RARE interview with the "Indian Warren Buffett" - Mohnish Pabrai

Primary Topic

This episode focuses on Mohnish Pabrai's approach to investing and entrepreneurship, his interactions with Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger, and his unique insights on minimizing risks while maximizing gains.

Episode Summary

In this insightful interview, Mohnish Pabrai shares his journey from an entrepreneurial background to becoming a renowned investor, drawing parallels between business acumen and investment strategies. He discusses the profound influence of mentors like Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger, emphasizing the importance of understanding human psychology and risk in investment. Pabrai delves into his philosophy of 'Dhandho'—a low-risk, high-reward approach—and explains how early business ventures and personal experiences shaped his investment tactics. The discussion also covers his views on value investment, the significance of branding in business, and how the right mindset can lead to exceptional success.

Main Takeaways

  1. Embrace a low-risk, high-reward investment strategy to maximize returns.
  2. Early entrepreneurial experiences are invaluable for honing business and investment acumen.
  3. Mentorship and learning from seasoned investors like Buffett and Munger can provide pivotal insights.
  4. Understanding consumer behavior and brand dynamics is crucial for business success.
  5. The right mindset and approach to risk can significantly influence investment outcomes.

Episode Chapters

1: Early Lessons from Business Ventures

Mohnish shares stories of his early business experiences, which laid the foundation for his investment philosophy. He emphasizes the importance of risk assessment and seizing opportunities. Mohnish Pabrai: "If you understand the big picture, you can change the big picture."

2: Investment Philosophy and Strategy

Discussion on Pabrai's investment strategies and how he applies business principles to investing. He reflects on lessons learned from Buffett and Munger. Mohnish Pabrai: "I'm a better investor because I'm a businessman, and a better businessman because I'm an investor."

3: Insights on Brand Value and Consumer Behavior

Pabrai explains the role of branding in business success and how consumer habits influence investment decisions. Mohnish Pabrai: "Understanding consumer behavior and brand dynamics is crucial for both business and investment."

Actionable Advice

  1. Start Small: Focus on low-risk opportunities with high potential rewards.
  2. Learn from the Best: Seek mentorship and learn from experienced investors.
  3. Understand Your Investments: Deeply analyze businesses before investing.
  4. Monitor Consumer Trends: Stay updated on consumer behavior as it directly affects business outcomes.
  5. Maintain Discipline: Stick to your investment philosophy even in volatile markets.

About This Episode

Episode 586: Shaan Puri sits down with Mohnish Pabrai for a rare interview about value investing.

Mohnish is sometimes called the "Indian Warren Buffett" for having turned $1M into over $1B+ through stock investing. In this podcast they talk about how founders can become great investors, how to avoid big mistakes, and lessons learned from Buffett & Munger.

Want to see Sam and Shaan’s smiling faces? Head to the MFM YouTube Channel and subscribe - http://tinyurl.com/5n7ftsy5

People

Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger, Mohnish Pabrai

Companies

Berkshire Hathaway

Books

"The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham

Guest Name(s):

Mohnish Pabrai

Content Warnings:

None

Transcript

Mohnish Pabrai
An idea is like an asshole. Everyone has one, okay? Ideas don't mean anything. This guy is known as the indian Warren Buffett. He's billionaire investor Mohnish Pabrai.

Shaan Puri
And last month, I went to his house and asked him to teach me everything he knows about investing. How did you make your money after taxes? After everything, I got a million dollars and I, for the first time, had money in the bank. That million became worth 13 million. And I said, wow.

Mohnish Pabrai
Well done, Mohnish. And so they got 70% a year, compounded. How the hell were you getting these returns? I'm always looking at what is hated, unloved. The key to moving the needle is inactivity.

Shaan Puri
I've met and become friends with Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett. Good afternoon, Mister Buffett. And good afternoon, Mister Munger. My name is Mohnish Pabrai. How does that happen?

Mohnish Pabrai
It shouldn't happen. When I look at a CEO, I always try to find out, did they run a lemonade stand when they were twelve? Because if they didn't run the lemonade stand when they were twelve, they're not going to be that great at business at 30. How stupid can you be? If you know the big picture, you can change the big picture.

The most important thing in life is. Are you a fan of bitcoin? Are you a believer? If you put a gun to my head, I would say, what do you. Think about Elon Musk?

Elon is not human. If I said, what's the number one trait that makes a great investor? What comes to mind? I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to.

Shaan Puri
I put my all in it. Like days off on a road. Let's travel. All right. Welcome.

Good morning. Great to be here. Sean, you are a great investor, but you started as a businessman. I'm a businessman trying to become a great investor. How do those two relate?

Mohnish Pabrai
In our brains, we actually use the exact same part of the brain in both activities. So Warren Buffett has a great quote. He says, I'm a better investor because I'm a businessman, and I'm a better businessman because I'm an investor. And in his case, a lot of people don't know. But Warren had done a lot of different businesses in different areas before he was 17, starting when he was, I think, five or six years old.

His very first business was buying Cokes from his grandfather's store at a nickel a piece and then selling them at a dime piece. Buy wholesale, sell retail. Yeah. So that was one of his first ones. And one of the things that a lot of people don't understand about the way our brains work is the human brain.

Actually, when we are born, it is the most underdeveloped organ when we are born because the birth canal is not wide enough. So for the first five years of life, the brain is the fastest growing organ that we have as humans. The neuron connections are growing at a exponential rate from the age of about eleven to about 20. That window is when the brain is set up to specialize and the neuron connections get cut. So they actually go down quite a bit.

But the brain allocates areas to hone in and specialize. So if you think of someone like Michelangelo or Bill Gates or even Warren Buffett, these guys started specializing at ten or eleven. And if you start writing code at the age of ten or eleven, for example, like Bill Gates did by the time he was 20, the expertise that he had, someone else starting at 20 would not be able to match him even at 50. So that ten year window is a very critical window in human development. And unfortunately, our education system doesn't recognize that.

Shaan Puri
And unfortunately I'm 35, so it's too late. We hope there are some eleven year olds listening, or we hope when you have, tell your kids. Yeah, it's not all. The cake's not fully baked yet. Hey, quick break to talk about our sponsor today we're talking about HubSpot and their new AI powered service hub.

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That's what they want and that's what they deserve. So visit HubSpot.com service to learn how this all new solution can help you deliver customer service with AI to your customers. So I think the thing with Warren was that I think when he was about ten or eleven years old, he was running a bunch of very interesting businesses. What was he doing? I've never heard these, so I didn't know this back.

Mohnish Pabrai
One. First businesses was he used to go to this racetrack in Omaha called Aksarban, which is Nebraska spelled backwards. And he used to publish racing tips called Stable Boy selections, basically telling you what horses to bet on and then also, what he would do is when all the races had been run, he'd collect all the discarded tickets on the ground, and he'd go home and go through each one carefully to see if some drunk had thrown out a winning ticket. And he'd find a few. He'd find a few, but he was too young to go to the window to collect under 18.

So he would give them to his aunt Alice, who would go and collect for him around the age of 14 or 15. He had a very good friend in high school called Don Danley, and Dandley was a tinkerer. He was very mechanically inclined. So one time, I think, Warren went to his home, and he saw that Don's working on a pinball machine in his garage, and he asked Don what he's doing. He said, oh, I just bought this pinball machine that wasn't working.

They gave it away. I paid like $15 for it, and I think I can get it working. And Warren asked him, how much is it going to cost? He said, it's going to cost like $3 in parts and maybe a couple of hours to get it working. And then Warren says, can you find more machines like this which don't work?

He said, oh, yeah, there's a lot of machines you can buy which people. People don't want them because they don't work, etcetera. So Don and him formed a company, in their minds, never actually incorporated anything. They called it the Wilson Coin operated amusement Company. And they went to barbershops in DC.

And these two boys, kind of nerdy looking 15 year olds, they went to the barber and said, look, we work for a Mister Wilson. And Mister Wilson did not exist as a fictitious character. We work for Mister Wilson. And Mister Milson has asked us to present you with a proposition that we can put a pinball machine in the barbershop, and we'll come by once a week, and whatever coins are in there, we'll split it 50 50 with you, half for you and half of Mister Wilson. So the barber said, yeah, put it in the corner, right?

And so Warren got Danley busy fixing pinball machines, and the two of them would go on weekends and, you know, get barbershops every week. They're making some money. And so I think he had eventually something like 40 bars, barbershops with these machines. And Warren said that the first week he went back to the first barbershop, he thought he died and went to heaven. So there was like five or $6 in there.

And so their take was about like $3 on $18 of capital in one week. Right. And he just told Don, go as fast as you can. Danley, what are you doing right now? Exactly?

Warren had all these different businesses that he was a senior partner, and whoever he was working was a junior partner. One time, Danley showed him an ad for a Rolls Royce for sale for $300. But it didn't run. It was old, beat up Rolls, and people is giving away like junk. Right.

And he thought he could fix the Rolls. So they bought the Rolls for 300, maybe another $50 in parts. And Danley had it running. And then they spruced it up, and they would rent it on weekends for $100 to weddings. And then on the weekdays, the two of them would go to school, the high school, in the roles.

So what happened is, and Warren, he didn't know this, but he was specializing and figuring out business in that window of time, the eleven to 20. Right? And so by the time he was 1918 or 19, I think he went to college when he was 17. By the time he was 17 and went to college, he had $15,000. And he told his dad, I'm going to pay for my college myself.

And he also told his dad, I don't need an inheritance. Whatever money there is you're leaving, leave it to my two sisters. I'm good. And 15,000 back then is a lot. It's about ten to one.

Shaan Puri
So 150 grand, 17 year old. Yeah, think about 17 year old, 150k. Right. And at that time, college was cheap. And the other thing is that he got interested in investing.

Mohnish Pabrai
His dad was a stockbroker, so he used to go to his dad's office on the weekends. And he says that at the age of eleven, he bought his first stock. And he said, I was wasting my time till then. But he didn't really have a philosophy. He didn't have an investing philosophy.

At 19, he read the intelligent investor by Ben Graham, and that was transformational. And he thought Ben Graham was this guy who died and passed away. But then he discovered that Ben Graham was teaching at Columbia. He was a professor at Columbia. So when he finished his undergrad, he applied to Columbia to go to business school there so he could learn directly from Ben Graham.

