We're constantly told that diversification is the only free lunch in finance. Yet most of the world's top investors choose not to eat it.
Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger, John Maynard Keynes, Lou Simpson, George Soros. All run concentrated portfolios.
Today's guest on the Rules of Investing is similarly esteemed, with a similarly concentrated portfolio.
Claremont's Bob Desmond runs a portfolio of just 10-15 "quality growth" stocks. And many of the stocks he owned during the 'free money' period of high liquidity and high growth are the same stocks he owns today.
In today's episode, Bob explains why quality growth is the best strategy in all markets, why investors shouldn't react to "bear porn" headlines, why nVidia might not be overpriced despite its recent run, and the one stock he would love to own "forever".
The biggest trends to watch in the next 5 years
3 early warning signs it’s time to change your view
Sell-offs are a buying opportunity. Don’t get off the train
What the ‘smart money’ is saying about Australia's future
Did Buffett really change his mind on gold?
Tapping into research from the world’s best investors
How Ophir spot offshore growers (before they get big)
A key question most investors ignore, do you?
Chris Stott launched a new boutique. Then COVID hit.
Don’t fight the Fed, buy commodities instead
The $200 billion opportunity to power Australia's future
The unspoken rules of Wall Street’s best hedge funds
Buy growth, but don't ignore the price
The biggest experiment in markets: How does it end?
Navigating the COVID crisis
COVID-Crash special with Sam Sicilia and Martin Thompson
How to buy growth companies before they get expensive
Aboud: What I'd buy in a market crash
Finding income in a low-rate world
The theme to dominate this decade in markets
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