"Do you remember learning to drive? One of the first lessons is not to overreact. When the car drifts, overcorrecting sends you into the next lane. Calm, measured movements keep you on course. Business is no different. A good plan will wobble. Markets move. Results lag. The mistake isn’t in the plan—it’s overreaction. Strong execution is often about restraint: making small adjustments, staying disciplined, and letting the strategy work."
"Benjamin Graham discovered, on purpose or not, the real lesson: you protect your downside by studying the lessons history gives you. You gain the upside by remaining forever vigilant to opportunities and keeping an open mind. It's a great approach to investing...and life."
"If 2023 was the year it announced itself on the global stage, and 2024 was the year it started to take a leading role, then 2025 has been the year that AI really began calling the shots — whether we like it or not."
"Selling simply because a stock has risen is like stopping the race the moment you find yourself ahead, instead of seeing how much further you can extend your lead."
"Do you remember learning to drive? One of the first lessons is not to overreact. When the car drifts, overcorrecting sends you into the next lane. Calm, measured movements keep you on course. Business is no different. A good plan will wobble. Markets move. Results lag. The mistake isn’t in the plan—it’s overreaction. Strong execution is often about restraint: making small adjustments, staying disciplined, and letting the strategy work."
"Benjamin Graham discovered, on purpose or not, the real lesson: you protect your downside by studying the lessons history gives you. You gain the upside by remaining forever vigilant to opportunities and keeping an open mind. It's a great approach to investing...and life."
"If 2023 was the year it announced itself on the global stage, and 2024 was the year it started to take a leading role, then 2025 has been the year that AI really began calling the shots — whether we like it or not."
"Selling simply because a stock has risen is like stopping the race the moment you find yourself ahead, instead of seeing how much further you can extend your lead."