And he joined Columbia's MBA program. Must have been 20 or something. And then, of course, after that, Graham hired him. And isn't there some story where he tells Graham, like, I'll work for you for free, and Ben Graham says, your price is too high? That's correct.

Shaan Puri
He still ended up convincing him somehow. So actually, Graham. At that time, Jews were very heavily discriminated against. There was a lot of anti semitism on Wall street. So Ben Graham, who was jewish, wanted to give the few jobs that he had to jewish kids and young jewish people, because there just weren't many opportunities.

Mohnish Pabrai
So he basically told Warren, look, I got to take care of the community. But then Warren went back to Omaha, and about a few months after that, Graham called him and said, if you want to come to New York, I got something for you. And Warren never asked him what the salary was, what the position was. He just took the next train to New York with his wife. His experience as a businessman, he was very lucky.

It got seared in, in that window of time. And both Warren and Charlie, they can crack businesses and business models really fast. So when we start a business, we will spend maybe three or four or 5% of our time on figuring out the strategy. What's going to be the product service, market pricing. Yeah.

All the. How are we going to make it work? And all the different plans, and then 95, 97% is all the blocking and tackling to make it happen. It's Dan Lee fixing machines. Yeah, exactly.

In the case of investing, we use the same brain cells that we use in that three to 5% of time. And basically, one of the things that attracted me to investing was that, basically, that 3% becomes 80% because we don't need a Danley. We've got public companies and all of that, and we just have to pick which businesses we want to own, partially, and which ones we want to ride and so on. And so I think that I always find it strange if I run into investors who haven't been entrepreneurs, because I think they're missing a very key part. And on the other hand, I find that entrepreneurs are very naturally already set up to be great investors if they make a couple of tweaks.

But what ends up happening is that we don't see a lot of entrepreneurs becoming investors, and we also don't see, we see a lot of investors who haven't built businesses, met payroll, and so both have flaws. So if you had the good fortune of having the entrepreneurial experience, then I think looking at the Buffett munger frameworks, it's a very easy transition. Right. It's probably also easier to go business to investor than investor investor for a long time, then suddenly go try to be an entrepreneur. Well, investor to business.

The problem is the windows closed. Right. So you'd be at a disadvantage to start with. But, yeah, the earlier you start on, both endeavors, the better off you are. There's a great, I don't know if you've seen this, but I didn't know, like I always heard, okay, Warren and Charlie, great investors.

Shaan Puri
I read the shareholder letters, and the shareholder letters are often, they're amazing, but they're very like high level and they're philosophical in a way. Then you have, I saw this letter of Warren writing a letter to this, I think the CEO of Sees Candy. I don't know if you've seen this, but it's a letter. And I expected it to be very, again, philosophical, amusing. Instead he's like brass tacks.

Right away he's like, I went to the store and I have a few ideas for you. It is a very operational, tactical. I noticed this price point. I noticed this and I was like, oh, he's a businessman today. We only think of him as one bucket, but actually he's got both gears.

Mohnish Pabrai
Sees is a wonderful business. It taught them a lot. It taught them more than they ever thought they'd learn from a stupid candy business. But one of the things Warren did when he first bought seas is he told the CEO, listen, you got free rein, run the business like you've been running and so on and so forth. But on December 26, I'm going to set the prices for the next year.

He would sit down with the entire seas price list and he would bump all the prices by ten or 15%, and inflation might have been 3%. He would raise prices significantly above inflation. And what he would observe is volumes went up. And then the year after that, he'd again bump it by another 1012 percent, and volume still went up. Both him and Charlie were amazed that you could have a business where you're continuously raising prices significantly above the rate of inflation, and there's no resistance from the customer base to accepting those prices.

And that's what gave them a huge lesson in brands. And he was a dyed in the wool, hardcore deep value investor. It was really hard for them. They paid three times book value for seas. They were choking almost when they paid that amount.

So I think they bought seas for like 25 million. Looking back, they could have paid 200 million and it would have been a. Still would have been a good deal. Yeah. And Seas has sent dividends to Berkshire in the billions.

I mean, it's been about 50 years since the purchase, and billions of dollars has flown from seas to Berkshire, which has then been used to buy a whole plethora of other businesses. And if you look at their purchase of coke, for example, they put a quarter of the entire book value of Berkshire Hathaway into coke in 1988. If they had not bought Seas, they would have never bought coke. So the lessons that they learned about branding and the power of brands is what led to the Cork investment, which was a much bigger home run. And they've made many more brand investments since then.

Shaan Puri
Half the portfolio is in Apple right now. Right? Yeah. So one of the biggest brands in the world. And I think, I think Warren understood this notion of consumer behavior and how powerful brands can be and how powerful habits can be.

Mohnish Pabrai
And then he went from there. So. Yeah, absolutely. And one of the interesting things about sees is that sees wasn't this fast grower. It wasn't.

Shaan Puri
They bought it and then sales exploded. But I think the beauty of sees, if I remember correctly, is that it was just no additional capital had to go in, so everything was just free cash flow coming out. So seas is very much a California story, right? I mean, it was founded in California. Almost all the sales were in California.

Mohnish Pabrai
If you look at seas from the time they bought it till today, about 50 years, the unit volume has gone up on average 2% a year. California GDP probably at least in the seventies, eighties, nineties was going up about at least four or 5% a year. Part of that might have been the price increases, but even with those heavy price increases, they still got the volume going up slightly. But when you overlay that you do 50 years of 10%, that's a very big number. Sees is not cheap today.

Now Warren was very excited about being the candy muggle of the world. They tried really hard to send seas everywhere. They would open a store in Chicago and then fall flat on their face. Then they'd open in Arizona and they fall flat in place. They repeatedly tried over and over and over again to broaden seas and expand it.

And by and large, those efforts didn't work. Even today, the bulk of the volumes of seas is in California. And so when the Koch investment came about, they found something very different than seas. They knew seas doesn't travel well, but they could look at more than a hundred year history of coke and they knew coke travels really well. There are two countries in the world where you can't get coke, North Korea and Cuba.

Okay? If they opened up to coke in either of those two countries, and coke did not advertise at all, sales would take off. It's so embedded in the pop culture. So even in countries and places where they've never done any branding before, you know, people in Pakistan or India or Bangladesh they're having indian food with a Coke. So it's ubiquitous.

And that did not exist with seas candy. It wasn't ubiquitous. And Warren understood you can't consume infinite amounts of candy. There's an aftertaste and all that coke, you can actually consume a lot of. Right.

Shaan Puri
There's no, what does he call it? Taste memory. There's no aftertaste. Yeah. Yeah, that's right.

Mohnish Pabrai
So I think, like I said, I think they move from being hardcore quantitative, deep value guys to actually understanding a lot of nuances of brands and consumer behavior, which was very fundamental to how and why Berkshire did so well. So you talked about specializing, kind of that eleven to 20 years old ish windows today, you've done phenomenally well. You manage, I don't know, almost a billion dollars or maybe more, who knows? A lot of money and done incredibly well investing. Did you do that when you were 1120 or were you a late bloomer?

No, actually, it was just dumb luck. A lot of things in my life have been dumb luck. So my dad was a quintessential entrepreneur, and he was really good. So a great entrepreneur. One of the first traits you need is you need to be able to identify offering gaps, some product or service that ought to exist but doesnt, like Starbucks before Starbucks or McDonalds before mcdonalds, and so on.

Right. And so my dad was really good at figuring out that, oh, this product should be there, but isnt. And he was really good at identifying these offering gaps. He was also really good at starting businesses from scratch. But his downfall was that he was always very aggressive and he was always over levered.

So when the businesses were going, he was literally taking every last dime of profit coming in and everything that he could borrow and just pounding into the growth as aggressively as possible. And the negative was that when the first headwind showed up, the businesses had no staying power, and so they would run into trouble. So my brother and I think after we were like maybe nine or ten years old, we were like his board of directors. Okay? And I remember, like, when I'm ten or eleven years old, my dad, my brother and me would sit down in the evening and we had to figure out how to make the business survive for one more day.

So all the walls were caving in, there were everything going bad, and there were a lot of moving parts. And we put our heads together and we try to figure out how to make it last. Right. And then we'd make it past the one day and the next night the same thing over. Right.

And so I finished many mbas before I was. By twelve. I think at 15 or 16 I was. I don't know why my dad did it, but I'm really grateful he did. He used to take me on sales calls and, you know, who takes 15 year old on a sales call?

It just doesn't fit. But my dad didn't care. And that was just incredible for me because I was getting to see, I finished high school in Dubai, so I was in Dubai from the age of 16 to actually 19. And in that window of time, my dad had a gold jewelry business. And so we used to go, I used to go with him to these.

He was manufacturing gold jewelry and selling it to these retail merchants. And so he's going into cold calling, right? And I'm observing him going into a jewelry store. He doesn't know them. Were you a silent shadow or did you have a role in.

No, no, I was very silent, but I was soaking it in. And sometimes when he was traveling, my brother and I would run the business. So they were like all these goldsmiths and all that, and we'd manage giving them the gold and taking the jewelry and all that. So basically, I didn't realize it then, but when I went to college, I studied engineering and then I joined a telecom networking company as a R and D engineer. And when we were working on these products, I'd ask my boss, so what are we going to sell this for?

And who's the customer and what kind of, like, what are you going to make on it? And my boss would tell me, those are all questions for marketing and sales. We don't need to care about that, just design the product. He didn't know the answers. That's the poker tell.

He didn't know the answers. He didn't care. And I found that all the people I worked with, the engineers, didn't care. I said, how stupid can you be? You don't have the big picture.

The big picture is interesting and exciting. If you know the big picture, you can change the big picture. What I did after two and a half years with the nerds is I switched to international marketing. And that was such a breath of fresh air. It was so great.

And my learning again skyrocketed and I had a big advantage because I had a very strong engineering background, but I also had all the background for my teen years. And so what I found is that I was able to connect with customers and figure out kind of what they wanted and how to really get the order much better than guys 20 years more experienced than me, because they hadn't had all these experiences and they didn't think like an entrepreneur. It was just a small subset. And later in life, when I heard about Buffett for the first time, I found a lot of commonality. He had a very different experience in the sense that he was his own entrepreneur.

