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How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett: Profiting from the Bargain Hunting Strategies of the World's Greatest Value Investor

How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett: Profiting from the Bargain Hunting Strategies of the World's Greatest Value Investor
By Timothy Vick

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A $10,000 investment in Warren Buffett's original 1956 portfolio would today be worth a staggering $250 million ... after taxes! What are his investing secrets? How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett contains the answers and shows, step-by-profitable-step, how any investor can follow Buffett's path to consistently find bargains in all markets: up, down, or sideways.

How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett sticks to the basics: how Buffett continually finds bargain stocks passed over by others. Written by an actual financial analyst who uses Buffett's strategies professionally, this tactical how-to book includes:

  • Comprehensive financial tools and information
  • Strategy-packed "Buffett in action" boxes
  • Buffett's own stock portfolio­­continually updated on the author's website!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #76129 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-08-23
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 277 pages

Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover
Learn How Warren Buffett Consistently Beats Wall Street to the Best Stocks­­and What He Plans Next

Warren Buffett is the only billionaire in history to amass his fortune entirely through shrewd investing. And while many books have chronicled Buffett's story, none have examined his legendary value investing techniques­­where he looks, what he looks for, and what signals tell him it's time to buy.

How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett shows, step by profitable step, how any investor can follow Buffett's path and find consistent bargains regardless of the overall market. Value investing practitioner and chronicler Timothy Vick packs the book with:

Comprehensive value investing tools and information

Methods for appraising today¿s popular technology stocks

Insights on how Buffett assesses risk and potential reward

Praise for How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett

"This is a must read for anyone wanting to learn the investing techniques of Warren Buffett."­­Mary Buffett, Author, Buffettology

"I have seen no trend toward value investing in the 35 years I've practiced it. There seems to be some perverse human characteristic that likes to make easy things difficult."
--Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett is widely considered history¿s greatest investor. This fascinating man­­humorous and homespun on the outside, serious and ready for battle on the inside­­would have the world believe his success was as simple as adding 2 + 2. But the truth is entirely different. As How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett reveals, Buffett has a clear and consistent set of investment rules and methods that have brought him and his investors unparalleled good fortune. These tools­­including which performance numbers Buffett considers most critical, strategies he employs to take advantage of consistently irrational markets, management attitudes that make him look favorably on a situation, and more­­are, for the first time, analyzed with the attention to detail investors require.

The resulting book is nothing less than a step-by-step rulebook for emulating Buffett's startling investment successes.

"What doesn't work is when you start doing things you don't understand or because they worked last week for somebody else. The dumbest reason in the world to buy a stock is because it's going up."

Far from a scratch-the-surface biography filled with interesting but extraneous biographic material, How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett takes you straight to the core of Buffett's investing genius. Timothy Vick tells you how Buffett did it, how he continues to do it, and how you can follow Buffett's lead to build an impressive portfolio of your own.

Nowhere else will you find this depth and breadth of Buffett's keen market insights:

  • Three strategies for gaining market-beating results without assuming excessive risks
  • Techniques for estimating a company¿s future earnings­­one of the fundamental bases of intrinsic value
  • Why per-share book value growth remains Buffett's favorite yardstick of a company's investment potential
  • How Buffett seeks to avoid losses through convertibles, options, and his secret weapon­­arbitrage

Warren Buffett has left a clearer, more profitable set of tracks to follow than any other great investor. Discover how to uncover, interpret, and follow those tracks­­for consistently high rates of return and a portfolio of solid, predictable, and long-term profitable stocks and investments­­in How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett.

About the Author

Timothy Vick is the senior analyst with Arbor Capital Management, which has offices in Anchorage, Jacksonville, and the Chicago area. The founder and former editor in chief of the nationally distributed market newsletter Today's Value Investor and author of Wall Street On Sale, Vick also serves as a consultant to small businesses on valuation and strategic planning. He has appeared on CNBC and CNN, and has been quoted by The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Barron's, Investor's Business Daily, and other national publications.


Customer Reviews

Who Wants To Be A Billionaire?5
Legendary billionaire Warren Buffett is considered by many to be the world's greatest value investor. "How To Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett" is a book that guides the ordinary investor though Buffett's methods to profit using his bargain hunting strategies.

As Buffett is quoted as saying in the book, "To invest successfully, you need not understand beta, efficient markets, modern portfolio theory, option pricing or emerging markets. You may, in fact, be better off knowing nothing of these. That, of course, is not the prevailing view at most business schools, whose finance curriculum tends to be dominated by such subjects. In our view, though, investment students need only two well taught courses - How to Value a Business, and How to Think About Market Prices."

