Return on Reason

The Berkshire Owner's Manual: What Private Investors Should Steal from the Professionals

26 min · 4. juni 2026
episode The Berkshire Owner's Manual: What Private Investors Should Steal from the Professionals cover

Beskrivelse

What actually translates from professional money management to your own brokerage account? In this episode of Return on Reason, Max sits down again with Ben to work through key passages from Berkshire Hathaway's famous owner's manual and test which principles hold up for the individual investor. The conversation covers a lot of ground: why Buffett's "corporate form, partnership attitude" structure let him compound through panics without redemptions, and whether that ownership mindset still matters when you only hold a fraction of a percent. Ben makes the case that thinking like a business owner rather than a trader is exactly what builds a good temperament—the ability to hold quality through volatility instead of selling into fear. Along the way, they dig into how to actually evaluate management: why capital allocation is the rarest skill (and why buying back stock at high prices is a red flag), why honesty on earnings calls matters more than a clean quarter, and how to smell trouble in the accounting—non-GAAP reconciliations, EBITDA creep, and excessive stock-based comp hiding in the cash flow statement. This episode discusses general investing concepts and is not personalized financial advice.

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Alle episoder

7 episoder

episode The Berkshire Owner's Manual: What Private Investors Should Steal from the Professionals cover

The Berkshire Owner's Manual: What Private Investors Should Steal from the Professionals

What actually translates from professional money management to your own brokerage account? In this episode of Return on Reason, Max sits down again with Ben to work through key passages from Berkshire Hathaway's famous owner's manual and test which principles hold up for the individual investor. The conversation covers a lot of ground: why Buffett's "corporate form, partnership attitude" structure let him compound through panics without redemptions, and whether that ownership mindset still matters when you only hold a fraction of a percent. Ben makes the case that thinking like a business owner rather than a trader is exactly what builds a good temperament—the ability to hold quality through volatility instead of selling into fear. Along the way, they dig into how to actually evaluate management: why capital allocation is the rarest skill (and why buying back stock at high prices is a red flag), why honesty on earnings calls matters more than a clean quarter, and how to smell trouble in the accounting—non-GAAP reconciliations, EBITDA creep, and excessive stock-based comp hiding in the cash flow statement. This episode discusses general investing concepts and is not personalized financial advice.

4. juni 202626 min
episode The Liquidity Explanation: Why Markets Keep Hitting Highs in a World on Fire cover

The Liquidity Explanation: Why Markets Keep Hitting Highs in a World on Fire

The S&P just closed at 7,398. The NASDAQ's forward PE is back at levels last seen at the dot-com peak and the 2021 frenzy. Warren Buffett is sitting on $373 billion in cash. Ray Dalio says we're 80% of the way into bubble territory. Meanwhile, the US is at war with Iran, the Strait of Hormuz has been disrupted for months, and the IEA is calling it the largest supply shock in oil market history. So why do equities — the asset class most exposed to all of it — keep printing new highs? The answer you'll hear everywhere is "liquidity." Cash on the sidelines. So much money in the system. But what does that actually mean? When people say money "flowed into" the market, where do they think it went? Does cash enter the market in aggregate, or does ownership just change hands at a higher price? And can liquidity alone justify permanently higher valuations — or is that just the story we tell ourselves at the top of every cycle? Max sits down with Ben to pressure-test the explanation everyone's relying on.

15. maj 202629 min