But one of the things that's really important is that when I look at a CEO, I always try to find out, did they run a lemonade stand when they were twelve? Because if they didn't run the lemonade stand when they were twelve, they're not going to be that great at business at 30. Okay. The little itty bitty lemonade stand has a lot of lessons. And so I think when we have kids, I think it's really important in that window.

They don't need to run lemonade stands, but they really need to be doing what's going to be their calling. And I think that's what the biggest responsibility of parents is. They need to expose them to more of what they think their passion is. You know, I've done like maybe 500 plus episodes now of this, and the podcast is named my first million. Because when we first started, I would just say I was fascinated by the many different ways people became millionaires.

Shaan Puri
I thought, that is cool to hear the stories. That's how the podcast started. And along the way, I noticed three common things of what you were doing in your teens. Cause I used to ask this question, I was like, you know, you're amazing. Now, if I met you when you were 14, what were you doing?

And would I have known that you were going to go on to do things? And most people are very humble. They're like, oh, you wouldn't have known. But then when I say, what were you doing? It's always something that no other 13 or 14 year old is doing.

It's like, oh, yeah, I used to go to the shop and I found these, you know, these CDs, Rosetta Stone, that I could go sell for three x on eBay. And I made an eBay account. Or, you know, I started buying shoes and flipping them. So it was always like, eBay flipping or sneaker flipping is like a super common one. Another one was competitive video games because a lot of the strategy, you know, communication, collaboration, you know, just extreme competitiveness gets built in there.

And there's a couple others, but another one is like a Mormon mission. So Mormons who go and have to sell, you know, Jesus to a bunch of people get rejected a thousand times in two years. They become incredible salespeople and so you see these backgrounds where, oh, you were kind of forged at an early age to do this. Well, we have a common friend, you know, Saeed Balki, right? And you interviewed him for your podcast.

Mohnish Pabrai
Saeed was an entrepreneur at the age of eight or nine, maybe even earlier than that. He was selling greeting cards. He was making and selling on street corners. And then by the time he was eleven or twelve, I think he was writing code and make a website and went from there. How did you make your money?

Shaan Puri
Give me the highlights of your progression in terms of your own ability to generate money and then start to invest it. I actually never ever wanted to be an entrepreneur. I never wanted to start a business because I had seen so much turmoil, trauma in my childhood, right? And I remember I was like 24 or 25 years old and my dad was visiting me, I was living in Chicago. And he tells me it's time to quit and start your own business.

Mohnish Pabrai
And so I said, you know, have you forgotten? Have you forgotten my childhood and all the ups and downs? So my dad just said, oh, that's what makes life great. But he said, look, the company you're in, the business I work for had 2000 people. He said, you're such a tiny cog in such a big wheel.

You could drop dead tomorrow. They won't even miss you. You don't matter. And what you really want to, to be doing is figure out something where there's an offering gap and go for it. And I was actually getting a little bit frustrated at work because the company had been growing.

It would get more and more bureaucratic. And so I actually started to think about what might be possible. And I didn't have any money. Basically, I was 24, 25. So what I did is I came up with some IT services offerings that I thought would be pretty unique because at that time, client server computing was just getting going early nineties, I had about $30,000 in my four hundred one k.

And I said, okay, we'll worry about retirement later and we'll pay the penalty. I pulled that out and I applied for every credit card I could get my hands on. And so I had 70,000 available to me in different credit limits in credit cards. And so I said, okay, we've got up to 100,000 that we can play with. And the third thing that I did is I basically did both.

I was going to my job and I had started my company at the same time because basically what I would do is like, from like six to nine in the morning, I'd work on my business. And then from 06:00 p.m. Till midnight, I work on my business again and weekends, but somebody was paying the rent. I still had a paycheck and all that. And I said, okay, once we have enough revenue, clients profit, I can quit, right?

And I always tell people that, basically, if you think about it, there's 168 hours in a week. Your employer needs you for 40, right? And if you live close to work or work remote, the commute time is not that much. And even if you take out time for eating, sleeping, everything else, you have at least another 40, 50 hours that you can engage on something other than work. And I used to always get great reviews when I was starting my business.

I said, okay, look, the plan is to not get fired. The plan is not to be employee of the year, right? I don't need to overshoot. So I said, I'm going to give them just enough so I'm just above firing level where it's not so bad that they call me in and terminate me. I need to be above that, okay?

And I did this over nine months, and then I had clients, revenue and all that. And I went into my boss and his boss, and I resigned, right? And they said, you know, mohnish, we really couldn't figure out last nine months like you checked out. I said, exactly. I said my goal was to just do enough so I didn't get fired.

But she said, yeah, we saw a big drop in the old monish and the new monish, and we talked about it, and we actually said it's not so bad that we would fire him, but there's something off. We couldn't figure it out, right? And then, so I explained to them I was going into a business. My own business was not competitive with theirs. And so they said, look, when your business fails, not if your business fails.

When your business fails, you can come back, we're going to give you more money, we're going to promote you, and you're going to do great. So I said, my plan was that if I failed when I was going to my business, if I failed, I said, look, I got my degree. I can look for a job. I can apply for personal bankruptcy, clean everything off and start over. I said, this is even better.

I don't have to look for a job. I get more money. I actually felt like the, you know, people think there's a. People have a false mental model. People think entrepreneurs take risk.

Entrepreneurs do not take risk. They do everything in their power to minimize risk. If you think about Buffett's pinball machine business. What was the risk those 214 year olds, corny's 14 year olds, took? Nothing.

Okay. It's $15 in a pinball machine, which they could use themselves. Worst case scenario, $3, $3 in parts. So the second pinball machine will only get bought when the first one's already producing cash and the third one after the second one. So basically, there's no risk.

Right. If it fails, they sell those machines for more than they bought them. Entrepreneurs are actually great risk reducers. They start with something that seems risky. But so that's the other thing that is a commonality between entrepreneurs and value investors, which is why the same brain cells get used.

Both are trying to minimize risk. We, as value investors, want to go low risk, high return. And great entrepreneurs, that's exactly what they're doing. They're going low risk, high return. Nobody is doing high risk, high return.

The only. So if you look at the United States, probably around a million businesses, more than a million businesses a year get formed in the United States. Venture backed businesses are less than, much. Less than even 1% of that piece might be, in most years, less than one 10th of 1%. So if there was no venture capital and no venture backed businesses, it would make no difference to the landscape.

Okay. We'd still have the million businesses being formed. Venture backed businesses are a different animal because they are high risk, high return. What the VC wants you to do. The VC's got ten bets.

He doesn't care whether your bet works or not. He just wants one of those ten to work. So he wants you to step on the gas as aggressively as possible. If you blow up, you blow up. When you're an entrepreneur who's not venture backed, that is not how you go.

You don't put just foot on the gas. You're very careful about downside protection. So what happened? Some of the big entrepreneurs who Richard Branson, I think, is, the people see him as this free risk taker, reckless sort of guy. But you've pointed out that that's not true about Richard Branson in this case.

One of the stories I love about Branson is when he had the idea to start Virgin Atlantic airline. The minimum that you need to start transatlantic service is a Boeing 747. Okay? A couple of hundred million dollars, right? And Branson got Virgin Atlantic off the ground with no money.

So what he did is he calls directory assistance in the United States, 555 120. In Seattle, 206-55-1212 asks for the number for Boeing. Okay? Gets the number for Boeing calls the main switchboard and says, I'd like to lease a 747 that you guys might have hanging around that you're not using. They hang up on him, okay?

He keeps calling them. And finally, the lady of switchboard says, let me transfer you to someone who can get rid of you properly. She transferred him to someone who's head of commercial sales. And so this guy tells him, listen, Mister Branson, in every country we have one customer and you are not the customer. In the UK, it's British Airways, and so therefore there's nothing to talk about.

So Richard tells him, listen, I agree with you, that's fine, but just humor me for a second. Do you have an old Boeing 747 lying around that you're not using? He says, yeah, actually we do. If one of your customers, like the one in the UK, called you, like British Airways called you and they wanted a plane, what would you lease it for? So he says, well, I really don't need to have this conversation, but we would lease it for about 200,000 a month, okay, two or 300,000 a month.

And Branson was able to convince Boeing to lease him that 747 because he was sitting and doing nothing. Then when he set up Virgin Atlantic, he said, you get paid for all the future flights in advance because people buy tickets. So the plane is going to fly in April. People already bought tickets in February. So you say, I got cash coming in two months, three months before the plane is going to fly, and I'm going to pay for the fuel 30 days after that plane lands.

So he had negative working capital and the lease payment is also in arrears. So basically, he was able to get Virgin Atlantic off the ground with zero equity. Now, the way I look at it is that if you can start an airline with no money, you can start any business with no money. You just have to replace capital with creative thinking. How is it possible that 0.1% of the population owns almost 70% of all the motels in America?

Shaan Puri
That's an incredible story. Can you explain? How is that possible? In the early seventies, a dictator came to power in Uganda. Idi Amin.

Mohnish Pabrai
And Idi Amin noticed that in Uganda, most of the businesses were controlled by East Asians, Indians, Patels. They control like, 80% of the economy. And these patels had come to Uganda. They were brought to Uganda about 100 years ago to work on the railroad, almost as slaves, right? But because they're natural entrepreneurs, they went from railroad builders to eventually owning and controlling his whole economy.

And he was pissed. So Idi Amin said, Africa is for Africans, and you guys are not Africans. And these Patels had been in Uganda for three or four generations. That was their home. They were ugandan citizens born and raised, right?

And what he did is he nationalized all their businesses and he threw them out of the country, which just means. Took their businesses, right? He just took them. He basically confiscated all, not their businesses, homes, everything, confiscated all the assets. And he told them, you got 90 days to leave the country.

So these patels in Uganda were stateless, okay, you're being thrown out, you know, you citizen of a country, the country is throwing you out, right. And they lost all their money. So they were able to convert a very little small sliver of their assets into gold. And the United States took some patels as refugees. The UK took them, Canada took them.

