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Mohnish Pabrai
By admin - Posted on October 5th, 2008
Tagged: Morgan Housel down recently with famed value investor Mohnish Pabrai and got a chance to pick his brain on everything from the short-selling ban to his recent lunch with Warren Buffett. Morgan Housel shares Pabrai's thoughts on the recent market turmoil, and how he's looking for bargain investments during these tumultuous times.
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Morgan Housel down recently with famed value investor Mohnish Pabrai and got a chance to pick his brain on everything from the short-selling ban to his recent lunch with Warren Buffett. Morgan Housel shares Pabrai's thoughts on the recent market turmoil, and how he's looking for bargain investments during these tumultuous times.
- 1 comment
By admin - Posted on August 15th, 2008
Tagged: Mohnish Pabrai, an increasingly well-known value investor in the mold of Warren Buffett, has endured a tough year, but he continues to take the long view. In his Q2 letter to investors in his Pabrai Funds, he wrote "Some exceptional businesses and assets are clearly available at spectacular prices -- well below what a rational intelligent private buyer would pay for these businesses. These market declines generally bode well for net buyers of securities.
Mohnish Pabrai, an increasingly well-known value investor in the mold of Warren Buffett, has endured a tough year, but he continues to take the long view. In his Q2 letter to investors in his Pabrai Funds, he wrote "Some exceptional businesses and assets are clearly available at spectacular prices -- well below what a rational intelligent private buyer would pay for these businesses. These market declines generally bode well for net buyers of securities.
By admin - Posted on July 6th, 2008
Tagged: $650,100 is what Guy Spier and Mohnish Pabrai forked out for the privilege of dining with Warren Buffett on June 25. Guy Spier , CEO of Aquamarine Capital Management talks about his lunch with Warren Buffett.
$650,100 is what Guy Spier and Mohnish Pabrai forked out for the privilege of dining with Warren Buffett on June 25. Guy Spier , CEO of Aquamarine Capital Management talks about his lunch with Warren Buffett.
By admin - Posted on June 25th, 2008
Tagged: Mohnish Pabrai, managing partner at Pabrai Investment Funds, talks with Bloomberg's Rhonda Schaffler in New York about the outlook for his lunch with billionaire investor Warren Buffett, the credit markets and his investment strategy. Pabrai and a friend paid $650,100 last year in an annual charity auction to have lunch with Buffett.
Mohnish Pabrai, managing partner at Pabrai Investment Funds, talks with Bloomberg's Rhonda Schaffler in New York about the outlook for his lunch with billionaire investor Warren Buffett, the credit markets and his investment strategy. Pabrai and a friend paid $650,100 last year in an annual charity auction to have lunch with Buffett.
By admin - Posted on April 22nd, 2008
Tagged: It often seems like every hedge-fund manager is reading from the same playbook about how to look, work and behave. Neatly pressed khakis; thumbs glued to a BlackBerry; slick digs in Greenwich or Manhattan staffed by number-crunching research drones. But apparently, Mohnish Pabrai never got his copy. He wears shorts to his Southern California office, keeps e-mail to a minimum and almost never misses his 4 p.m. nap. And forget goosing returns with fancy computer models or using complex derivatives: Pabrai doesn't even sell stocks short.
It often seems like every hedge-fund manager is reading from the same playbook about how to look, work and behave. Neatly pressed khakis; thumbs glued to a BlackBerry; slick digs in Greenwich or Manhattan staffed by number-crunching research drones. But apparently, Mohnish Pabrai never got his copy. He wears shorts to his Southern California office, keeps e-mail to a minimum and almost never misses his 4 p.m. nap. And forget goosing returns with fancy computer models or using complex derivatives: Pabrai doesn't even sell stocks short.
