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Beat the Benchmark 2026. Update: I wish I had never bought these two stocks.

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0:01

Hello dear friends. My name is Clive

0:04

Thompson. Today I'm going to be talking

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about my beat the benchmark portfolio

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2026 and I'll be talking about the best

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and worst stocks. And I'm going to tell

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you about two stocks I really regret

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putting in the portfolio.

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Let's quickly start with a risk warning.

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Nothing in this video is meant to be

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investment advice. I'm not an investment

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advisor. Stocks may go down as well as

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up and you may not get back what you

0:31

started with. Stocks and portfolios that

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I mentioned today may fall in value and

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you may lose money. Let's get on with

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it.

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Every year I publish a specimen

0:44

portfolio called beat the benchmark.

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It comprises 40 stocks.

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These stocks are very carefully chosen.

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They are designed to be as diversified

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as possible. Now, this year's portfolio

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went live in December 2025 and quite a

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few of my viewers have been asking

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questions about its yield, its PE ratio,

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its growth, and its safety. Today, I'm

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going to answer those questions and I'm

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going to show you how I answer them and

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walk you through how you can find the

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metrics and fundamentals of your own

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portfolio very quickly and easily. Let's

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get into it. The portfolio philosophy is

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simple. I want exposure to as many

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countries as possible. I want exposure

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to as many industries, currencies,

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countries, and company sizes as

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possible.

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Not the 40 fastest growing stocks, but

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40 stocks that fit together like a

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jigsaw puzzle. And I want to

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deliberately avoid duplication while

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avoiding concentration risk. Now, how is

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it performed? We started with $400,000.

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We've got $47,000

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now, slightly up. Um, but we had a very

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good January and February, up about 9%

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as you can see here on the chart. Uh,

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but then after the war started here, we

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fell back heavily and we're currently up

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about 1.4%. Uh, which is where your

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48,000 comes from. Uh, that's very

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slightly behind the benchmark. Um, but

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I'm very confident and you're going to

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see the reasons why in a minute.

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So on the 28th of February, the war

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came. Of course, with hindsight,

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everybody says we could have known it's

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coming. Uh perhaps plenty did, but that

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changed everything. Some stocks surged

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and others fell hard.

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Here's a quick summary of what moved and

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why. The winners were largely in defense

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and energy. Singapore Technologies

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Engineering surged on demand for

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battlefield vehicles, drones, and cyber

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security. Norway's Norbit Asa rose

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sharply. They make underwater threat

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detection equipment. Uh they protect

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subca infrastructure. DO Aviation in

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France, Indra Systems in Spain, and

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Leonardo SPA in Italy performed or

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benefited from the dramatic increase in

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European defense spending. On the energy

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side, uh, Shell Transport and Trading

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performed well, um, as did the

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alternative energy companies, Vestus

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Wind Systems and Kazak Tomrom, the Kazak

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uranium producer.

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The losers were the more painful story.

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Hermes, the luxury goods manufacturer,

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uh, fell as luxury spending came under

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pressure with the war. Betsson uh

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dropped heavily after Turkey cracked

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down on online gambling and its currency

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collapsed and the Chinese collectibles

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company PopMart mart suffered from

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rising tariffs and higher shipping

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costs. Coming up, I'm going to tell you

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about two stocks I should never have

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bought and why. But first, let me show

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you the metrics and the fundamentals of

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the portfolio. And I think you're going

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to agree that they're pretty good.

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Now, most investors know simply Wall

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Street for its snowflake. That's the

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visual score you get when you click on

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any individual company. It rates that

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company from 0 to six across five

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dimensions: health, value, future

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growth, past performance, and dividends.

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What very few people realize is that you

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can generate the same snowflake for your

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entire portfolio at at once. So, here's

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the snowflake for my entire portfolio,

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and you can see that it scores really

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well on health. It's got an average

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score of 4.72 out of six, and I would

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say any score above two out of six is

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good uh or good enough, and three out of

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six is very good. Uh it also scores well

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on the past track record, well on the

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future growth, and well on the value

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section. On the dividend section, maybe

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doesn't score so well, but dividends

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wasn't an important part of this

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portfolio. across the board the

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portfolio's got pretty good fundamentals

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I think.

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There we are. That's the so strong

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health value and future and growth past.

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Now let's look at the growth picture. So

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to get that I'm going to click on

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analysis and I'll scroll down to the

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charts here and let's go across to look

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at the growth that's coming. So let's

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just go there. So as we can see the

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historical growth of the portfolio,

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we're talking about the earnings per

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share growth or the earnings growth was

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19.7 compared with the US market of

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8.2%.

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And the projected future growth is 24.9%

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growth in earnings compared with the US

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market of 16%. We got a similar picture

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in the revenue growth of 16% past growth

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uh versus 12 for the US market and

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revenue growth forecast uh in the future

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at 12% compared with 10.9% for the US

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market. And if we come to the earnings

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per share growth, we get a very picture

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uh very similar picture to the earnings

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growth of 19.9 historical 24.4 for

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forecast earnings growth much higher

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than the US uh forecast for the whole

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market of 16.6%.

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So I can say that across the board this

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portfolio is expected to grow faster

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than the market average. That's not

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guaranteed, it's an expectation. And

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here is one of my favorite views. We'll

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scroll down here. Uh it's the

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diversification across holdings. Look at

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that ring of holdings. Every company

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represented there represents a different

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segment. There's no single stock

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dominates. The largest holding KPL

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represents just 3.9%

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of the portfolio. Most of the holdings

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sit in the 2.1 to 2.9% range. That's

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genuine diversification. Diversification

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by name, by numbers, by country, by

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industry. And finally, valuation. This

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is where it gets interesting. So to get

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to the valuation, I'm just going to

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scroll up here and we'll go to this

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section and scroll to the left.

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Nearly there. There we are. So this is

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quite interesting because we can see

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that the value of the portfolio is

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$47,750,000.

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But based on the discounted cash flow

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value, these businesses are actually

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worth based on the cash they are

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expected to generate $851,780.

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That's a figure which can change daily

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of course. Um so the current portfolio

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is currently priced at 52.1%

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below its estimated intrinsic value. So

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we have a theoretical value of $851,000.

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intrinsic value $851,000 on a discounted

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cash flow basis. Current market value

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less than half of that very cheap in

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terms of the portfolio and also as we

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saw earlier high growth expected.

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Now this brings me to what's called Mr.

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Market or Benjamin Graham and Warren

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Buffett.

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Now Benjamin Graham was the mentor for

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Warren Buffett. Warren Buffett wouldn't

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be the hero he is when it comes to

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investing if it wasn't for Ben Graham.

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So Benjamin Graham in his book called

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the intelligent investor introduced a

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character he called Mr. Market.

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Mr. Market is sometimes rational and

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sometimes very euphoric and sometimes

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he's deeply pessimistic willing to sell

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you perfectly good businesses for far

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less than they're worth.

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Warren Buffett once said, "Mr. Market is

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