India, surprisingly, refused to take the Patels, refused to recognize the Patels had any right to return to India because they said, you havent been here for 100 years. And India was at that time dealing with the Bangladesh refugee crisis, so it couldnt deal with any more. But a small number of patels, a few thousand of them, came into the United States in the early seventies. The refugees, they didnt have skills where they could get great jobs. They didn't have.

They spoke English with a funny accent. And they realized that, look, if we buy a really small motel, 10, 12, 14 room motel, the family can live in one or two rooms. Motels are labor intensive. The family can do all the work. It's a job and a house together.

Yeah. So basically cooking, cleaning, front desk, laundry. And so what they started doing is they would buy these motels and basically fire all the staff and move in into two of the rooms. And because they had no costs, they were able to charge nightly rates that were lower than all the neighboring motels. So what would happen is that the Patel owned motel would be running 100% occupancy.

The other motels couldn't match that rate because they'd lose money, because they had staff, workers comp and staff and all that stuff. And what the Patel started to do, and Patels are very frugal. They basically were vegetarians at that time. In the US, if you were vegetarian, you're really host. You couldn't really eat out anywhere.

So they were forced to just cook themselves, which was cheap, so there wasn't much of a grocery bill. And what they started doing is, as their nephew came of age, for example, they would help him out to buy his own motel, and then the nephew would get that going and then the next one, the next one. And you run this for 50 years, and you end up with 70% of the motels in the country under Patel ownership. Not only that, they've actually gone up market now. So a lot of the Hiltons, Marriotts, Westerns, if you really look, youll find its under Patel ownership.

Same math. They always are very good operators. And then they went into 711 laundromats, Dunkin donuts, all of it, you name it. But bottom line was that these were entrepreneurs that were low cost producers. Low cost producers have an inherent advantage.

And I remember when I first, when I first met Charlie, he had read my book, and we were discussing the Patels. He says, yeah, I got some friends in the motel business. I just tell them, don't ever, ever try to compete with a Patel. If you ever find yourself in competition with a Patel, just find another game to play. Just move on.

It's not worth it. Hey, let's take a quick break to tell you about our sponsor. It is a podcast that we want you to check out. It's called d two c Pod. It's hosted by Ramon Barrios and Blaine Bolas.

Shaan Puri
It is brought to you by the HubSpot podcast network, the audio destination for business professionals. And this is a podcast about all things direct to consumer d two c. It's e commerce stores. It's how you optimize your brand. And they're talking with founders, marketers, and platform creators about all kinds of things that you need to know.

For d two c, you know, website conversion, paid ads, Facebook ads, consumer trends, email marketing. If you want to know the stories behind your favorite brands, this podcast is for you. They did an episode recently about scaling creator growth and influencer incentives that I thought was pretty cool. So check it out. Listen to DDC Pod wherever you get your podcasts.

So you said you met Charlie. That's got to be kind of a surreal thing for you to have met and become friends with Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett. How does that happen? How does that come about? It shouldn't happen.

Mohnish Pabrai
I was this scrawny kid who grew up in the suburbs of Mumbai, and I accidentally heard of Warren Buffett in the mid nineties. And it was a big aha moment for me at that time. I was lucky. The first couple of biographies on him had come out. And what I realized is, when I read about how Warren was investing, I said, all these models are the same models that an entrepreneur uses.

It's the same. Exactly what I was saying. That better businessman, because I'm an entrepreneur and vice versa. I said, but the big advantage he seems to have is that 4% of time of strategy is 80% time for him. And even in the business I had created, the IT business which had grown and scaled, I always enjoyed the 4% more, the strategy, the figure.

I was happy doing sales calls and building teams and all that. That was great. Do it once. I said, wow, if I go into investing it would be 80% of my time because there's no blocking and tackling. Someone else is doing that.

For me that was a big aha moment that I should switch. I was lucky. In the mid nineties someone bought a small portion of my business after taxes, after everything, I got a million dollars and I for the first time had money in the bank and I didn't really need the million. So I said okay, what we're going to do is we're going to take this million, we're going to invest in the public markets and we're going to find out if we can actually do this.

An idea is like an asshole. Everyone has one, okay. Ideas don't mean anything, right? So you really have to execute. It's really execution on the idea that has value.

You know, entrepreneurs get kind of hung up on, oh, I need to get a patent and all that. One of the things you have to understand is you can go to your most direct competitors, you can tell them all your trade secrets, they will listen to you really carefully and they will not change behavior. Okay. So you dont need patents for anything. The ideas dont mean anything.

Its really the execution. Basically I said okay lets take the million, lets start investing it, lets figure out what happens. And I was surprised. We did really well. I think that from 95 to 2005 year period, that million became what, 13 million?

And I said wow, well done Mohnish. So they got 70% a year compounded. Yeah. And so I was getting, I was doing investing part time while I was running my it business. I was much more interested in the investing side, losing interest on the business side.

Till that point when in 1999 I didn't even feel like going into work. I said this is, I just want to just focus on investing. And so I made a couple of big changes. Then I looked for and found a CEO to run my company and basically 13, 14 million I felt was enough to retire, do nothing. I could do investing full time.

My plan was, okay, someone can run the business, whatever's value is there, it doesn't matter. I can go off and just now do investing full time and I had a few friends who had basically, I used to just give them stock tips in the mid nineties, find some company and make the investment. After that, I didnt care who bought the stock. Ive already bought it. Id tell my friends, hey, I found this company.

You ought to see if you want to take a flyer on it and buy it and so on. And they did really well on the stock tips. But some guys worth like 5 million, they would put 10,000 to what I told them, and they would triple their money, wouldnt make any difference. A bunch of these friends came to me and said, look, we don't like this randomness of these stock tips. We don't see you sometimes, and you may have sold.

We don't know. We want you to manage some money for us. And so they were proposing giving me $100,000 each, and it would be a million dollars in all. I said, okay, I'll do it. I thought of it as a hobby.

I didn't even think of it as a fund, but I want to do it in a format that works for me. So I love the Buffett partnerships, where he didn't charge management fees, he only charged performance fees. So what's a normal structure? And then what did Warren do? So a normal hedge fund would be a two and 20 structure.

They would take 2% of assets as a management fee for breathing. Every year. Every year. And then 20% of the profits. Right.

So if a hedge fund, for example, let's say, has a billion, billion dollars under management, right. The general partners would take $20 million a year for breathing. For breathing. And then if it went up 10%, so they would make 100 million, for example, on the billion, theyd take another 20 million on that. So basically, what would happen is the investor who put up the money on a 10% return gets a 6% return below the s and P because of all these frictional costs.

So Buffett had run his partnership by saying that theres no management fee. The first 6% returns go to you, and above that, ill take one fourth and you take three fourths. So in the same situation, if the fund is up 10%, in Buffetts case, the first 60 million goes to the investors and the remaining 40 million is split. So it becomes 10 million to him and 30 million to the investors. So its half the fee, basically, and youre paying for performance.

If hes not up that much, you dont pay anything. So I like that structure. I told them I want to set up a fund. So its all legal, and we will do it with that structure. They really didnt care what structure it was.

Pabrai funds really started in 99 as a hobby with me and my buddies, and I had 13 million on the side, which was my main focus. And I said, yeah, theres another million here. Its okay if I find something I can buy for both, it makes no difference. About a year after that, there was about 2.5 million. We were up like 70% the first year.

And some more money had come in and I said, why do I treat the fund like a stepchild? Why don't I think of it like a real business, and why don't I basically grow and scale it like a real business? And so I started to do that. And paparai funds, we had a very good run for the first eight or nine years. I think we were doing like mid thirties a year on average, no down years.

And the assets grew. We were at about, I think in 2007, we were at about 600 million in assets under management. And I had made a lot of money, the fees and the compounding and all of that. So in a ten year period, you turned the million dollars of managed money into about $600 million of assets of management, including new money. Yeah.

It wasn't just organic, but the original money had almost tripled. Tripled or quadrupled in that period. I had asked you yesterday when we were hanging out, I said, you know, there's really two questions when you hear this story. Number one, how the hell were you getting these returns? So what did you know about invest?

Shaan Puri
What was that part? But the second part is, how'd you, what'd you do on the fundraising side? How'd you get so many, so much more money to come through the door? And you've had a great line about that, about how you get more money to come through the door. Because you didn't strike me as a guy who wanted to be out there fundraising and knocking on doors and trying to raise funds.

So how does it happen? Buffett has a great, great quote. He says that if you are in a rowboat in the middle of the Atlantic, they will swim to you in shock infested waters to invest with you. If you have beaten the market, they will find you. He says, you could be a leper and they will invest with you.

Thats what happened. Also, one of the things that was very difficult for me was that the SEC has a lot of rules and laws around hedge funds. One of those is you cannot solicit the general public. Right. So when I was running my it business, I could call on any CIO and say, hey, would you like to use our services, et cetera.

Mohnish Pabrai
I could literally call anyone out of the phone book. When you're running a fund, you can't just get a list of dentists in North Carolina and pound them. That's not legal. You can't do that. So the SEC said, you can only talk to people you know.

Okay. I said, the people I know, I'm going to run out of my Rolodex in like, five minutes. You know, there's very few people I know. So what I did is I started to meet my investors once a year for an annual meeting where I would give them their results and take their questions and all of that. And I told them, listen, there was one reason and one reason alone.

You were put on planet Earth, and that is to bring assets to Pabrai funds. Humans are always looking for a calling. They are looking for some cult leader to follow and be part of cult. Okay? You gave them one.

So, yeah, you know, they were. They were wandering in the wilderness. They needed purpose. Okay? So I said, here's what you need to do.

You need to go talk to your friends and family, because I can't talk to them. The SEC won't let me talk to them. You can talk to them, okay. You talk to them. You tell them about me.

You tell them to contact me. Once they contact me, I can engage with them. Okay? So go out and spread the word. Okay.

And send me more of your assets, too. Okay. So basically, what, like I said, I started with a million. A year later, it's 2.5 million. Two years later, it's 10 million, and it's growing.

