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It's good for beginners to understand Buffett first, his investment philosophy is simple and easy to understand, and the simplicity and ease of understanding here is just to understand his investment philosophy, but it does not mean that it is easy to do.
For Soros, I personally feel that the investment he does is impossible for beginners to learn, and his main investment objects are macroeconomics, which requires a lot of financial knowledge.
In fact, there is no need to choose a specific one, learn more about both, so that your understanding is more comprehensive, and you can find out what kind of investment is more suitable for you.
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I haven't read Soros's investment methodology, but I believe in Warren Buffett, and I'll give you a resource that has all the information about Buffett, as well as most of his writings, and I suggest you can take a look at the main views and writings of the two, Soros's mainly.
I don't think I can tell you who to trust, you have to judge for yourself, you can compare the main points of view of the two, and make trade-offs, maybe both good and bad. Come on!
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It should be said that one is long-term and the other is short-term, if you choose, it depends on your potential, and the long-term is better, but few people do it.
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Of course, it's Ba. I recommend that you read the letter to shareholders, the original teachings of the king of stocks. Not to be missed.
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Warren Buffett is a value investor, which is easier to do.
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Warren Buffett goes long.
Soros goes short.
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Looking at today's global financial world, if you want to select two of the world's top masters, most people will have two names in their hearts: Warren Buffett and Soros. Coincidentally, both were born in August 1930, and Soros is only 18 days older than Buffett.
As both financial predators, what is the difference between Buffett and Soros's way of making money?
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1. Warren Buffett is an investment master. Soros is a master of speculation.
2. Warren Buffett's investment method is to choose high-performance and low-cost companies and enterprises, and this must be what he understands. Soros uses quantum **, mainly by conducting bulk operations in the financial market, hedging risks and speculating profits.
3. Warren Buffett has real gold ** wealth in his hands, and his assets are exchanged for cash at a very small discount. Soros holds financial assets by **, and if he cashes out, it will inevitably cause **volatility, and his losses will be greater.
4. Different investment methods have led to Buffett's hard work and Soros's speculation.
5. One reason why Warren Buffett's influence is smaller than Soros's is that Soros uses the law of financial investment, as a leader, he can use his own assets to drive several times or even dozens of times more of the energy of his own assets to act on the financial market. The Asian financial crisis is an example of a leader leading a flock of sheep to run wild.
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If you are in the financial circle, then there are two names that you should be familiar with, one is Warren Buffett and the other is Soros. As the two major financial predators, what is the difference between them? Let's get a little more into it.
Warren Buffett, chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, investment master, representative figure of value investment, is famous for buying and holding excellent companies, and is known as the god of stocks. George Soros, the founder of Quantum, a financial tycoon, a big speculator, and a philanthropist, is known for being good at setting off a bloody storm in the national socks judgment financial market, and is known as "the man who broke down the Bank of England".
These two top masters, one cautious and composed, the other ruthless, seem to be worlds apart, but in fact, the two have a lot in common. First of all, both Buffett and Soros are strictly disciplined and know the value of the price book that waits. It's like fighting a war, 90% of the time is not on the battlefield, but in peacetime recruitment, food requisition, training, and constantly accumulating their own advantages while waiting.
Once the opportunity comes, it will be like a thunderbolt, and it will be decided in a war.
Warren Buffett's value investing mainly revolves around the key concepts of intrinsic value, margin of safety, and long-term investment. In short, investors need to figure out the intrinsic value of a company (such as a company), and then when the market is much lower than the intrinsic value, they should be decisive and hold it for a long time, waiting for the market to return to its fundamental value.
Soros's investment style, on the other hand, is completely different. In Soros's book "Financial Alchemy", he has a more detailed explanation of his investment philosophy and reflexivity theory. Compared with Warren Buffett, Soros's investment style is more speculative and short-term.
Therefore, Soros wants to be a typical "trader" rather than an "investor".
