The Tortoise Speaks...

A blog which periodically revisits evergreen investment principles!

Physical Fitness & Investing

Does staying fit help in anyway to become a good investor?

I was listening to a very honest interview, with Mikael Syding, a former hedge fund manager from Sweden. What struck me the most about this interview, were not just his thoughts on investing but also about fitness.

Historiography – A great tool for investors

The Truth can be adjusted

Michael Clayton (2007)

864full-michael-clayton-posterLately, I have been spending a lot of time reading business biographies. I have always been enamoured by the ability of some investors to weave stories and narratives out of historical facts.

Kung Fu Investing

I recently presented on the Alibaba Group & its founder Jack Ma (lovingly known as Crazy Jack) at FoF. While reading about the culture of the firm, it was obvious that they’re heavily influenced by their founder’s love for martial arts and historical Kung Fu Fiction. It’s so much woven into their culture, that Jack Ma’s nickname in the company is “Feng Qingyang” which comes from a character, who is a reclusive, unpredictable & aggressive swordsman.

Great Conversations

True history of the world is the history of great conversations.

– Tyrion Lannister (Game of Thrones)

Great Conversations: A Pensive Tyrion, Picture from HBO

A Pensive Tyrion, Picture from HBO

If you have caught up with the last week’s episode of Game of Thrones, you’d have noticed Tyrion drop this line. It’s one of those moments when life connects with art.

Is New Really Better?

Is New Really Better?

The fundamental impulse that sets and keeps the capitalist engine in motion comes from the consumer’s goods, the new methods of production or transportation, the new markets, the new forms of industrial organization, that capitalist enterprise creates.

– Joseph Schumpeter

I love Apple products. But that’s not what this post is about. It’s about a very interesting concept which we all fall prey to at some point in time. We (humans) always crave new experiences. In fact as Schumpeter says in the quote above, making new things is a sign of growth. What he doesn’t mention there & is perhaps hidden between the lines is that it only works when we’ve mastered the other things we’re previously good at. New for him meant incremental.

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