And part of it was that the annual returns are adding, but part of it was that. So I had eight investors when I started. A year later, they were 17, and two years later they were 25. So now I had an audience of 25 to proselytize and spread the word and, of course, the results. Now, the other thing that was happening is that when I started the funds in 1999, we were nine months away from the biggest bubble about to burst that had happened in decades, the.com bubble.

I was able to see the bubble not very much in advance of the rest of the world, maybe just two or three months ahead. I knew the Internet was transformational, but I also knew that the euphoria was too much. We had pets.com trading at multibillion dollar valuations with no revenues. It was just common to have a lot of companies. People were counting eyeballs.

They're not counting dollars, and they're not looking at net income. Theyre not even looking at revenue. Theyre just looking at eyeballs. I said, okay, this is bad news. It will blow at some point.

The bubbles are going to burst. I didnt know when. I had always been a tech investor from the mid nineties, and id done really well. Tech had had a great run from 95 to 2000. It had just done really well, and id ridden that coattail.

But what I did in 99, when the fund started, and also with my own capital, is I did a 180. I switched completely to classic Ben Graham, deep value, what Buffett had started doing in the fifties. And one of the things that was happening in the equity markets at that time was the day the Nasdaq peaked. I think March 8 or March 9, 2000, was the day that Berkshire hit a multi year low. And literally, people were pulling money out of their Berkshire stock and buying pets.com dot.

Then that goes to zero. Eventually I said, okay, basically, theres a lot of basic businesses that had become really cheap because nobody was interested. So I was buying funeral homes at two times earnings and buying steel companies at three times earnings. And so a lot of basic businesses, which are very predictable and doing well, trading really cheap. And so Pabrai funds did really well.

In fact, the Nasdaq imploded. Basically, it hit 5000 in March 2000. By the time it bottomed out the next two or three years, it was at 1270, 5% drop. The Dow in the S and P didnt go down as much, but they also went down a lot.

It was a traumatic period for investors. It was a great period for me. It was very easy for me to talk to my investors because I was the only guy making money for them. Okay. If they had like five accounts, they just moved it all to me because everything else was going down.

Shaan Puri
Everything else was red. So thats how we got going. So in 2007, I think my net worth at that time was like 84 million. And Warren had been running these charity lunch auctions where once a year you could bid on eBay to have lunch with Warren Buffett, and the money would go to the Glide foundation, which was doing feeding the homeless and all that in San Francisco. So I said, I am using this guy's intellectual property and making all this money off him.

Mohnish Pabrai
I really have a big tuition bill I need to pay. So I said, the lunch is a great way to do that. I said, I can bid for the lunch and I'll meet Warren. I'll be able to thank him in person. And it goes to a cause that he supports.

So I thought about it. Okay, 84 million. Whats an appropriate tuition bill? I said, 2 million is good. I think if I gave him 2 million, id feel good about that.

I said, okay. I decided in 2007 I was going to bid for that lunch. And I decided I would go up to $2 million, and you can bring up to seven other people to that lunch. So I was going to take my family, but there still were a couple of seats empty. So I contacted my friend guy spear.

He lives in Zurich. I said, hey, guy, I'm going to bid on this lunch, blah, blah. And I said, do you want to come in with me? And I said, if you and your wife want to join us, because there'll be four of us and two of you, you can pay one third, and I'm willing to go up to 2 million. So guy says, well, that's too rich for me.

I can't pay one third of 2 million. He says, I'm good for a quarter million. So I said, okay, whatever the bid ends up at. You're capped at a quarter million, right. And so I bid for it.

It settled at 650,000, much less than what I was willing to pay. And then one third of that got paid by guy. And so my only agenda in meeting Warren was to just say, thank you, Warren, I didn't have. And of course, he was a big fanboy. And meeting him and all that Warrens agenda when he has these lunches is really different.

His agenda is he wants the people who won that lunch to feel like they got a great bargain. So he would take all our, what I would call our lemonade, lemon questions and turn them into lemonade. So hes always exactly what he does in the Berkshire meetings is hes a great teacher. And so he was trying to give as much value as he could in that lunch. And like he told us when we met him, he said, look, I got nothing going on all afternoon, right?

So when you guys are sick and tired of me, you just let me know and I'll leave. Right. We kept asking him questions for 3 hours, and then we were exhausted. And so we said, porn? We just don't have anything else to ask you.

He said, okay, I'll take off, no problem. And in that lunch, I told him, I said, look, warren, my wife, then Harina, I said, she's a huge fan of yours, but her true love in life is Charlie, okay? And Warren got competitive. He said, charlie is a very boring guy. He's a very kind of pessimistic.

Always says no to everything. I'm the guy who's really interesting. So he said what I'm going to do is you guys live in California, in LA, I'm going to set you guys up to meet Charlie for lunch and then when you meet him for lunch, you're going to find that he's useless and I'm the guy. So I thought he was joking about that, right? And two days later I got an email from his assistant to Charlie's assistant copying us, basically saying, hey, I met this wonderful couple in California and they seem to think you're more interesting.

I think they just don't understand. So I want them to meet you so we can set the record straight. Right. And so this is really what he was saying. This is exactly what he said in the email.

Right. Was he joking or was he not joking? And then Charlie's assistant sets us up to meet Charlie for lunch. Now Warren, you can bribe and have lunch with. Okay, Charlie, theres no bribing.

This is great. And so we met Charlie, my wife and I, we met Charlie in 2008 at the California club in LA. And I actually found that lunch a lot better than the Buffett lunch. Okay. It was great because I think Charlie is just so direct and I never expected these lunches or any of this to lead to anything.

It's a one and done. But it led to a friendship with Charlie. He started asking us to come to his place for dinner and I would meet him like four or five times a year for dinner. And then we started playing bridge together. Usually on Fridays he would play bridge at the LA country club.

I'd meet him about once a month or something to play bridge. And that used to be lunch and then about four or 5 hours of bridge after that. So it was a, a wonderful deep friendship for 15 years, which was unexpected. Just never expected that. Let's go back to the lunch.

Shaan Puri
You ask him questions for 3 hours. What were the interesting questions and answers? I know you've said one that I want to hear you explain because I didn't fully, I've heard the tidbit, but I want to hear the full story. Which was he said something about being a harsh greater of people. Yes.

What does that mean? Well, I told Warren, I said, warren, both you and Charlie are such good judges of humans and human nature. Were you always that good at figuring people out? So he says to me, mohnish, you're mistaken. I am useless at figuring people out.

Mohnish Pabrai
He said, if you put me in a cocktail party with 100 people and you gave me five or ten minutes to meet each person. I could tell you three or four people are exceptional and I could tell you three or four people you want nothing to do with. And the remaining 92 I would have no opinion on because not enough time to figure them out. But he also said that, look, what you do in life is those three of you people who are exceptional, you bring them into your inner circle. And obviously the three or four people who are not the great humans, you're not going to have anything to do with them.

But the third thing you do is you treat the 92 just like the useless humans. So he says be a harsh grader. So he says that when you have friendships and when you have people, you work with your peers and all that, he says there's a gravitational pull. If you hang out with people better than you, you're going to get better. If you hang out with people worse than you, you're going to get worse.

So he said that one of the things that most humans are not willing to do is loyalties get in the way for them, right? So they may have a friend who's kind of weird or quirky or has ethical issues, but they've had a long friendship so they'll keep that person going with them that has detrimental impacts. So basically I really took that to heart and I said that I really going to try to see if I can focus on the great relationships, the great people. And that's actually been a journey I've been on now for like 1617 years. It's been tremendous.

It's great now. It's unfair, right? Because you're treating the unknown the same as the useless people. But that's the way life is. I think that sometimes you have to make these difficult choices because if you don't do that then the impact of that is significantly negative.

And one of the things I realized when I started to get to know Charlie, I got to meet Charlie's friends. So I would play bridge with his friends. Id meet his friends. And what I realized is his friends were so off the charts. They were so exceptional.

I said, wow, this is like a different world, right? And I said Im going to take a shortcut. Im going to make Charlie's friends my friends because hes already done all the work. He did the filtering. You cant get a better filter than Charlie Munger.

I worked on building relationships with Charlie's friends and some of his family and that's been beautiful. I mean, some just great friendships and I realized that there's such a huge delta in off the charts, top 0.1%, top 1% of humans and the rest. And we talked about this. Adam Grant wrote this wonderful book, give and take, and he categorizes people in three buckets, right. The givers, the takers and the matchers.

Right now, the takers you don't want anything to do with, they're just going to want to extract whatever they can from you. So they're just not people you want to have in your life. The givers are people who are selflessly trying to help the planet, not really concerned about what comes back to them. Those are the ones you want to be with. And then the matchers, they're kind of doing math in their heads.

Oh, Shawn did this for me, so im going to do something similar for him. So even the matchers arent that great. So what you really want to do is you want to seek out the givers. And more important than that is you want to be a giver, right. And so the interesting thing that he pointed out in that book is that when youre a giver, the universe conspires to help you.

And I found it magical how? And Warren and Charlie are great examples of givers. Everyone's trying to help them in any way they can. And so that's the funny thing, is that the matchers who are trying to do this equalization, they end up losing. The best way to get the most is not ask for anything.

It'll all come to you. So these are wonderful models to incorporate. Yeah. There's even some game theory with that, which is the cost of excluding somebody who might be good or might be great is actually quite low to you. But the cost of accidentally including somebody who might have some toxicity, it's quite costly to you.

Shaan Puri
And so I think even in investments, he has the good pile and then the too hard pile. Warren has a lot of baseball analogies. He says that in investing, there are no call strikes in baseball. You're at the pitch, three strikes, you're out. He says, I can let a thousand balls go by, thousand stocks go by and not swing.

Mohnish Pabrai
I only need to swing when eight moons line up. Right. And so the fat pitch, right, the fat pitch, right. And so the thing is that we live in a world with infinite humans. If there are infinite humans, it also implies that there are infinite number of good humans.

So basically making a, excluding a good human from your circle because you can't figure them out, there's no penalty for that because there's an infinite supply. Just to put as wait for the fact that mathematical way, mathematically. But when you bring in a substandard person, there's so many drains, it's just negative. I want to hit you with some of your big investing philosophies and give me the kind of the punchy version of what does the phrase mean and how you use it. Let's do one.

