Seth Andrew Klarman was born May 21, 1957, in New York City.
Seth Andrew Klarman was born May 21, 1957, in New York City. ◦
He graduated magna cum laude from Cornell University in 1979 in economics with a minor in history, then attended Harvard Business School where he was a Baker Scholar. ◦
Klarman founded the Boston-based Baupost Group in 1982 with $27 million alongside partners William J. Poorvu, Howard H. Stevenson, Jordan Baruch, and Isaac Auerbach. ◦
The firm grew to manage roughly $30 billion in assets. ◦
He is the author of *Margin of Safety* (1991), edited the sixth edition of Graham and Dodd's *Security Analysis* (2008), and was inducted into Institutional Investor Alpha's Hedge Fund Manager Hall of Fame in 2008. ◦
He is notoriously publicity-shy, has rarely given an interview, and his annual Baupost letters are closely guarded and not published publicly. ◦
His book *Margin of Safety* is out of print and commands famously high prices used. ◦
Klarman is a proponent of value investing in the tradition of Benjamin Graham. ◦
He believes avoiding loss should be the primary goal of every investor. ◦
At Baupost, he maintains that it is clearly better to be scared than sorry. ◦
He holds that risk is not inherent in an investment; it is always relative to the price paid. ◦
He argues that volatility is not risk, and historic volatility does not necessarily project future volatility. ◦
He believes a margin of safety is necessary because valuation is an imprecise art, the future is unpredictable, and investors are human and do make mistakes. ◦
He maintains that business value cannot be precisely determined, and any attempt to value businesses with precision will yield values that are precisely inaccurate. ◦
He warns that things that have never happened before are bound to occur with some regularity, and you must always be prepared for the unexpected, including sudden, sharp downward swings in markets and the economy. ◦
He believes that when excesses such as lax lending standards become widespread and persist for some time, people are lulled into a false sense of security, creating an even more dangerous situation. ◦
He distinguishes investors from speculators, noting that investors believe over the long run security prices tend to reflect fundamental developments involving the underlying businesses, while speculators buy and sell securities based on whether they believe those securities will next rise or fall in price. ◦
He asserts that no one knows what the market will do, that trying to predict it is a waste of time, and that investing based upon that prediction is a speculative undertaking. ◦
He notes that investments throw off cash flow for the benefit of the owners, while speculations do not. ◦
He would rather underperform in a huge bull market than get clobbered in a really bad bear market. ◦
Rather than ratchet up risk, his approach has been to hold cash in the absence of opportunity. ◦
He advises that borrowers—individual, corporate, or government—should always match fund their liabilities against the duration of their assets, and warns to beware leverage in all its forms. ◦
The best investors do not target return; they focus first on risk, and only then decide whether the projected return justifies taking each particular risk. ◦
He holds that it is always easiest to run with the herd, and at times it can take a deep reservoir of courage and conviction to stand apart from it. ◦
He believes that being very early and being wrong look exactly the same 99% of the time. ◦
He advocates that investors should usually refrain from purchasing a "full position" all at once, and that buying a partial position leaves reserves that permit investors to "average down," lowering their average cost per share if prices decline. ◦
Absolute-performance-oriented investors are willing to hold cash reserves when no bargains are available. ◦
Above all, investors must avoid swinging at bad pitches. ◦
Baupost's largest partnership vehicle achieved net annual returns exceeding 20% with only one money-losing year since 1983, employing a value discipline with an event-driven bias across publicly-traded and private equities, distressed debt, and real estate. ◦
Margin of safety is simply the idea that you want room to be wrong. ◦
Value investing is, at its core, the marriage of a contrarian streak and a calculator. ◦
He believes that the latest trade of a security creates a dangerous illusion that its market price approximates its true value. ◦
He holds that all investors need to learn how to be at peace with their decisions, because your own psychology can be your worst enemy as an investor. ◦
He believes the way to maximize outcome is to concentrate on process. ◦
He notes that when stocks are rising for no better reason than that they have risen, the greater fool is at work. ◦
He maintains that patience and discipline can make you look foolishly out of touch until they make you look prudent and even prescient. ◦
He asserts that value investing is simple to understand but difficult to implement, and that the hard part is discipline, patience, and judgment. ◦
Klarman is a proponent of value investing in the tradition of Benjamin Graham. ◦
He is the author of *Margin of Safety* (1991) and edited the sixth edition of Graham and Dodd's *Security Analysis* (2008). ◦
He was inducted into Institutional Investor Alpha's Hedge Fund Manager Hall of Fame in 2008. ◦
Baupost employs a value discipline with an event-driven bias across publicly-traded and private equities, distressed debt, and real estate. ◦
He graduated magna cum laude from Cornell University in 1979 in economics with a minor in history. ◦
Klarman is notoriously publicity-shy and has rarely given an interview. ◦
His annual Baupost letters are closely guarded and not published publicly. ◦
His book *Margin of Safety* is out of print and commands famously high prices used. ◦
He acknowledges that being very early and being wrong look exactly the same 99% of the time. ◦
He observes that it is always easiest to run with the herd, and that at times it can take a deep reservoir of courage and conviction to stand apart from it. ◦
He notes that patience and discipline can make you look foolishly out of touch until they make you look prudent and even prescient. ◦
Direct engagement is limited, as Klarman is notoriously publicity-shy and has rarely given an interview. ◦
His annual Baupost letters are closely guarded and not published publicly. ◦
His book *Margin of Safety* is out of print and commands famously high prices used. ◦