human. who has ever lived or ever will live. who has spent more time in competitor stores than me.

Whenever he'd go on vacation with his family and they were passing a retail store, he'd be back in 20 minutes. And what is he doing in there? What did he do? So I'll give you an example. One time he went into the store and there's manager says to him that was such a badly run operation and Sam says to him yes but did you see the candle display Did you see how fantastic that candle display was? So his perspective was, I can learn from losers. Okay, I want to learn.

that spark that's there in something that's a total loser right so he was going in and now one time uh in brazil in this this uh retail store they find this older guy flat on the ground and they call a paramedic It turns out it's ambald.

And what he was doing is he was measuring the space between the aisles and he didn't have a tape with his body so he laid down he laid and you know the space between the aisles is a very important data point for a retailer because you're going to waste square footage or be too narrow and the people want to enjoy the experience

so you have to get that right right and so he was in brazil saying how are they doing it am i three inches too wide in walmart am i three inches too narrow what am i what's going on here right so that was this was a game of inches That's who Sam Walton was and in fact Walmart has not innovated at all. At least for the first 20-25 years that Walmart ran, everything came from somebody else who was already a competitor.

They took a lot from Sears, they took a lot from Kmart, and then they killed them. And they kept learning from one competitor after another. Sam Walton actually used to say, I'm not the smartest tool in the toolbox. I'm not a smart guy, but I'm a learning machine. I'm gonna keep at this. and what others have become so you know it's very funny he goes and visits soul price the founder of price club which eventually leads to costco

And he looks at Price Club and he says this is fantastic and he creates Sam's Club. And Costco was also taken from Price Club. So both Sam's Club and Costco. They would not have existed. So Sam's Club is Sam Walton?

I didn't even know that. It's part of Walmart. Oh, I didn't even know that. Oh yeah, it's part of Walmart. And it was completely cloned from price a price club which was a predecessor to costco right so sole price was an incredible entrepreneur someone goes to him and says you know no one has had more impact on retailing than sole price because sole price influenced sam walton in a major way

And he influenced Jim Sinek of the founder of Costco in a major way. I mean, these are the pillars. And then these two companies influenced Amazon. Right. Right. So it's all coming from sole price. so someone told soul price you know you are like the father of retailing in the u.s And actually globally, what do you think of that? He said, I wish I'd worn a condom.

That's too good. That's amazing. So Sam Walton is... Yeah, but I just want to say that, for example, some of those things that Costco does, Costco pays 50% more than Walmart pays its employees. So the entry-level people are making 50% more. hurt the profitability. In fact, Sol Price's view was similar to Henry Ford's view that

I want the people who work in my stores to be able to shop in my stores. Just like Henry Ford said, I want my workers to be able to buy my cars. At that time, the cars were automobiles were for the rich right and uh henry ford said no i want them for everyone right so he wanted to drop the price and and uh so i think at costco the lowest wage is like 20 bucks an hour

you know like when you're starting out whatever and then they have tuition reimbursement all kinds of other things and uh they get a lot of productivity out of their people yeah because of that you've got these books here and we're sitting in your we're at your house we're in your library You've got, how many books do you think you have in here? This is a thousand books. A few thousand. A few thousand, yeah.

I mean, just to set the scene, so that your office, your computers over there were surrounded by a cave of books on every topic. So I see some business books over here. I see investing books. You just brought a retail book about Sol Price, the founder of Price Club from over there. There's science, I think, on that wall. What does this door go to? What is this? That's my bedroom. That's a bedroom. Okay, so you live in the library, essentially.

and you nap every day i think absolutely yeah yeah we're both nappers i've been i've been so used to napping that if i don't snap my productivity goes down and so i actually don't like to work if i'm not productive and and what i find is that even if i lay down for half an hour, 45 minutes, I'm re-energized. And I think for the work I do, I need to be all in. So I actually can't do this work if I'm tired.

you know yeah there's a uh this athlete conor mcgregor and they asked him about his training schedule and he said you know one of the big mistakes i made is that i was always trying to train all the time i wanted to come to the gym three times four times a day i thought that's how you win and the His coach was basically like, you're like a light that's always just dimly flickering.