Shaan Puri
Heads, I win, tails, I don't lose much. Well, I mean, I think this is classically comes from the patels, right. It's the Dhando philosophy. But this is how we want to do all our bets with people, with stocks, with everything asymmetric. Yeah, basically, where we always want to look for things where the odds are so heavily in our favor.

Mohnish Pabrai
And so in investing, we do get these anomalies where you take, what's one. That you've benefited from, or what's an example in your portfolio or your career investing, where you felt like you recognize asymmetric upside. Your downside was cap, but your upside was high. Well, I think that if I look at my first business, for example, I'm taking 30,000 for my 401k, which I can make up. And at that time, the credit card laws were very different, where if you declared personal bankruptcy, you got a clean slate and actually didnt affect your credit because you couldnt file again for seven more years.

So everyone will give you money after you filed. Actually, theyve changed the laws now. But at that time, what I had, I realized that starting a business has high rates of failure. I said, how do I minimize the risk on that? This is what all entrepreneurs do.

I said, okay, basically, if this thing blows up, which there's some probability that could happen, I got my job already. They want to take me back and I clean up the slate. And I'd also de risked it because the company was already cash flow positive by the time I quit my job. There was already a pipeline and such repeatedly. What I found is, even in investing, I'll give you an example.

For example, I think in 2000, there was a steel company in Canada, Ipsco, and I noticed that they were trading for three times earnings. The stock was at $45. They had $15 a share of cash on their balance sheet. They had no debt. And they had contracts over the next couple of years where they had said, our earnings for the next two years are going to be $15 a share each year, because these are not forecasts.

These were hard contracts. I said, okay, so the stocks at 45, if I just buy the stock and hold it for two years, I got $45 cash in the company. Now it was cyclical business. Third year could be zero, could be negative. But I said I own all the plant, equipment, everything for free.

My I made the investment, I put 10% of assets into IPSco and I said all I want to do is I want to see what Mister Market does with his stock in two years. Just going to hang out and see what happens. We make the investment and then a year later the company announces that were going to have one more year of $15 now youre going to have 60 versus 45 by now the stock has gone up and its sitting at about dollar 90 double in one year. So I said okay, its still a very cyclical business maybe we should take our chips off the table. And while IM thinking about all that, one day I wake up and the stocks at 155 some swedish company came and offered 160 to buy them.

Five minutes later I sold the company and moved on. So what Im saying is that thats what were looking for and in the equity markets because these are auction driven markets. When you look in areas which are hated and unloved, you will find these anomalies. Last year, for example, I spent about seven or eight months studying the coal industry. Full lettered word, hated and unloved more than anything else.

I mean a lot of endowments and funds are not even allowed to invest in the coal industry. Theres so much hatred for it. So you got excited. The math was like this. If theres a business that is going to exist for 50 years, on average, its going to produce a billion a year in cash flow thats going to be distributed to shareholders available to buy for less than 2 billion.

Where do I sign? Okay, that was the coal industry. And so it's like in auction driven markets, you repeatedly run into these things where things. There's companies emerging from bankruptcy, there's things that people just don't like. There's different reasons why things get mispriced, right?

Shaan Puri
You talked about like private markets versus public auctions and why you think public auctions present more of these dislocations, more of these opportunities. Well, I think that, let me put it this way. Let's say this home of mine was a publicly traded company listed on the NYSE. Every day its price would change. It would be wiggling here and there.

Mohnish Pabrai
If I look at the average public company on the New York Stock Exchange, the twelve month range of the stock might be 70 to 140 in twelve months. If I just throw a dart at any company in the New York Stock Exchange and I just look at the 52 week range on that stock price, it's going to be 60 to 170 to 130. So 50% swing. It's a big swing, right. My home, which maybe might go up 4% in a year or in a good year, maybe 3% would be vacillating in value.

It would be sometimes trading 20 30% more than its worth and sometimes trading 20 30% less than its worth. And if I had a realtor friend and I said to him, listen, can I call you every day and just tell me what my house is worth? The guy would think I was stupid, but I would call him on Monday and say hey, whats my house worth? He said its worth 2 million. I said oh, thank you.

I call him the next day, hed say still worth 2,000,003rd day. He said listen idiot, its 2 million. And after a month he would tell me, oh, its moved to 2,030,000 and then again he would be at 2,030,000 for a while. It wouldnt move because its an intelligent buyer facing an intelligent seller. Youre not typically going to get a company like IpSco available as the whole company for the price.

You can buy some shares because the whole company, theres an intelligent guy. The swedish company paid four times that price to buy the company. Thats just the nature of the reason ive always liked public markets is because there is so much irrationality. And if youre just willing to be patient, in a year, if I can make two good investments, it's a good year. We don't need a lot of activity.

We just need to be patient and wait for the times when something weird is causing a mispricing. Right? So let me ask you a few questions. So number one, should, in your opinion, should somebody just buy the index, low cost index fund or actively invest? The index is a really good way to go.

The index is too dumb to know that it owns Nvidia. And it's even more dumb, it's even more dumb that it'll never sell Nvidia or it's own Apple the last ten years and never sold it. For example, I would say for the overwhelming majority of humans, probably more than 99% of humans, you're best off just buying an index. And I think that the US equity markets and the US financial services industry is so efficient that the frictional costs for owning an index through an ETF is single digit basis points less than one 10th of 1%, less than 0.05% or 1% or so on. So it's very small.

And so I think it's very smart to go with indexing. Absolutely. Yeah. For the vast majority of people. Yeah.

For almost everyone. And for whom? Who shouldn't do that? Well, if you have the talent and the patience to figure out what a business is worth and then have the ability to buy those businesses well below what they're worth and patiently hold them, those sliver of humans that can do that would be better off just doing it that way. If I said, what's the number one trait that makes a great investor?

Shaan Puri
What comes to mind? Patience. If you are a guy who loves to watch paint dry, you paint a wall and just sit there and watch it dry, you will do very well. Did you ever watch Seinfeld? Some episodes.

Not religiously. The thing is that Elaine, Elaine is on a flight with her boyfriend. Okay. I forget the name of the boyfriend. And I think if you pull up Google, you can probably find this clip.

Mohnish Pabrai
The boyfriend is just staring at the seat back in front of him. Okay. And so Elaine says to him, would you like something to read? He keeps looking at the seatback and says, no, do you want to talk about something? And he says, no, he just doing nothing.

Just looking at the seat back in front of it. By the end of the flight, she's broken up with him.

He would have made a great investor.

Shaan Puri
That's what you need if you can. Be happy or Pascal had a great quote. He says that all man's miseries stem from his inability to sit quietly in a room at alone and do nothing. And so if you have this ability to watch paint dry, watch the back of an airplane seat for a few hours and just be in a Nirvana state, this is the work you need to be doing. I don't know if you know this, but you have fans in a subreddit on Reddit.

I don't know if you've ever, have you ever been on. I haven't done much on Reddit, so. I went when I was doing my research for this, I'm seeing what do people think about you, what questions do people have? And I go, and one of the best comments I thought was such a great compliment, they go, the day I knew that this is my guy I want to follow. He's on CNBC, he's on a tv show, and they're asking for stock picks.

So give me a stock pick. And they go around the core and everybody gives their stock. It's going to be this. It's going to be this. It's going to go up.

And they go to you and you go, I don't really give public stock tips like this. And they're like, well, you're on tv, you got to do something. And they're like, the comment was he refused to just randomly name a pic or tell people to go buy something. And the tv hosts were like, why are you on tv? And he was like, that's not what I do.

And he just stayed steadfast. And I thought it was such a great compliment, but also so big of a contrast from, you go watch Kramer or these guys and it's like, you go on and it's like overstimulation telling you you gotta do something right now. The opposite of patience, basically, is that should people avoid that? Yeah, I mean, I think that it's a big red flag if you're taking stock tips from some guy on tv. I think that's just not going to end well.

Mohnish Pabrai
The guy on tv is not going to be there when he's down 30%. He's all somewhere not available. Have you seen the reverse Kramer index? It's not just him. People just, whatever he said, do the exact opposite and you're up like you're crushing the market if you just did the exact opposite of this guy.

Yeah. Like I said, I think indexing is a great way to go for most people.

I wish in high schools or even middle school, compounding was part of the curriculum. From an investing point of view, it's really simple, but people don't pay attention to the math. There are three variables that matter with compounding. One is the starting capital you have. The second is the annualized rate of return you get.

And the third is the length of the Runway. Right now, there's something known as the rule of 72, which is a kind of mathematical, very helpful rule. Explain it. It's a beautiful rule. I learned this, luckily, one teacher in college, she used to be a student, she came back to teach because she's like, I wish we actually taught things that were relevant in the real world.

Shaan Puri
So she took it on herself, became a teacher to come back and teach personal finance. And the one thing she did was she's like, compounding is the 8th wonder of the world. And let me just tell you the rule of 72, very simple math. So the rule of 72 is just a mathematical quirk that happens to work. So for example, if I'm getting a 7% return a year, and I want to know how long is it going to take for this money to double?

Mohnish Pabrai
I can take 72 divided by seven. It's approximately ten years to double ten years. Right now, if I have a 10% interest rate that I'm getting, and again, if I do 72 divided by ten, it's seven years. So you can switch between the years or the interest rate and it tells you the other one. And this is the most important thing in life, is how long does something take to double, okay?

Because that basically leads to everything else. So, for example, if you look at someone like Warren Buffett, he started his compounding journey when he was like ten or eleven years old. I think he would say it's when he was seven years old. He's going to be 94 this year. Thats a 87 year Runway so far.

The thing is that if you have a really long Runway, then a low rate of compounding would still get you a big number. Or if you have a shorter Runway and a higher rate would again get you the same result. So its very important in life. And that's why I think that I wish they did this in high school, is to start that engine early. So, for example, let's take a situation of someone who's just finished college at 22 years old.

They got some job, maybe like making 70, 80,000 a year or something, and they put away $10,000 in their 401k. They're 22 years old. An index, right? The index has done 10% a year. Now what that means is the 10% a year means that that 10,000 will double every seven years.

So let's take a situation where the person is now 64 years old. Right? Now, they started at 22. It's 64. So it's 42 years.

