A constant in my approach to investing: You should think politically but unconventionally.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Look: invest in what you understand, what's foreseeably going to offer real value and returns, not necessarily what's trendy.
I found an approach to investing that made enormous sense to me: rigorously analyzing a company's fundamentals, understanding exactly how it makes money, developing a view on the business's future prospects, and deciding if it's a good business.
For most people, attaining the intellectual clarity and emotional detachment that investing requires is tough.
What's in my mind is that I'm investing in people. It might be through a building or a program, but I'm investing in people. And the people that I'm investing in are underprivileged or hold a core value that I believe in.
Money and investing can be complex, confusing, and often boring subjects.
The way that we are going to solve social problems is by working with multiple different types of investing.
As much as it's sometimes hard to make choices about where you invest, it's equally hard to make choices about where you don't invest and what you eliminate.
Investing is a business where you can look very silly for a long period of time before you are proven right.
In any investment, you expect to have fun and make money.
When it comes to investing, you are your own worst enemy.