Buffett disciple Mohnish Pabrai names his 2 favorite investing books right now

Buffett disciple Mohnish Pabrai names his 2 favorite investing books right now


Looking to invest in stocks with long-term value? Veteran investor Mohnish Pabrai has two books to recommend.

Speaking to CNBC Pro Talks, Pabrai — a value investor and disciple of billionaire Warren Buffett — said that “100 to 1 in the Stock Market” is an “extremely well-written” book.

Authored by Thomas Phelps and originally published 50 years ago, the book teaches about how to increase wealth one hundredfold through buy-and-hold investing.

Buy-and-hold is a passive investment strategy that involves purchasing stocks and holding them for a long period of time, even if there are short-term fluctuations.

The founder of the Pabrai Investment Funds, which has grown from $100,000 in 1999 to $1.2 million in revenue as of March this year, was discussing his playbook on what to buy and what to avoid.

Another book for those looking for “competitive advantage or ability to earn superior returns,” he said, is Christopher Mayer’s “100 Baggers” – which talks about companies that returned $100 for every $1 invested.

Does the business earn very high returns on equity? Can it grow and prosper without the use of debt? … Can this business reinvest the high returns and equity back at high rates?

Mohnish Pabrai

founder of the Pabrai Investment Funds

Investors should be asking themselves a few questions, he said.

“Does the business earn very high returns on equity? Can it grow and prosper without the use of debt? … Can this business reinvest the high returns and equity back at high rates?”

How to know if a company’s a ‘homerun’

To illustrate his point, Pabrai gave the example of Starbucks.

“When they open a store in the U.S., they get their money back in two years. When they open a store in China, they get their money back in 12 to 15 months,” he said.

These are “astronomical returns on capital,” the veteran investor said, adding that Starbucks had the ability to “get their money back really fast.”

“The business is getting more efficient because most of us don’t go and lounge around Starbucks. We pre-order, just pick our latte and go. And that’s even more profitable [for them].”

Pabrai summed up his idea of a “homerun” – he said it’s being able to see a clear “10-, 20-, 30-year runway.”

“What I’m trying to say is that if I find a business where the the they can grow without the
use of debt, … at a not expensive looking price, then you got yourself a homerun.”

Don’t miss: Bill Gates has 5 book recommendations for your 2022 summer reading list: ‘Compelling without sacrificing any complexity’

Like this story? Subscribe to CNBC Make It on YouTube!



Source

How the world’s 240,000 crypto millionaires are spending their fortunes
Business

How the world’s 240,000 crypto millionaires are spending their fortunes

A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox. The price surge in bitcoin helped created another 70,000 new crypto millionaires over the past year, adding hundreds of billions of dollars in […]

Read More
NBA looks to China for growth, renewing a foothold in its second-largest market
Business

NBA looks to China for growth, renewing a foothold in its second-largest market

Michael Porter Jr. #17 of the Brooklyn Nets shoots the ball during practice and media availability as part of 2025 NBA Global Games China at Venetian Arena on October 9, 2025 in Macao, China. Ryan Stetz | National Basketball Association | Getty Images MACAO — The National Basketball Association returns to China for the first […]

Read More
Levi Strauss raises prices, helping to boost profit and outlook
Business

Levi Strauss raises prices, helping to boost profit and outlook

Levi Strauss‘s profits are growing more than Wall Street expected despite higher costs from tariffs, thanks to targeted price increases and a shift away from wholesalers, the company said Thursday as it reported fiscal third quarter results.  During the quarter, Levi’s gross margin grew 1.1 percentage points to 61.7%, up from 60.6% in the year-ago […]

Read More