Warren Buffett's Contrarian Bet on Apple That Changed Everything
Buffett swore off tech stocks for decades — here's why his $36 billion Apple stake became Berkshire Hathaway's crown jewel.
We use cookies
MainRatios uses cookies for essential site functions. With your consent, we also use analytics cookies including session replay sampling (PostHog, Google Analytics) and advertising cookies (Google AdSense). You can reject non-essential cookies, including the "sale" or sharing of personal information under CCPA, and you may withdraw consent at any time (GDPR). See our Privacy Policy for details.
Aprende de los más grandes inversores de la historia. Sus estrategias, filosofías y sabiduría atemporal.
Buffett swore off tech stocks for decades — here's why his $36 billion Apple stake became Berkshire Hathaway's crown jewel.
Bill Ackman turned a small hedge into roughly $2.6 billion in weeks. Inside the concentrated, activist playbook of Pershing Square founder Bill Ackman.
Carl Icahn turned activist investing into an art — buying cheap, then forcing change. Inside his playbook, his biggest trades, and what investors can learn.
While the world obsesses over Berkshire's $$AAPL$$ stake, Buffett's $32 billion wager on railroads reveals his true edge — and why most investors miss it.
Seth Klarman built a $27B fund holding cash and buying what others fear. Inside the margin-of-safety philosophy that compounded ~20% a year for decades.
Philip Fisher pioneered growth investing and the scuttlebutt method, shaping Warren Buffett. Inside his philosophy, principles, and Fisher-style stocks.
Buffett's $1 billion investment in Coke seemed insane at the time — here's the framework behind his most profitable contrarian bets.
Stanley Druckenmiller compounded capital near 30% a year for three decades without a down year. Here is the macro philosophy and conviction behind the streak.
Charlie Munger reshaped investing by championing quality over cheapness. Explore his mental models, famous holdings, and the temperament that built a fortune.
Peter Lynch grew Fidelity Magellan from $18 million to $14 billion, compounding at roughly 29% a year. Here is the playbook behind the legend.
When Warren Buffett invested $1.3 billion in Coca-Cola in 1988, critics called it overpriced at 15x earnings. Here's why he held through decades of doubt.
Julian Robertson compounded at ~31.7% a year, then closed Tiger near the dot-com top. His long/short model and Tiger Cubs reshaped hedge funds.