

๐ Episode 4 of 30 โ Complete Value Investing Course for Indian Investors
Welcome to Episode 4 of the Complete Value Investing Course by Manish Goel. Today, we explore the life and timeless wisdom of Benjamin Graham โ the father of value investing. Born in 1894, Graham developed the framework that created more billionaires than any business school in history. His most famous student? Warren Buffett, who credits Graham with transforming his life.
Table of Contents
ToggleBenjamin Graham (1894โ1976) was a professor at Columbia Business School for 28 years. He wrote two masterpieces: Security Analysis (1934) and The Intelligent Investor (1949). Warren Buffett calls The Intelligent Investor “the best book on investing ever written.” Graham’s own investment fund earned an average annual return of about 20% over 20 years.
Imagine a business partner named Mr. Market. Every day, he offers to buy or sell shares at a certain price. Some days he’s euphoric and offers ridiculously high prices. Other days he’s depressed and offers absurdly low prices.
The key insight: You don’t have to trade with Mr. Market every day. You only trade when it benefits you. When the Sensex dropped 800 points recently due to global tensions, that was Mr. Market being depressed. Quality companies like Titan Biotech (~โน368) didn’t suddenly become worse businesses โ only Mr. Market’s mood changed.
When you buy a stock, buy it at a significant discount to its true worth. This discount is your margin of safety. If an engineer builds a bridge to hold 10 tons, he builds it for 30 tons. That extra 20 tons is the margin of safety.
Similarly, if you calculate a company is worth โน500 per share, you might buy it only at โน300โ350. This cushion protects you from both errors in analysis and unexpected bad luck.
Intrinsic value is the true underlying worth of a business, based on its earnings, assets, growth rate, and dividends. Graham taught that in the short run, the market is a voting machine (driven by popularity). In the long run, it is a weighing machine (driven by actual results).
Graham developed specific quantitative criteria: adequate company size, strong financial condition (current ratio above 2), earnings stability (profitable for 10+ years), consistent dividends, and low PE and price-to-book ratios. While not every criterion applies perfectly today, the philosophy is timeless: buy financially strong, consistently profitable companies at reasonable prices.
1. Read The Intelligent Investor โ available in Hindi and English
2. Learn to read financial statements (covered in Episodes 6โ10)
3. Always think about margin of safety before buying
4. NEVER gamble in F&O โ Graham would be horrified!
โ ๏ธ SEBI data confirms: Over 90% of F&O traders lose money. Benjamin Graham built his fortune through patience and discipline, not speculation. Follow his example!
๐บ Watch the Complete 30-Episode Value Investing Course
This is Manish Goel reminding you โ invest in quality, invest with a margin of safety, and let time create wealth.
Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Please consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor before making investment decisions. Stock market investments are subject to market risks.
Chat with us on WhatsApp