because you never turn off and therefore you can never turn on and be as bright and as effective as you could be and this flickering dim light it's not doing you any justice and so i've used that in my own model of like where's my light right now and if i need to just shut it down briefly 30 minutes an hour whatever it is to come back full brightness that's that's the well jeff bezos you know he said all decisions important decisions in the morning and

He's very particular. He needs a solid eight hours at night. Right. And he leaves work at a normal time. Right. But he says that they don't do these important decisions in the afternoon. Right. It's the first thing in the morning because he wants the highest energy levels. And in fact, what I also drive, I find my best work is in the morning. I'm curious about your style because I came over to your house once and you were...

You were very calm. It didn't seem like you were on the clock. You're moving from one meeting to the next. There was not a big bustling team of analysts and junior people. You seem like you keep a pretty clear calendar. Is that intentional? Do you think that's just what you like or is that effective? In the business I'm in, if I can find a couple of things to buy in a year, in the case of Buffett, one thing to buy every five years, right, I'm doing well.

And so this is not a situation where having some packed schedule or whatever. I think the thing is that this is a case where you're taking in a lot of information.

but there's not much action right and so you're basically trying to improve your metal models you're trying to understand more about the businesses that you already own and i'm going through like you know value investors club and some zero and that sort of thing and just looking at what else is there right and and Sometimes I find an amazing idea, whatever, and then now there's a deep dive.

And then that might take a while. I was reading something interesting. So in our first episode, we talked about how you got started. You were actually an entrepreneur first. And then basically, you said this great thing. You go, I realized that as an entrepreneur, maybe 3% to 5% of my brain power was on.

strategic decisions, really clear thinking, coming up with the right answer. And then 95% of my time was blocking and tackling. And you're like, as an investor, it's great because that 3% becomes 95%. I'm just about clear thinking and making the right strategic move and not, I don't have to busy myself. But one thing I thought was cool was I've read that you took some personality test or you got some analysis done on you that basically...

Helped you, you know, they sort of told you your temperament is for single-player games. What is this? I didn't understand what what you did. Yeah, so This was kind of accidental that happened and I think it turned out to be one of those great things that happened in my life is that in In 1999 actually I was at a crossroads where it was very clear to me that the business that I had built, my IT business,

I had lost interest in it. And I had become a lot more interested in investing. And it was a difficult time because I had like 170 people in the company who thought I'm motivated.

and i can't fake it you know and uh so very accidentally i was with these two industrial psychologists and they basically did uh 360 on me so they had me take a bunch of tests they talked to my direct reports they talked to my friends family spouse so on and they built a 360 view of who I was and then they gave me what I call my owner's manual.

And I think everyone should have their owner's manual. Like it comes with an appliance you bought. Yeah, I mean, we show up, we don't have an owner's manual. And each one of us has programmed differently. so what they said is look the way a human is his traits likes dislikes and what passions they are, that is hard-coded at the age of five. And that is not going to change from the age of five to the age of 95. Okay? So you cannot change traits.

You can try to change behaviors, but you cannot change traits. The traits are between your genetics and the first five years of life hard-coded. Now the problem most humans have, which I had, is we don't know what those traits are. What most of us try to do is we do what they call mirroring. We look at what the world considers acceptable. and we adapt our behaviors so that we kind of fit in. But that can be a big disservice.

okay so so basically what they were able to tell me is they said look uh you you are a person they said when we look at the company you're running and we look at who you are We don't even know how you... can go to how you're functioning yeah we don't know and actually i was in pain wow i was in a lot of pain and the the thing was that i loved that business when it was just me and i loved the business that was growing until we got to the first 10-15 people.

And then as I started growing beyond that, my life became and my job description became HR. I'm just herding cats. I'm not a cat herder. Okay, that's not who I am. So what they said is that that business that you have, you need to get rid of it in some way as soon as you can. And I was just thinking at that time, this was in March or April of 1999, I was just thinking of starting Pabrai funds, right? They looked at it.