"How To Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett" does detail effectively, in easy-to-understand language, Buffett's methodology in analyzing and evaluating businesses and attitudes about market prices, as well as the investment decision-making process, and philosophy about developing good investment habits.

Buffett's rules and methods for investment success are carefully outlined, including the importance of developing a mathematical mind, using a buy-and-hold strategy for companies with strong franchises, growing book value and return on equity, using the magic "15 Percent Rule", comparing stocks to bonds, avoiding losses, and stringing small gains together with takeovers.

"How To Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett" contains charts and case studies with pertinent and contemporary examples, including studies of technology companies. A chapter, "Your Competitive Advantage Over Buffett - The Internet", details several web sites that provide information, research and investment tools for value-oriented investors.

This book is relevant for value conscious investors who wish to formulate an intelligent and consistent approach to investment management.

Propagating misconceptions about Buffett5
First of all, the author does describe early Buffett activities as some sort of shady active trading/arbitrage, i.e. anything but value investing. That is a plus, and Timothy Vick should be credited for honestly admitting that. Reading from page 13, Buffett's estimated net worth in 1969, the year he shut down his speculative Buffett partership, was $20 to $25 million. You can disregard everything else in this book, because once you have made $20 million through active trading/arbitrage, does it really matter what you do for the rest of your life?

If Buffett made his fortune and got his start in investing through active trading, what's the point of extolling buying and holding and value investing?
Let me rephrase the question, can a buy-and-hold value investor make $20 million in 12 years starting with 50K ? Of course not. If you want to get rich, AVOID value investing.

So, once you are as rich as Buffett was in 1969, you can certainly afford to condemn active traders and speculators because A) you don't have to ever work and can live off dividends or interest on Treasuries B) you can settle for 10% or so percent annualized return on your value stocks.

Second, the author lists Buffett's core holdings (AXP, G, KO, WPO, MTB, etc) and claims they have had a fabulous return over the years, and these "value investments" are the reason Berkshire book value was going up 25% or so annually. False and wrong. If you do the math, market price of most of these stocks went up from 5% to 10% annually (one or two exceptions at 18%). So much for fabulous stock picking! So why did Berkshire book value go up so fast? The answer is, probably because Buffett is a great manager and did a good job running his core insurance businesses and managing the cash flow of the companies he acquired and controlled. You have to understand the difference between buying and holding stocks you have no control over (value investing), and successfully running a business you own, taking over and controlling other companies, and awarding yourself compensation exceeding the gains of other shareholders (what Buffett has done throughout most of his career, but not lately). Is running a large insurance company equivalent to value investing? Probably not. There is a big difference between holding a piece of paper and running/cotrolling a business.

What drives Buffett--the consummate guide5
Multi-billionaire Warren Buffett does not hide the fact that his goals are to amass wealth--and neither does Mr. Vick's book. The author's book mirrors the extraordinary passion (for, after all, Mr. Buffett invests in people--and passionately, as readers shall learn) that drives the unprecedented success of the holding company Mr. Buffett manages, Berkshire Hathaway.

This book was written by a self-professed "disciple," not a biographer, of Mr. Buffett, his work, both past and in-progress. For a novice such as I, the book was anything but a "soap box" preaching on "how to become." Rather, this is a magnum opus--a comprehensive, easy-to-follow true "inside look" at a buck-the-trend investor--the very principles, products, services and industries he understands through "years of the fun of making money and watching it grow."

Sure, Mr. Vick "scratches the biographical surface" of this legendary professional--how could he not? After all, Mr. Vick himself has come to know Mr. Buffett--through extensive research, Mr. Vick's own tried-and-true Contrarian investing and more. "How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett" contains unique insight on Mr. Buffett, the man, and Mr. Buffett's strategies for gaining market-winning results, estimating a company's future earnings and measuring the yardstick of this mentor's investment portfolio.

Written by an award-winning journalist and analyst who routinely offers objective and articulate insight to the national media, including TV and radio--I've taken the trouble to track his quotes; hence, my submission of my review--this book was a great starter for a reader who simply wanted to know more about this legendary figure--and the professional, particularly, his convertibles, options and other "secret weapons."

At worst, it's a mere tool for helping to shape--agree or disagree with Mr. Vick's/Mr. Buffett's philosophy--your own investment strategies. Are you into arbitrage? Read and learn. At its very best, this book shines with its breadth on Mr. Buffett's lead. It's filled with in-depth tips for how to follow Mr. Buffett's clearly outlined set of tracks.

Again, this was written with keen turn-of-phrase--concisely and with the understated depth of a consummate newspaper reporter and analyst extraordinaire. A real page-turner. I've read Mr. Vick's previous books; I now look forward to his next.