📖Jim Rogers
Price vs Value Disconnect
Prices diverge from value short-term but converge long-term.
In the short run, the market is a voting machine; in the long run, it's a weighing machine. Prices can diverge wildly from value, but eventually converge.
🏠 Everyday Analogy
📖 Core Interpretation
In Price vs Value Disconnect, Jim Rogers focuses on the gap between price and value. Returns come from paying less than what a business is worth, not from guessing short-term market moves.
💎 Key Insight:The voting-to-weighing machine transition is inevitable.
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❓ Why It Matters
Ignoring valuation turns even good companies into poor investments. Overpaying compresses future returns and leaves little margin when assumptions are wrong.
🎯 How to Practice
Estimate intrinsic value with conservative assumptions, set clear buy ranges, and act only when price offers a meaningful discount with acceptable downside.
⚠️ Common Pitfalls
Confusing a low price with true cheapness
Using one metric without business context
Overly optimistic assumptions that erase margin of safety
📚 Case Studies
1
Commodities Supercycle Call (1999)
Rogers argued a long commodities bull market was starting after a 20‑year bear, launching the Rogers International Commodity Index in 1998–1999.
✨ Outcome:Investors who followed gained strongly in energy, metals, and agriculture through the 2000s supercycle peak.
2
Oil Spike and Crash (2008)
Rogers remained bullish as oil surged above $140, then collapsed during the global financial crisis amid demand shock and deleveraging.
✨ Outcome:Long‑term commodity investors who stayed invested saw partial recovery as emerging‑market demand and QE supported prices in the following years.
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