And they said, this is perfect for you. This is going to work extremely well for you. In fact, one of them invested. He's one of the first investors who came in. He put a skin in the game. And I told him, listen, I'm paying you guys $2,000 to do this. You're giving me 100,000. I really don't want to lose your money. They said, I don't have any doubts, Monash. You're going to do very well.

so i don't see any risk here right and he did extremely well uh and so uh they were actually right because now it's been 26 years since I've been running it and I haven't gotten bored. So what did your owner's manual say? So I said, don't like that. My owner's manual basically said that

Well, first of all, they said that I had very high horsepower, right? And they said that I was one of the smartest guys they had come across, etc., which was great. But they said that you are a guy who likes to play single-player games.

you are not the kind of guy who would be happy being in a soccer team for example where you're one of the forwards or whatever and your performance depends on the team. They say you do They say you seek out games which are single player games where you think you have some edge. and when you think you have some edge and it's that sort of game you will kill it and actually what i've noticed is like so for example i got banned in vegas playing blackjack

Right? Okay, I gotta know this story. I figured out a system which Basically beat them. Okay. Counting cards? What were you doing? I actually did it without counting cards. Right? And in fact, it took the casino...

Almost a year of watching me so I used to go every like six weeks or something and they played those tapes over and over Because the markers that they look for were not there and uh but we'll talk about that in a second so what i'm saying is that so what are the games i like i i like blackjack i like bridge i like investing And even Dakshana for example, the Dakshana Foundation, that's also a game, right?

That's your philanthropy. Yeah, but they're all mathematical games. Even Dakshina is a mathematical game because what I'm looking at is input-output ratio. People think I'm doing all this good in the world and all that. What they don't understand is I'm a game player. And what I'm trying to do with Dakshina is how much money is going in and what's coming out. And that's the only thing I'm focused on.

is what's going on and what ended up happening with an entity like Dakshina is Warren Buffett wrote me a letter saying that this is the best. He took the time to write the letter like this is the best. Never done that for any philanthropy that he's looked at. And the reason is because there's a game player who's not focused on, you know, name and lights or a bunch of fancy pictures in the annual report. We have no pictures in the annual report and that's just like the Berkshire report, right?

But it's about an honest input pro output singular. So what I did is every year that we ran Dakshana. Well, explain what it is. I don't even know. If you take a step back and say, okay. I want to give money away to make the world a better place. So the natural second step you would get to with that is I want very high returns. on the money I'm putting out. So social return on invested capital.

should be extremely high now most nonprofits don't even think this way they're all hard there's a homeless guy let me help the guy right they don't really do an analysis of okay what is going in and what is coming out so I ran into this model this guy was running in I think in 2006 I ran into it where he was taking 30 kids who were very very poor in India in Bihar and most of these kids were coming from illiterate parents etc but they have very high IQs and he prepped them for about 10 months

And he had them take the IIT entrance exam. The IIT, they're the best technical institutes in the world. And now the thing about the IITs is that there's about 1.3 million kids applying for $16,000. It's about a 1.3% admit rate. Princeton is about a 5% admit rate. Harvard is about 5 or 6%. This is 1.3%.

And if you get into the IITs, it's basically free to attend. The government subsidizes it. So if you're a very poor person, and you get into the IITs, well now Microsoft will hire you, Google will hire you, anyone will hire you, right? But getting in is expensive because the coaching is expensive. So what this guy had done is he had made the coaching free for these very poor kids. and now what was happening is you had a family that was making

$60 a month, let's say. And the kid graduates and Google hires him for $120,000 a year. Okay. I mean, you know, the transformation in five years, the guy's making $300,000 a year. Right. And so they're just attached. And he was spending $800 per kid. On the training, the test prep. So you spend $800 and you take a family from $60 a month.

to $10,000 a month. Right. Okay. I mean, what's the ROI on that? And you're going to do that for this whole lifetime. And you're going to reset the extended family and all of that. the ROI is off the charts. So when I saw that, I said, wow, this is the holy grail. So I went to the guy and I said, I'd like to fund you. He said, I don't want to scale. I do 30 kids. I don't want even 31 kids. I don't want to take outside money, none of that. So, I'm the Shameless Cloner.