Neither Buffett nor Soros likes diversification. Warren Buffett has openly questioned decentralization: why not put money into the tenth most optimistic one?
In reality, Warren Buffett's astonishing achievements have been created by concentrated investment, and he is very fond of betting heavily on the companies he fancies. Coincidentally, Soros also said: What matters is not whether your judgment of the market is correct, but how much money you make when you make a correct judgment and how much you lose when you make a wrong judgment.
The key to Soros's success is almost the same as Buffett's: they all rely on heavy bets to generate huge profits.
In fact, in their stories and cases, we can almost see that Buffett likes to buy long, while Soros likes to buy short, everyone has their own areas of expertise, and the methods of making profits are different, and the evaluation is even different.
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The difference between Soros and Warren Buffett is.
1. Warren Buffett is an investor, and Soros is a speculator.
2. Warren Buffett likes long-term holdings, and Soros likes swing operations. But Warren Buffett also has shares for 1 year, and Soros has also held shares for several years.
3. Warren Buffett doesn't play leverage, doesn't short, doesn't speculate on foreign exchange, and Soros plays all three.
4. Warren Buffett does not have his own theory. Soros has his own theory of reflexivity.
5. Warren Buffett's method is easy to learn, and in principle, anyone who has engaged in industry can easily learn the Pasteur method. Soros's method is not easy to learn, requires strong economic skills, and even more needs good intuition.
6. Buffett's method is relatively easy, ** before it is more tired, but ** after it is relaxed. Soros's method is too tiring, ** before and after. But in fact, Buffett lived like a Puritan, while Soros lived a dashing life.
7. Warren Buffett is better at writing articles, complex truths can be expressed in simple words, and he writes with a sense of humor. Soros can't.
8. Warren Buffett is better at fundamental analysis, and Soros is better at macroeconomic analysis. Warren Buffett rarely sees him analyzing macroeconomics. Soros is rarely seen analyzing valuations.
Extended Materials. 1. The investment strategies of Soros and Warren Buffett.
1. Warren Buffett insists on buying "good companies", and even directly participates in the business decisions of enterprises. Warren Buffett, for example, has long served as a director of The Coca-Cola Company, exercising his personal influence over the company's business strategy. Warren Buffett's investment in high-quality companies enables companies to produce better products, and in this way, the wealth of society increases, and Buffett receives a corresponding return as a shareholder of the company.
2. Soros prefers to crack down on "bad companies". The scope of these "poor enterprises" is relatively wide, including not only listed companies that have cheated in the market, but also the currency of a country that is overvalued. When the capital in the market is invested in these "poor enterprises", in fact, these funds are allocated to the wrong place, and those capitals cannot play their true value, Soros effectively uses the foreign exchange market and the ** market to implement his "short" mechanism to avoid further waste of social wealth and greater economic losses, and Soros can get the corresponding remuneration in the process.
2. What Warren Buffett and Soros have in common.
Confidence; never think dogmatically; hardship, or the family impact of hardship; Focus, always pay attention to the field and company you invest in, and maintain information advantage; : Do not do diversification; learn from mistakes and difficulties; Investing is their life.
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Soros has a low starting point, and Warren Buffett has a prominent background. So I'm more optimistic about Soros.
Soros and Warren Buffett are people of two worlds. Soros is a philosopher who focuses not only on economics, but also on philosophy, politics and other issues that are closely related to human beings. Warren Buffett is just a smart investor. The two are completely different.
Soros is a poor man who struggles and polishes into a legend, and Warren Buffett is a son who inherits his father's business.
Soros is even more admirable, this man is a real hero.
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As long as we usually learn more and understand more investment knowledge, whether it is in Baoxing Global or where, we can have better development and chase their footsteps.
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Warren Buffett and George Soros are both among the world's top investors and are widely regarded as the most successful investors in history. Although both are among the most successful investors in human history, their investment ideas, strategies, and styles are slightly different.