By admin - Posted on April 19th, 2008
Tagged: Mohnish Pabrai wears shorts to work but doesn't "short" stocks. He's more likely to be caught napping in the afternoon than caught glued to a BlackBerry or sorting through e-mails. If you do not know Pabrai, you may be at least a little impressed or even surprised that he is a hedge fund manager that has outpaced the market averages by nearly 25 percent on an annualized basis since 1999, when he set up shop. The impressive part, for me at least, is not the returns but that his stock selection strategy is a simple, traditional, and largely unoriginal approach patt
Mohnish Pabrai wears shorts to work but doesn't "short" stocks. He's more likely to be caught napping in the afternoon than caught glued to a BlackBerry or sorting through e-mails. If you do not know Pabrai, you may be at least a little impressed or even surprised that he is a hedge fund manager that has outpaced the market averages by nearly 25 percent on an annualized basis since 1999, when he set up shop. The impressive part, for me at least, is not the returns but that his stock selection strategy is a simple, traditional, and largely unoriginal approach patt
By admin - Posted on February 16th, 2008
Tagged: Mohnish Pabrai, an increasingly well-known investment advisor in the mold of Warren Buffett, had a rough Q4, during which he was forced to unwind a failed bet in Delta Financial (DFCLQ), a mortgage lender that was forced to declare bankruptcy despite an attempted rescue plan that involved Pabrai buying $10 million in convertible bonds.
Looking at Pabrai's holdings at the end of 2007, it appears that he sees this convergence of factors in Sears Holding, helmed by another famed investor, Eddie Lampert.
Mohnish Pabrai, an increasingly well-known investment advisor in the mold of Warren Buffett, had a rough Q4, during which he was forced to unwind a failed bet in Delta Financial (DFCLQ), a mortgage lender that was forced to declare bankruptcy despite an attempted rescue plan that involved Pabrai buying $10 million in convertible bonds.
Looking at Pabrai's holdings at the end of 2007, it appears that he sees this convergence of factors in Sears Holding, helmed by another famed investor, Eddie Lampert.
By admin - Posted on January 18th, 2008
Tagged: Mohnish Pabrai, an increasingly well-known investment advisor in the mold of Warren Buffett, got hit hard in the fourth quarter of 2007 as the subprime mortgage crisis wrecked one investment and weighed heavily on another.
Pabrai, a former IT consulting exec, typically focuses on value investing and special situations, and he has gained a following and penned a pair of books on his investing style.
Mohnish Pabrai, an increasingly well-known investment advisor in the mold of Warren Buffett, got hit hard in the fourth quarter of 2007 as the subprime mortgage crisis wrecked one investment and weighed heavily on another.
Pabrai, a former IT consulting exec, typically focuses on value investing and special situations, and he has gained a following and penned a pair of books on his investing style.
By admin - Posted on November 30th, 2007
At the Value Investing Congress meeting in New York, Mohnish Pabrai told why he likes Pinnacle Airlines (Nasdaq: PNCL). Pabrai owns 14-16% of Pinnacle Airlines.
Pabrai's notes on Pinnacle Airlines: No fuel price risk, no ticket price risk. No impact of passenger load factors.
Pinnacle is a capital leasing company.Pinnacle is the lowest cost operator. New deal with Northwest that allows them to fly airplanes with 76 seats versus 50 seats before.
At the Value Investing Congress meeting in New York, Mohnish Pabrai told why he likes Pinnacle Airlines (Nasdaq: PNCL). Pabrai owns 14-16% of Pinnacle Airlines.
Pabrai's notes on Pinnacle Airlines: No fuel price risk, no ticket price risk. No impact of passenger load factors.
Pinnacle is a capital leasing company.Pinnacle is the lowest cost operator. New deal with Northwest that allows them to fly airplanes with 76 seats versus 50 seats before.
By admin - Posted on November 7th, 2007
Tagged: Pabrai manages the $300 million Pabrai Fund using a deep value approach. His fund has generated an average annual return of roughly 25% since its inception in 1999. Stockpickr has sorted through Pabrai's holdings and compiled a list of Pabrai's Top Stocks ranked by their price/earnings-to-growth (PEG) ratios. Generally speaking, the lower the PEG ratio, the more undervalued the stock.
Pabrai manages the $300 million Pabrai Fund using a deep value approach. His fund has generated an average annual return of roughly 25% since its inception in 1999. Stockpickr has sorted through Pabrai's holdings and compiled a list of Pabrai's Top Stocks ranked by their price/earnings-to-growth (PEG) ratios. Generally speaking, the lower the PEG ratio, the more undervalued the stock.