So I told him, do you mind if I clone your model? He said, no, this is a very good thing. I think you should clone it. I'll help you in any way. So I took his model and that's what Dakshina is. So we are spending, Dakshina spends about three or four million dollars a year. Just imagine what the output of that, right? You know when when you look at it from each family and then you and we're doing three four million. We've been doing it for 17 years So basically

What we get out of $3 million a year, a lot of other nonprofits would not get out of $100 million a year. So we actually have a footprint. that is much larger than what it should be in terms of impact. And to take it back, it's a math game. So basically, we had two or three things that were important, and that's how I looked at it. The first was the yield. So the IITs accept 1.3% of the kids who apply. They accept 70% of our kids.

that's amazing so now what i'm doing is i have a game which puts two models together so one day before i die I want to have $10,000 left. Okay, so basically inheritances just don't do much, right? I mean, my kids already have. They're doing well. Yeah, what is your philosophy on that? Well, in general, large inheritances are going to do more harm than good.

And, you know, basically, you don't want a person to be on an IV drip for their whole life. I mean, that's the worst thing you can do somewhere. And so, Buffett has a great quote. He said, I want to give my kids enough money for them to do anything they want. but not enough to do nothing.

New York City founders. If you've listened to My First Million before, you know I've got this company called Hampton. And Hampton is a community for founders and CEOs. A lot of the stories and ideas that I get for this podcast. I actually got it from people who I met in Hampton. We have this big community of a thousand plus people and it's amazing. But the main part is this eight person core group that becomes your board of advisors for your life and for your business. And it's life changing.

to the folks in new york city I'm building an in real life core group. in New York City. And so if you meet one of the following criteria, your business either does 3 million in revenue, or you've raised 3 million in funding, or you've started and sold a company for at least $10 million, then you are eligible to apply.

So go to joinhampton.com and apply. I'm going to be reviewing all of the applications myself. So put that you heard about this on MFM so I know to give you a little extra love. Now back to... So, because I I'm investing for a living and we have this kind of compounding going.

I'm gonna end up with more than I need I mean basically I don't need to spend any more than I'm spending I could not increase happiness by spending more so there's no point to spending more I mean I'm very happy with the with the lifestyle and everything else right so Everything else basically needs to get recycled. But it needs to get recycled at high returns. So on one hand, I have a compounding engine and a net worth that's growing. On the other hand, I have to give it away.

God Google told me that on June 11, 2054, I'll be leaving planet Earth. Okay, so... You asked AI, what did you do? Average life expectancy? If you go to God Google and just say, hey, I'm, you know, 52 years old and tell me when I'm going to die. he will tell you okay and now that we have the date so you know my birthday is june 12th just to make it poetic i made it june 11th okay okay so we have an exact number so basically uh 2054 means i've got like

29 years and change left. And at any kind of compounding rate, it's a ridiculous amount of assets that get built over time. But I want to end on June 10th with $10,000.

Okay, so there's one game which is to give it away and the other game is to make it and we need the two curves to be where the giving away becomes probably in the next few years needs to become very much more dominant so like the three million a year needs to go to five ten fifteen eventually and so on and so for me you know It's the same as playing blackjack. it's just a math game these are both math games right and yeah there are a lot of families getting helped

And my investors are happy. And so then that's fine. Okay, so what was your blackjack system? I'm skeptical. So the blackjack system, it would destroy the casino. they would have to either change the game or something. But basically, I'll give you some pointers of kind of what's going on here. There's a publication called BJ21 BJ21.com Okay, I'll go to BJ21.com And you give them a hundred bucks. They're gonna give you a PDF. It gives you the odds of every blackjack table in North America.

Okay, so for example if I go to The Win Las Vegas, right? The Win Las Vegas has a bunch of different blackjack games, single deck, double deck, six decks, whatever else. Every single one of those, it gives you the odd. if you play perfect blackjack and these odds vary depending on how competitive so if I'm going to some you know riverboat in Indiana I'm not going to get the same odds as Vegas. Vegas Strip is going to be more efficient because it's more competitive.

