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In this enlightening episode, Kyle Grieve explores timeless investing principles from "Money Masters of Our Time" by John Train, examining legendary investors across different strategies and philosophies. (00:27) The episode reveals that while each investor had unique approaches—from Warren Buffett's value investing to George Soros's speculation—they all left valuable clues to their success that apply broadly to the art of investing. (00:48) Grieve focuses on actionable insights that can be adapted to any intelligent investing framework, covering investors like T. Rowe Price, Philip Fisher, John Templeton, and Peter Lynch among others. (02:15) • Core theme: Understanding that multiple investing strategies can lead to extraordinary success, with each master offering transferable wisdom regardless of your preferred investing style
Kyle Grieve is the host of The Investors Podcast and a seasoned investment analyst with extensive experience studying successful investment strategies. He has been hosting episodes since 2014 and has analyzed over 180 million downloads worth of content focused on financial markets and the investment approaches of self-made billionaires. Kyle specializes in translating complex investment concepts into actionable insights for ambitious professionals seeking to master their craft.
Warren Buffett emphasized the importance of being "animated by controlled greed and fascinated by the investing process." (08:01) The key distinction is the word "controlled"—while greed can be a powerful motivator for wealth creation, uncontrolled greed leads to destruction. Buffett's former partner Rick Guerin exemplifies this, as his impatience and leverage caused him to sell Berkshire shares at $40 that are now worth $756,000. (09:51) True masters combine this controlled ambition with genuine fascination for their craft, working harder than peers and becoming students of the game.
Philip Fisher identified three key opportunities to purchase quality businesses at reasonable prices. (24:49) First, buy during startup periods of new manufacturing, distribution, or technological upgrades when CapEx suppresses cash flow. Second, purchase on bad corporate news like strikes or marketing errors that create temporary setbacks. Third, acquire businesses with inefficient plants that can be fixed through upgrades. Fisher's framework demonstrates that the best investments often come when excellent businesses face short-term challenges that the market overreacts to.
John Templeton's strategy focused on finding businesses that "nobody else wanted or even looked at." (13:48) He characterized unloved stocks as having brokers who struggle to sell them, small floats, zero institutional ownership, and companies where IR departments receive no analyst calls for years. Templeton understood that the greatest price inefficiencies exist in neglected areas where other investors won't even bother studying the opportunities, providing value investors with their best hunting grounds.
Paul Cabot emphasized the importance of getting "all the facts" and facing "facts, not pipe dreams." (18:08) This fights the human tendency to spend excessive time confirming existing beliefs rather than seeking truth. The approach requires spending significant research time on what you could be wrong about, following Charlie Munger's principle that "any year that you don't destroy one of your best ideas is probably a wasted year." (18:43) Successful investors must prioritize fact-finding over advice-seeking, as facts represent truth while advice often contains bias.
Philip Carré's investing precept emphasizes being "quick to take losses and reluctant to take profits." (55:31) The reluctance to take profits is crucial for long-term wealth building—good businesses will continue rising in price while improving fundamentally. Many investors make the mistake of selling holdings simply because they've doubled in price, only to watch with regret as the business continues compounding wealth over multiple years. This principle requires discipline to hold winning positions through multiple expansion cycles rather than taking quick profits.