“A business absolutely devoted to service will have only one worry about profits. They will be embarrassingly large.” – Henry Ford
“Research shows there are at least 100 adjustments needed to make earnings and the balance sheet consistently calculated from firm to firm. And people think EBITDA is going to fix that? Those four (ITDA) aren’t even right.” – Joel Litman
“The Interpretation of Financial Statements was first published in 1937, shortly after the Ben Graham bible, Security Analysis, and during an era when investors left the stock market in droves. Today, when the contrary is the case, investors should confirm their understanding of the financial statements of the companies whose stock they own” – Michael Price, in the forward to Ben Graham’s “The interpretation of Financial Statements”
“To improve judgment, suspend judgment.” – Joel Litman
“To clear the mind, merely note that nothing at all is of special or unique ‘value’ or ‘worth’ except by invested, superimposed, and projected belief. Therefore, withdraw value, worth, importance, and interest.” – David R. Hawkins
“I know of no long-time practitioner who regrets adhering to a value philosophy; few investors who embrace the fundamental principles ever abandon this investment approach for another” – Seth Klarman
“The most important quality for an investor is temperament, not intellect. You need a temperament that neither derives great pleasure from being with the crowd or against the crowd.” – Warren Buffett
“It is not enough to have a good mind. The main thing is to use it well.” – Rene Descartes
“There exist limitless opportunities in every industry. Where there is an open mind, there will always be a frontier.” – Charles F. Kettering
“Every businessman and investor is expected to be able to understand these corporation statements. For security salesmen and for customers’ men in particular, the ability to analyze statement is essential. When you know what the figures mean, you have a sound basis for good business judgment.” – Ben Graham, The Interpretation of Financial Statements, 1937
“To win in life means to give up the obsession of ‘who’s at fault.’ Graciousness is far more powerful than belligerence. It is better to succeed than to win.” – David R. Hawkins
“Nothing is particularly hard if you divide it into small jobs.” – Henry Ford
“The well – disciplined mind should only speak when requested to perform a task. Untrained, the mind becomes an unruly “on stage” performer and a nuisance. The self needs to learn respect for the Self and the silence of the presence. By observing the mind, it becomes apparent that the self represents the disruptive, unruly child who constantly seeks attention.” – David R. Hawkins
“The law of development is evolution. Revolution is justified only when evolution is impossible.” – Henry Laurence Gantt
“The book value of a security is in most cases a rather artificial value.” – Ben Graham, The Interpretation of Financial Statements, 1949
“I think inefficiencies are there for the finding, but they are fairly hard to find.” – Edward Thorp, Stock Market and Black Jack Expert from the book “Market Wizards” by Jack Schwager
“A useful decision or choice is to decide to stop mentally talking about everything and refrain from interjecting comments, opinions, preferences, and value statements. It is therefore a discipline to just watch without evaluating, investing worth in, editorializing, commenting, or having preferences about what is witnessed.” – David R. Hawkins