So usually the house will end up with something like a 0.3, 0.4% all the way to like 2% edge over the better. Which means every bet you're making, if you make a $100 bet, every bet you're making, you're losing your 50 cents or whatever. So there's a casino in Vegas called the El Cortez. and the El Corte is a small casino so in order to kind of induce people to come they kind of improve the odds okay still in their favor but the single deck game at the El Cortez

has the thinnest house edge of any blackjack table on the planet. The house edge is 0.18%. Okay, so if you look at that BJ 21 All of that they have the edges of every table this one is a is the lowest right so this is a very thin And I have a system which took them a long time to figure out. They play single deck blackjack, right? But they only deal half the deck in the shuffle. So... The reason they deal half the deck is so that they can just make it difficult for the counter.

because you may be counting cards the deck becomes very favorable but then they shuffle right right so you the the high cards at the back but they never get dealt right so the counters get screwed right so I had a system where it basically relied on the fact that blackjack occasionally has streaks. It has streaks where you may win six or seven or eight hands in a row or you will lose six, seven or eight hands in a row.

and what i did in the betting was that usually when i was losing it was always the minimum bet and when i was winning the bets were increasing so with the variance of that what happened is I was able to overcome the 0.18, right?

so i don't want to go more than that that gives it you know and what i want to do is when the cameras turn off i'll explain it to you okay great so when you go to the next time and you go to all cartels but now what happens so what happened with them what really confused them which they had never dealt with before is normally what the counters do is on a brand new shoe it's a low bet in my case there was a brand new shoe there's a high bet

so they said we just shuffled right the whole deck is there there's no odds edge he has on that deck because the entire deck is there right he has a high bet Did they ever figure it out? So what happened is I'm playing blackjack. The general manager was very friendly to me, comes and sits around next to me and tells the dealer stop dealing.

Okay, so she is in the middle of a hand. She just continued dealing. She says he screams at her stop dealing now you should never heard that before okay like literally she said she said shuffle right we're done we're not dealing anymore then he tells me that mr pabrai I like you okay I read your book I watch your videos and you have a system that

we cannot beat. So I said, I told him, I said, you know, you know I'm not counting cards. He said, that's what threw us off. He said, we know you're not counting cards. we know you'll beat us and so you can come to this casino anytime you want but you cannot sit down on a blackjack table then I'm thinking why would I come here Whenever I go someplace to talk or something and they're introducing me, I always tell them, listen.

just say that I have a lifetime ban in Vegas because I really don't care about everything else on my CV that's really irrelevant and that's what's relevant it's just like if you get into Harvard Wow, that's impressive. Your Harvard dropout. That's the higher status signal. And so you're good at blockchain, made money in blockchain. I was banned from a casino. That is the highest status.

I mean, I took them for like about 150,000 or something. And you know, this was a very low table limit. The table limit was only 2,000. But at 2,000, I took them. So they said, okay, we're done. I love it. You've run into all these characters. We've talked about Warren, we've talked about Charlie, but I want to know about some of the other characters. Your stories are amazing. I could listen to your stories all day. So...

Michael Burry. One of my favorite movies is the big short and Michael Burry is this kind of mysterious character. Did you ever meet Michael Burry? What you're gonna end up when we finish this conversation is you're gonna know that my middle name is Forrest Gump. Okay, that's really where we're gonna end up. So, you know, I always tell people that God loves me. He loves me more than other people and I'll explain why, right?

In 2008, the financial crisis has not yet happened. It's like March or April of 2008. Things are getting topsy-turvy. I was visiting San Jose for some something I was going to San Jose and I knew Michael Burry had an office in San Jose and I didn't know him but I sent my email saying you know Mr. Burry I like you admire you etc and

I would love to visit you. So he was kind of well-known? He was not very well-known, but he was posting on Value Investors Club and things like that. He was there a little bit. And I liked the way he thought. And he said, I asked, stop by.

