Excess Returns

Buffett, Sun Tzu and the Ancient Art of Risk Taking | Tobias Carlisle

20 snips
Oct 16, 2025
Tobias Carlisle, founder of Acquirers Fund and author of The Acquirer's Multiple, delves into the rich interplay between investing and the timeless strategies of Sun Tzu. He highlights how Buffett’s acquisitions, like General Re and his massive stake in Apple, exemplify victory without conflict. The discussion reveals key concepts like via negativa—succeeding by avoiding mistakes—and the importance of temperament over intellect. Carlisle also emphasizes simplicity in investing, the merit of patience, and Buffett's strategic approach to the Japanese market.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

General Re: A Defensive Masterstroke

  • Carlisle recounts Buffett's General Re deal as a defensive masterstroke that insulated Berkshire in the 2000s crash.
  • Buffett swapped equity for bonds, later profiting when bonds rallied and reinvesting into equities after the downturn.
ANECDOTE

Apple: Victory Without Conflict

  • Carlisle narrates Buffett's Apple purchase as 'victory without conflict' achieved by quietly building a huge stake.
  • Buffett treated Apple as a consumer franchise and allocated an unprecedented portion of Berkshire to it, delivering massive returns.
ADVICE

Succeed By Not Failing

  • Use via negativa: focus on avoiding known failure modes instead of chasing complex upside narratives.
  • Run a checklist of how an idea can fail and reject ideas that can't clear those failure gates.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app