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The Swarm Lounge
General Investing and Economics Discussion - No Politics
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<blockquote data-quote="LibertyTurns" data-source="post: 798910" data-attributes="member: 789"><p>Admittedly it’s easier said than done but it’s the #1 investor lesson that needs to be learned. I had a great mentor. Taught me you shouldn’t try to catch a falling knife, gaffe off the losses, etc.</p><p></p><p>We’ve all probably had a bad Boss. Did he really ever get any better? You’ve probably worked in a bad department? Bet that department had been bad for more than a few days before you arrived & it probably was bad long after you left. Bad companies are bad. They’re usually bad at more than one thing. It’s the rare leader that has the skill to turnaround a bad company. Usually the people that take that job are marginal leaders trying to make a name by themselves by catching lightning in a bottle.</p><p></p><p>Why would you bet on any of the above? Seek out the winners.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LibertyTurns, post: 798910, member: 789"] Admittedly it’s easier said than done but it’s the #1 investor lesson that needs to be learned. I had a great mentor. Taught me you shouldn’t try to catch a falling knife, gaffe off the losses, etc. We’ve all probably had a bad Boss. Did he really ever get any better? You’ve probably worked in a bad department? Bet that department had been bad for more than a few days before you arrived & it probably was bad long after you left. Bad companies are bad. They’re usually bad at more than one thing. It’s the rare leader that has the skill to turnaround a bad company. Usually the people that take that job are marginal leaders trying to make a name by themselves by catching lightning in a bottle. Why would you bet on any of the above? Seek out the winners. [/QUOTE]
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