Okay, so I go to his office in San Jose and there's a few kind of analysts sitting outside. It's a very kind of seems like a very depressing place Okay, and I got a few is kind of a little dark and there are a few analysts there and then I go into the office And there's huge piles of paper everywhere.

and he immediately launches into CDS's okay and he says look Monash I want to tell you something about something that's going to make you extremely wealthy okay and he then downloads to me at 1 million miles an hour I've never heard of a CDS okay and he's talking about housing crash and the coming implosion and all this stuff you know and housing's never crashed okay in the US none of that and

80%, 90% of what he said went straight over my head. Okay, like he was just, he doesn't give me a full chord in half an hour.

my subhuman intelligence couldn't handle it. Okay, I couldn't. And you know, so I come out of the meeting, my head is spinning and I say, okay, well, that was interesting. Okay. And then, you know, of course, he rides off into the sunset right and then the movie comes out right and then he's exactly like the show in the movie right that's how he is right so i felt like okay you know god who loves me so much takes me to the epicenter.

of the epicenter of what would have been the best place to be. The best teacher to have. And the idiot, Monish, blew it. But that's the way it is. That's, I mean, what, where does that rank in terms of like, you know, sort of the... the best calls or, you know, foresight in terms of that you've seen in your career was... Well, I think this has happened to me a lot. I mean, in the sense that, like I said, you know, we put 98, 99% into a hard pile, right?

Even now, I think it was right of me to not do anything with it because I couldn't understand it.

Even after the financial crisis, it took me a while to understand the CDSs and all these tranches and how they were like doing all this stuff and all that. I mean, that took me a while to like really get my arms around it and even after knowing all that i would have been skeptical about making that bet so hats off to him right i mean he figured it out a few people figured it out but it was a very small number of people who figured it out right tell me about the greatest investor from India.

Who is the greatest investor for India? Well, the greatest investor for India would be Rakesh and Janwana. I never met Rakesh. I mean, I know his friends quite well. Guy actually met him. Guy actually went to his office and met him. Wonderful guy, died relatively young a few years back.

But Rakesh was a very interesting kind of split brain in the sense that he'd have like three or four bloomberg screens in front of him and he had all these charts and everything going on rapid fire trading going on but on the other hand he had these two or three stocks that he never touched So he had, I mean, I don't know anyone like that. And he was great at both, but the ones that he never touched,

I mean, they just went through the roof. There's a company in India called Titan Industries. And Titan Industries does branded jewelry. Branded jewelry basically didn't exist in India. You know, it was all mom and pop. And there was a trust deficit, right? So you go to a jeweler in India. And in India, they have like 22 karat gold, right? And you're buying the gold. You don't know whether it's half gold.

80% gold of what the hell is going on, right? The jeweler knows what you don't, right? That Titan brand is owned by the Tadas, who have very high integrity. So basically, they were able to take a sector which had a huge trust deficient. deficiency and I mean they've I think Titan is still in its infancy right and I think Rakesh made a huge huge I mean Rakesh I think compounded at north of 40% a year for several decades it's unbelievable and you know he started with like $10,000 borrowed

Didn't even have that on his own. Someone lent him the money. What made him great? Was he a brilliant mathematical mind? What was the trait that really helped him? He was a trained CPA. India's equivalent CPI chartered accountant so he obviously understood numbers well and Just before he died, so he had figured out that Indigo, which is a low-cost carrier in India, they have something like 70% market share growing very rapidly. It might become the largest airline in the world. Wow.

1,000 planes in order or something. Okay, so they're growing very fast. he had done well as an investor in indigo but then he took the next step And he set up a clone of Indigo. I mean, just think about the guts you need to set up bloody airlines, okay, from being a passive investor. And while he was dying, you know, he was like in bad shape in hospital and all of that.

that airlines up and running and cranking and all of that and doing great so If he had lived longer, I think he would have gone not just as an investor but also shown that he could be an operator. you said something like if you had lived longer this idea of like runway and how early you start yes matters a ton even Buffett I think you've said that

had he not been giving away so much money along the way, he'd be the wealthiest guy in the world right now. And I guess when you go talk to people, are you just sort of like, Yeah, you should have started 30 years ago. Is that the number one message? What we started our conversation with, right? I think the important thing is that if there's a young person listening, The funny thing is that if you look at the rules for an IRA or a Roth IRA