Warren Buffett has always advocated value investing, that is, looking for undervalued companies in the market, maintaining long-term holdings, and these companies have stable profitability and long-term competitive advantages. His investment style is steady, conservative, with a focus on cash flow and holding periods. His company, Berkshire Hathaway, is an iconic holding company in the slate industry, real estate and finance.
George Soros, on the other hand, advocates macro investing, focusing on the political and economic environment and people's emotional reactions to these situations, and judging the direction of the market based on this. He is a volatile and flexible investor, often leading companies in short-term trades of currency pairs and commodities, which is a riskier way to invest but also achieve greater returns.
The two investment gurus cannot directly compare their techniques with each other or the results of actual investments, and their investment philosophies and thinking methods have their own merits. Babin has gained a prominent position in the U.S. ** market with a steady, long-term investment approach, while Soros is known for pursuing targeted, short-term, flexible macro deals. When it comes to investing, everyone's style is different, and there is no such thing as a "short board" or a "long board".
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are all very powerful, and they are the first in each of them.
1. Warren Buffett and Soros are both world-class investors, known for their unique investment strategies and wisdom, Buffett is known for his long-term investment and value investment, and is committed to finding undervalued.
2. Soros is known for its hedging operations and global macroeconomic analysis.
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23 Winning Investment Habits:
1. Believe that the highest priority is always to preserve capital, which is the cornerstone of his investment strategy;
2. Regression As a result of habit one, it is a risk aversion.
3. He has his own investment philosophy, which is the expression of his personality, ability, knowledge, taste and purpose. Therefore, it is impossible for any two highly successful investors to have the same investment philosophy;
4. He has developed and tested his own personalized system of selecting, buying and selling;
5. It is ridiculous to think that decentralization is ridiculous;
6. Hate the payment of taxes and other transaction costs, and skillfully arrange his actions to achieve the minimization of taxes legally;
7. Invest only in areas that he understands;
8. Never make investments that do not meet his standards, and can easily say "no" to anything! ”;
9. Constantly look for new investment opportunities that meet his criteria, and actively conduct independent research and research. He is only willing to listen to investors or analysts whom he has good reason to respect;
10. When he can't find an investment opportunity that meets his criteria, he will wait patiently until he finds the opportunity;
11. Act immediately after making a decision;
12. Hold the winning investment orange peel until the determined exit conditions are established;
13. Firmly adhere to his own system;
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A habit is to hold.
One habit is hedging.
You can't do either habit.
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1.Warren Buffett's characteristic: advocating value investing, that is, what he himself says is 85% Graham and 15% Fisher. It means to be an excellent enterprise that can be understood reasonably and hold it for a long time.
2.Soros's characteristic: the "reflexivity" theory uses the deviation between market expectations and objective "facts" (according to Soros's theory, there is no strict fact in sociology), and when the deviation reaches a critical point, let go long or short.
3.In the eyes of many people, Warren Buffett advocates value investing, and Soros is good at speculation. But Soros's lifelong favorite subjects were philosophy and psychology, but he was not sensitive to numbers.
However, Lao Ba has been known for his sensitivity to mathematics since he was a child, and a twelve-year-old child tried to draw his own **trend chart, which is amazing. Many people don't notice that Warren Buffett was born as a ** agent and has a unique talent for hype and persuasion.
It's okay, I'll chase it as soon as I have time, 0457
I'm also mentally retarded, why do you talk so much 9972
Not exactly. He belongs to ultra-long-term investment, and you have been holding Coca-Cola and Geely blades for decades. Is there such a thing in China? >>>More
pwd=2d72 Extraction code: 2d72 The links mainly include: "Buffett's Letter to Shareholders", "What Buffett Says", "Snowball", "Buffett's Way", "Smart Investor", etc. (among them, "Buffett's Letter to Shareholders" can be regarded as a book written by him.
Warren Buffett's resume, he is again. The most complete.