42 years is six doubles, right? I do this to make it easy. Okay, so six doubles, right? That's two to the power of six. Two to the power of six is 64.

So that 10,000 that the person saved at 22 is 640,000 at 64. But that's not all they have. At 23, they save 11,000. That's again, sitting at some big number and you keep going. And, you know, sometimes we see these news articles.

There's some guy who's a janitor of some college and he gives 4 million to the college and lived in a one bedroom apartment, whatever, right? Why are we surprised? Okay, if you actually run the math, he actually didn't even save that much. And he didn't even have that. Such a great compounding engine.

It's not like he found Apple 20 years ago or something. That's not what happened. What happened was that there was a consistency. And so actually, my, my pushback to my dad when he was telling me, start a business is, I was telling him at that time, I said, look, I got a. Got $30,000 in the continued with 15% a year.

My employer at that time was matching the first 2%. So it was becoming 17% tax free, basically tax deferred. And my income is going up over time. I was. When I first started working, my salary was 31,000, right.

So I'm saving 4500 a year. Right. But if I was still working, my pay would have been hundreds of thousands or more. And I'm putting away a lot of money. So by the time I get to retirement, it's like it's game over.

Lots of extra cash available, no problem. And I never missed the money because it was pre tax. Right. Taken out. So it's just great.

So I think, I wish that young people understand that. Yeah. Listen, you can pursue lottery tickets, you can pursue entrepreneurial dreams. You can do all of that. That's fine.

But on the side, keep this going. And start it early. Let it be boring, let it be a stupid index fund, vanguard and whatever, and that's it. The tortoise is going to win the race. What's the circle the wagons philosophy?

Well, the circle the wagons philosophy actually came out of when I was thinking about Buffett's letter last year to the shareholders, the 2023 letter. He pointed out that in 58 years of running Berkshire, there were only twelve decisions that he had made that had moved the needle for Berkshire. Berkshire had a tremendous run. Theyve compounded. Till recently, were compounding at 20 plus percent a year for 58 years.

If youre 20% a year, you are doubling every three and a half years. That means after 35 years, its ten doubles, and 58 is another 23 years. So youve got another 616 doubles. Two to the power 16. Now, the way to do two to the power 16 is two to the power ten times two to the power six.

Two to the power ten round number is 1000. It's 1000 x. Right. And two to the power six is 64. It's 64,000 times what you started with.

Okay. If you started with $100, it's 6.4 million. Okay. $100 to 6.4 million. Okay.

So he's saying, I would calculate in the last 50 years, 58 years, Buffett's made three or 400, at least 400 different investment decisions. He's saying, twelve are the ones that mattered. Right. The God of investing has a 4% hit rate. That's the God of investing.

That's why we should index. What are the rest of us mere mortals supposed to do? Now? The thing is that I was thinking about his twelve bets, and I thought about, okay, which were the twelve? And I think he never mentioned that, but you could guess which one.

Ceas would be one of them. Coke would be another one. Amex, Gillette, capcities, Washington Post. You can come up with the names. Berkshire Hathaway energy, Ajit Jain.

Hiring Ajit Jain probably was the biggest bet for them. Paid off huge for them. What's the story with Ajit? There's something about the recruiter for him. So what I realized when I thought about these twelve bets was it wasnt the buy decision.

The buy decision is important. The important thing was they never sold. Seas, stayed in the stable for 50 years. Coke has been in the stable for 40 plus years. It wasnt the buy decision.

It was the paint drying decision that was the important thing. When you find yourself in the happy position of a small ownership in a great business, just find something else to do with your time. Play bridge or whatever. Have you considered golf? I have.

Golf is great. If you ask Charlie, he would say the single best decision, best investment Berkshire Hathaway ever made was the search fee they paid to hire Ajit chain. Okay, now, Ajit chain walks into their offices in 1980, 619 85, actually, never having worked in the insurance business, right from scratch, without them putting up venture capital or anything, the business he's created for them today probably has a value north of 100 billion. Okay. I mean, it just gets lost in Berkshire.

Berkshire is so big. But ill give you an example of a discussion I had with Charlie, I think maybe two, three months before he passed away. So he was telling me that Berkshire Hathaway writes super catastrophe insurance, like insurance against hurricanes, earthquakes and so on. Right. And many, many years when people are looking for earthquake insurance in Florida, of hurricane insurance in Florida, Ajith would look at the rates being offered and just take a pass.

Okay. Basically, he would find it's too competitive. Whatever else, people are not giving enough. Okay. What he did in 2023, and they mentioned it at the meeting, actually, is that he wrote hurricane insurance on Berkshire's behalf, reinsurance with a maximum payout of $15 billion.

So if these hurricanes had hit. Now, basically, the math is like this. I just want to explain how Ajit's mind works. Berkshire would pay out on a big catastrophe, earthquake, hurricanes, three to 5% of the total insured loss incurred. So for them to have a 15 billion payout, you would have to have had an event with insured losses in Florida of 300 billion, beyond Andrew and beyond Katrina is beyond all of those.

So it would need to be a really big event for them to have a 15 billion payout. The premium he collected to write that 15 billion policy. Take a guess. Take a guess. 5 billion.

He collected 5 billion. I was sweating that guess. But he collected. That's exactly what he collected. How much did he pay out in 230.

There was one that came through. My guess would be they might have paid out three. $400 million, collect 5 billion. And what Charlie said to me is, Ajit done this about six times. Okay.

Where he's picked the years that he's written these policies, because what was happening in most years is the premium offered was 2 billion. He just took a pass. All the other insurers wrote that policy. Berkshire took a pass. No.

Shaan Puri
Called strikes. And now, for example, we had some unusual losses. For example, that ship in Baltimore. Now, that's going to end up being about three to 5 billion in losses, and it's the biggest maritime loss in global history. It's going to change premiums for ships in the future.

Mohnish Pabrai
Berkshire will probably be writing when everyone else is saying, I don't want to do that. It's like the cat who sat on a hot stove and doesn't want to sit on any hot or cold stoves ever again. You know, you have a thing over there I saw in your office that says. It's like a placard. It says, trouble is opportunity.

Absolutely. That's a story of that. It's a quote by John Templeton. And actually a good friend of mine, Prem Watzer. In Canada, they call him Berkshire Hathaway of Canada.

Warren Buffett Canada. And I had seen that plaque on his desk, and somebody sent it to me. So it's a great quote. I mean, I think that that's what we are trying to do as investors, is we want. We need to be fearful when the world is greedy, and we need to be greedy when the world is fearful.

And so, basically, when the world is running away from coal, we need to run towards coal. So I'm always looking at what is hated and unloved. Right. And usually you will get a lot of mispricing when something is hated and unloved. Right.

Shaan Puri
Tell me about bitcoin. Are you a fan of crypto bitcoin? Are you a believer outside my circle of competence? I would say that if you put a gun to my head, I would say it's going to end badly. Why is that?

Mohnish Pabrai
It's in the eye of the beholder, there is no intrinsic value, as I understand it, to bitcoin. Now, you can argue that there isn't an intrinsic value to the dollar, but it has the full faith and credit of the US government, which is then backed by the hard working american people. So basically, I think that it's, for me, it's in the too hard pile. But I think for most people I would just say take a pass. Most people who have invested in bitcoin couldn't really tell you why it's or what it's going to be worth and why it should be worth that.

Shaan Puri
Okay, fair enough. So one of the reasons I wanted to fly here is because it's fun to meet these kind of outlier investors or even just hear the stories. And I've heard you tell a couple stories about guys I've never heard of that I would love for you to tell the story because I think most people have never heard of these people. So tell me about Nick Sleep. Who is Nick Sleep?

Or Junjunwala, whichever is your favorite. Give me one of the stories that. Well, I think Nick is a wonderful guy. And there's a book called Richer Weiser happier that came out two, three years ago and there's a chapter on him. Nick is very, he's a recluse.

Mohnish Pabrai
He doesn't do interviews and such. I was actually surprised he even talked to the author. But it's worth reading the book. And you know him, he and his partner Zach, they would come into their office and basically just sit and read annual report after annual report. They were blue in the face and they would want to see if they could understand different businesses.

And that exercise of reading those annual reports led them to the annual report of Amazon, for example. I've been a customer of Amazon, known Amazon for a long time, et cetera, familiar with the business. But every time I would take a cursory glance at Amazon, it looked very expensive. On an earnings basis or PE basis, it looked really expensive. And the reason it looked expensive is they were investing so far ahead of the curve on the growth that what should have been categorized as capex was just categorized as expenses.

So the US government was really funding their growth because there were no taxes being collected. Now, what Nick and Zach were able to do, because they were just sitting in their office with no distraction, reading year after year of buffet of Bezos letters. And the Bezos letters are worth reading. I mean, I think theyre very clear. He clearly laid out in those letters what he was up to, that basically he wasnt completely candid but you could tell that the business had very high returns on capital and he was investing, he was throwing a lot of things against the wall.

But basically they were very low risk bets. If any single bet didnt work, it wouldnt sink the company.

For example, one of the bets they made was AWS, which became a huge, and they didnt know it was going to become as big as it did. But basically they also made a bet on fire, Amazon fire, which didn't work. But basically, I think what Nick and Zach realized is that here was a very gifted capital allocator who understood all the different facets of building a team, going after different markets. He actually disrupted multiple industries. They had placed a bet on Amazon, and because Amazon was doing so well, it was becoming a larger and larger portion of their fund.

And in the UK, there are more regulations on hedge funds than we have in the US. The UK regulator was telling them that we see this position as very high risk and you guys need to diversify. So they were getting pretty pressure and they felt that they understood the business so well. So they looked at each other. They were managing, I think, two or 3 billion.

They had made hundreds of millions for each of them. And they said, look, we are independently wealthy. We never thought we'd be here. We're young, why do we have to listen to some regulator? We could return all the capital to all our investors.

And what Nick said is, if I return the capital, im going to put everything into three stocks. And these are three stocks. He owned maybe a dozen stocks, but he was going to go into three stocks. Those three stocks he was going to put one third each into was one third berkshire one third Amazon, one third Costco. He said, im very comfortable with these three stocks built to last businesses.