There's no minimum age. You could be six months old and have an IRA. The only rule is that you can only put in wages. that you earn and I was just reading in the Wall Street Journal there's some entrepreneur who's hired his kids who are like four years old and like six years old to do like different things in the business

Because he's putting like 6,000, 7,000 into their Roth IRAs, which is equal to their W-2 earnings, right? I'm probably stretching the limits of what he can get away with with the IRS. That's beautiful! I mean the thing is that but but even if you're not doing that if you start at 22 I mean that's the important thing is that when you when you start earning at 22 a small amount saved at 22 is more important than a larger amount saved at 32

because you get started earlier. So it's really important to have the whole spend less than you earn and put it into Berkshire. set it and forget it. Right. Yeah, because then if you start at 22 and you're 22 today, you're going to live over 100. Right. You know, you're going to go to 100, 110 by the time, you know, all the advances taking place. That's a 90 year runway.

I mean a 90-year runway is something. I mean if you're talking about even a 10% return We are only going to look at doubles, right? So every seven years that's 2 to the power of 13 total power 10 is a thousand that's two thousand two that's eight thousand Okay, the first ten thousand you invested is at eight million, right? The second thousand ten thousand another eight eight million, you know, so the thing is it's a mind-blowing amount of money

if you start early. So the length of the runway is really important. Do you pay attention to the macro because you know, my head starts to spin interest rates and then there's wars and there's all these different factors. that you could pay attention to. And there are some people who really pay attention to that. Do you pay attention to the macro? No, because I can't handicap and I wouldn't know what to do with the information. So I always try to keep the bet simple.

I need to be able to explain to a 10 year old in five sentences. Right. I'm not going to be able to figure out the macro. That's why I couldn't make that CDS bet. Right. You know, it was like so much stuff going on about housing is going to crash. It's going to happen. That's going to happen.

I mean, I just couldn't get my arms around it. In my world, everybody's talking about AI. Do you think about AI at all? The problem is I bring nothing to that party. And I'm probably going to get my head handed to me if I try to participate. It's not in the no-brainer category. It's not something where I have an edge. Of course, I do believe that it's transformational.

But, you know, I knew the internet was transformational. We've known electricity is transformational. We've known the app stores transformational. But in investing, you can do extremely well. without understanding all these things you go back to John Ariega you know don't understand any of these things or even Warren Buffett and you know Apple Apple is in the rear view they sold most of it yeah and they might have sold all of it by now but but basically

That was the one and done. But basically, I think that we don't need to understand flavor of the day. We don't need to understand NVIDIA. We don't need to understand AI. If you understand it, more power to you. That's awesome. And if you know how to leverage that understanding into dollars you can make, that's even better. But that's not me. So we all have to play to our strengths.

Okay, well Manish, this has been incredible. Part two, I'm happy with it. I asked you at the beginning, I said, is this like one of those Hollywood sequels where the first one was incredible and the second one, they just They just did it. But no, I think we did a good job. I think the sequel was, if not better, at least as good. No, it was fun. I enjoyed it. It was awesome. Awesome. Thanks for doing it. I put my all in it like my dad Let's travel never looking back.

Everyone, a quick break. My favorite podcast guest on My First Million is Dharmesh. Dharmesh founded HubSpot. He's a billionaire. He's one of my favorite entrepreneurs on earth.

And on one of our podcasts recently, he said the most valuable skill that anyone can have when it comes to making money in business is copywriting and when i say copywriting what i mean is writing words that get people to take action and i agree by the way i learned how to be a copywriter in my 20s it completely changed my life i ended up starting and selling a company for tens of millions of dollars

And copywriting was the skill that made all of that happen. And the way that I learned how to copyright is by using a technique called copy work, which is basically taking the best sales letters and I would write it word for word and I would make notes as to why each phrase was impactful and effective. and a lot of people have been asking me about copy work so i decided to make a whole program for it it's called copy that copy that dot com it's only like 120 bucks

And it's a simple, fast, easy way to improve your copywriting. And so if you're interested, you need to check it out. It's called Copy That. You can check it out at copythat.com.

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