Key Highlights

  • Investment: Understand risks, focus on value companies, and avoid speculation.
  • Corporate Culture: Build trust, define core values, and strive for the greater good.
  • Management: Trust partners, make decisions based on principles, and focus on the user.
  • Child Education: Provide security, teach values, and encourage continuous learning.
  • Understanding Companies: Focus on companies providing real value, and understand business models.

A Deep Dive into Duan Yongping's Insights

In a rare interview, Duan Yongping, the founder of BBK, shared his insightful perspectives on investment, corporate culture, management, and even parenting. The two-hour interview provided a wealth of practical and philosophical advice that can benefit investors and entrepreneurs alike. Here is a distillation of the top 50 takeaways from this valuable conversation.

01 On Investment

  1. Cheap things can get cheaper: Don't assume a low price automatically means a good opportunity.
  2. Staying rational is difficult: Emotions can cloud investment decisions.
  3. If you really know how to invest, you'll buy good companies and hold them.
  4. We are who we are because of the things we didn't do.
  5. Investing is interesting: You don't need to understand everything to make money.
  6. If you can't handle a stock dropping 50%, you shouldn't buy it.
  7. In the age of AI investing, if you're trying to make money by looking at charts, you're an easy target.
  8. Everyone makes mistakes, but some people don't keep making them.
  9. Warren Buffett's margin of safety isn't about being cheap, it's about how well you understand the company.
  10. Buying stocks means buying the company: Only 1% truly understand this.
  11. Investing is simple but not easy: You must understand the company, the business model, and future cash flows.
  12. Speculation is difficult: Most retail investors lose money in both bull and bear markets.
  13. I understand businesses: It's easier to understand other people's businesses, but I don't understand many.
  14. Why hold stocks for so long and make so much money? Because the money isn't that much.
  15. Copying trades isn't a sustainable investment method: You're lagging behind.

02 On Corporate Culture

  1. Corporate culture is closely related to the founder: Find people who share your values.
  2. Our culture is constantly evolving: Our "things we don't do" list is constantly being added to.
  3. "Do the right thing and do things right": This removes complexity.
  4. We do what we say: This builds trust.
  5. We have two types of people: Those who share our values and those who work with us.
  6. Good culture always gets back on the right track: It has a north star guiding it.

03 On Corporate Management

  1. Steve Jobs told Tim Cook: As CEO, make decisions and don't worry about what I would do.
  2. I trust my partners: This is important.
  3. The president of Panasonic told me: When I make a decision, I think about what old man Panasonic would think.
  4. I have a habit: If I encounter something unsuitable, I leave quickly.
  5. You should look at the users: They're looking in the rearview mirror.
  6. It's hard for the founder to leave the company: Not many people can do it.
  7. I don't think age is a barrier: Warren Buffett is 90 years old and still doing well.

04 On Child Education and Growth

  1. Everything parents do is to increase a child's sense of security.
  2. I don't ask children to do what I can't do myself.
  3. Children always have a temper: They can express emotions.
  4. They should know the boundaries: What you can't do is important.
  5. Security is important for children: It's hard to be rational without security.
  6. University teaches you how to learn: It builds confidence.
  7. Everything parents do teaches children how to do things: You teach them how to swear, hit, get angry, and be kind.
  8. Solving problems is helpful: You should find ways and reasons for mistakes.

05 On Understanding a Company

  1. I have three stocks: Apple, Tencent, and Moutai.
  2. Apple doesn't touch products that don't add value to users.
  3. Apple isn't cheap now: But I don't know if it will grow.
  4. I think Apple's culture is good: They care about making good products and user experience.
  5. Apple didn't make an electric car: It doesn't have enough differentiation.
  6. I don't know how many searches AI will replace: I think Google is good.
  7. I admire Jensen Huang: He's been saying the same things for a decade.
  8. I've known TSMC for a long time: But I don't understand the industry.
  9. I think AI should be involved: Don't miss the opportunity.
  10. The electric car business won't be good: It's tiring and differentiation is minimal.
  11. There are two types of white wine: Moutai and others.
  12. The most important thing for Moutai is whether it has a culture to maintain it.
  13. I wanted to sell Moutai when it was 2600 or 2700 yuan: But what would I buy?
  14. I wouldn't invest in General Electric today: Its business model isn't good.

Risk Warning: this article represents only the author’s views and is for reference only. It does not constitute investment advice or financial guidance, nor does it represent the stance of the Markets.com platform.When considering shares, indices, forex (foreign exchange) and commodities for trading and price predictions, remember that trading CFDs involves a significant degree of risk and could result in capital loss.Past performance is not indicative of any future results. This information is provided for informative purposes only and should not be construed to be investment advice. Trading cryptocurrency CFDs and spread bets is restricted for all UK retail clients. 

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