And he did that. What happened a few years after they hung up their boots is it's really funny. Amazon still kept, it's a juggernaut. It still kept going. And so it became 70, 80% of the pie.

So instead of them being one third each, it was 80 1010. For example, Nick decided that, oh, maybe I should take some chips off the table here. And so he cut the Amazon position in half and bought another business, which has not done well. It went sideways. And that goes back to Buffetts point of twelve that worked in 58 years is we are not going to, if Warren Buffett has a 4% hit rate, the rest of us are going to have a 2% hit rate.

It.

But you also need to get rich just once. I think that what worked really well for Nick and Zach was. They took the Buffett lesson, which is that once you have a great business, just leave it alone. Now, even after he was sloppy and he took chips off the table from 80% or whatever, he still done very well. I think one of the things that investors forget is that if you look at the Walton family, none of them are running Walmart.

Sam Walton passed away a long time ago. Its been several decades since Sam Walton passed away. The Waltons have for the most part kept the Walmart stock and for most of them, its almost the entire net worth in a single stock, more concentrated than even Nick sleepers.

Its not a business that they control, its not a business that they run. Its not a business that theyre on the board of. None of them gives them sleepless nights.

For example, in 2018, I started visiting Turkey. I was just looking at things hated and unloved at that time and I saw that the turkish markets was screening really cheap, everyone and the brother was just exiting Turkey. I have a really good friend of mine in Istanbul who is a very good investor, kind of classic Ben Graham investor. And I told him, hey Hyder, id love to visit Istanbul and id love to if we could visit all the companies in your portfolio, starting with the company with your strongest conviction, biggest position to the smallest position. And I said dont take me to see any companies where you dont have money in, okay.

He said, Mona should be a blast. So I went in 2018 1st time to Istanbul. The bluefish on the Bosphorus was great and all these different businesses we saw were great and I didnt really do much work. He told me what places were going to but I just said let me meet the companies first. I went back in 2019 and we are driving to this company and like I said, all these turkish names and companies, I said, I will do the work on the backend.

Im not going to spend time. So as were driving over, I said, hyder, remind me what company are we going to? Whats the Cliff notes version? He said, okay. He says this company going to visit Raysas has a 16 million market cap, $16 million market cap.

And he says liquidation value of the business if you sold it today is 800 million. So I said, is it a fraud? He said no, Im invested in the company. And so I said youre telling me the company is trading for 2% of liquidation value? He said yeah.

I said why? He said, its turkey, everythings cheap. I said, well, this is the outlier cheap, okay. And Reshas basically is a very simple business. The largest warehouse operator in Turkey, they rent out all these warehouses.

These are 99% leased, inflation indexed, and they leased to Amazon, Ikea car, four mercedes, Toyota, blue chip clients and all of that. I went and met the father and son who run the company and the founders. And then after that I went and visited a bunch of the warehouses and I couldnt find anything wrong with it, basically. And he was absolutely right. If you just went to any realtor in Turkey and said, this is their 80 warehouses, give me a value on each one.

He would just look at the rent and he would tell you, okay, youre looking at about 70, $80 a square foot for each warehouse. They had 12 million sqft. It was about a billion dollars and there was 200 million of debt. So 800 million liquidation value and 16 million market cap. Then I thought, okay, this thing probably trades by appointment and maybe you cant buy the stock, but Turkey has very high trading volume because theyre all gamblers.

So I found that when I started buying the stock, that huge volumes are available and I spent $8 million to get a third of the company. Okay. Now, the way I look at it is that when you look at Buffett's letter with the twelve positions or you look at Nick sleep with Amazon, the family that runs the business, they have maybe 40, 45% ownership. I'm an outside investor at 33%. I have no board sheet.

But the way I look at resource is the way the Walton family looks at the Walmart stock.

What I've noticed since then, since 2019, is they have increased the value of that business. So I would say that probably today the business might be worth 1.5 to 2 billion, somewhere in that range. And I think they'll continue because I've never seen them make any decisions that were stupid. Theyre very smart about the decisions. Its very well run.

I say, okay, basically we are done. We will keep that business. I dont care about the stock price. So the 16 million market cap now is about 500 million in four years. And the turkish lira, when we were investing, it was five lira to the dollar.

Today its approaching 33 lira to the dollar. Turkish lira has collapsed in dollars, were up almost 30 x but the business is worth more. The thing is that its exactly what Buffett says, basically just leave it alone. As long as that family and that father and son are running the business, we will just keep our stake and let it keep running. So basically, the idea is that I'm also going to, when I look back on a find, there were a few things that move the needle.

Big time and the rest didn't. And the key to moving the needle is inactivity. And so that's what you got to be very patient and be very inactive. You talked about Bezos being a capital allocator. Buffett, obviously, capital allocator for Berkshire.

Shaan Puri
And who are the other? I guess if I just throw some names at you or some companies at you, I'm curious to hear your take on how well they allocate capital, because we know maybe how good their brand is or their product is. But we were talking about this yesterday. There's a transition from, you're a product manager, where your focus is building product, and you're a people manager, where you're building an organization, and then you're a money manager, and you're now sitting on $100 billion. You have to figure out some way to invest it.

So tell me, Meta or Facebook, how do you think they've done with capital allocation? Well, I think it was really surprising to see how he did a 180. I think Mark basically moved from being a spendthrift to being a Patel. You know, he. I mean, literally, I just can't.

Mohnish Pabrai
I think it was remarkable to see an entrepreneur pivot that way. So, you know, Meta was a country club. You know, they had all this spending going on in all these areas, and he really tightened it up. I mean, I was really. I mean, and it showed up in the numbers.

They. I mean, Facebook is a great business. You know, all the different brands they have and different properties they have are tremendous. It is the norm in capitalism that great businesses will be sloppy with how they execute. I think normally it's very rare to find a great business which is also tight fisted.

And Meta wasn't tight fisted, but it is now. And so that was just wonderful to see. So I think, yeah, I think the capital allocation there is excellent now. Right? What do you think about Elon Musk.

Fellow Texas resident, the United States? This is one of the just most beautiful things about the United States is Elon wasn't born here, okay? And he wasn't educated in his 1st 20 years of life. Over here, we, the United States, got a finished product, basically, and he's created tremendous value, tremendous jobs, and disrupted multiple industries. I think Elon is an exceptional allocator of capital.

Yeah, it's terrific, actually. Tesla gets a lot of. There's a lot of conversation. Is Tesla overvalued? Is it undervalued?

Shaan Puri
Is it too frothy? I guess. What's your take on when you look at a business like Tesla? How does your mind analyze a business like Tesla? It goes into the too hard pile.

Mohnish Pabrai
I would say This. I would say that Elon is not human. Hes beyond HUMAN. If you just think about all the things hes done now, that neural net and boring company and what hes doing with SpaceX and all that, its just really very remarkable. The execution is off the charts.

I think, like I said, I think unbelievable in terms of what he's been able to accomplish. So I have a lot of respect. I think Elon understands capital allocation really well. And I think all the businesses that he gets involved in or he founds they do so well because he gets so much out of the people, which basically means he gets so much out of the capital. His hiring is so good.

The teams that he's building are so exceptional that, I mean, when you're hiring a software engineer, there could be an engineer who's worth 10 million a year, and there could be another guy worth a hundred thousand a year, and he can tell the difference. Right. So that's a great skill to have. I love that. We'll end with this.

Shaan Puri
We have Charlie here, and he passed away, and you were friends with him. What's maybe your favorite story or lesson from Charlie Munger? Yeah, I mean, obviously I miss Charlie. I think he was one of a kind. I think he was just, and I've been thinking last several weeks, several months about so many of the lessons and things.

Mohnish Pabrai
But one of the things Charlie said in one of the last interviews he gave, someone asked him, I think, what would you like on your gravestone? And he said, I tried to be useful. And I think those words, I tried to be useful, encapsulate Charlie really well. If you look at Warren Buffetts tribute to him that he did this year in the letter, Charlie selflessly helped Warren a lot. I mean, without Charlie Munger, theres no Berkshire Hathaway, even though you had a Warren Buffett there.

And I twice I went to Charlie when I was facing difficult personal situations. Nothing related to investing extremely helpful to me on point. I just did exactly what he told me to do, and those issues disappeared. Charlie always was trying to see how can I help the world in all the institutions that he touched. His memorial was at the Harvard Westlake School in California, and LA transformed that institution.

He was at the board of the good Sam's hospital transformed the hospital. Berkshire Hathaway transformed. I met so many partners he had in different businesses, always gave them the better deal. And I think in every way possible, I think that was just absolutely correct. He selflessly tried to be useful.

And Charlie? I don't think Charlie believed in God. I don't think he believed in religion. And I think he didn't believe in legacy. I think he believed that when we are gone, we're gone.

It's ashes and dust.

Till one day before he passed away, he was in the hospital. He knew he was dying. He was trying to get one last grant done to a nonprofit. No upside to him. He's dying.

Six days before he passed away, he was buying a stock, a stock we discussed, and I'd send him a write up on. So I'm just saying that I think Charlie extracted everything he could from his mind and his body. The other thing was that he never complained. Lost sight in one eye. Many decades ago, he was almost blind in the other eye.

He cared most about reading. That was most important to him. And I saw him one time when the second eye was giving him a very serious problem where he could have gone blind. This was maybe ten years ago in the second eye. Even when he was facing the prospect of complete blindness, he was so stoic.

Never said, oh, poor me, self pity. His response to me was, I'm going to have to learn braille. That's how he was going to deal with it. And so I think it's this great. We have such a big, rich body of work that he left poor Charlie's almanac, and I think a lot to learn from him.

Shaan Puri
Well, thank you for sharing that, and thank you for doing this. Hopefully your, you know, process of sharing some of your wisdom. So thank you for doing this. It's a pleasure. I really enjoyed the session.

Mohnish Pabrai
Thank you. Okay. All right, sounds good. Thank you. I feel like I can rule the world.

Shaan Puri
I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it, like. No days off on a road less. Travel, never looking back.

Mohnish Pabrai
Travel, never looking back.

Shaan Puri
Travel, never looking back.

Mohnish Pabrai
Travel, never looking back.