Charlie Munger’s Mental Models: How Great Investors Think Long Term
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In this episode of Intelligent Investment Today, we step away from stock prices, market forecasts, and short-term noise to explore how one of history’s greatest investors actually thought.
Charlie Munger, long-time partner of Warren Buffett and vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, believed that investment success was not driven by complex formulas or superior intelligence—but by sound judgment, emotional discipline, and the consistent avoidance of obvious mistakes. His influence fundamentally reshaped modern value investing.
This episode explores Munger’s most important mental models, including inversion, circle of competence, incentives, second-order thinking, opportunity cost, and the psychological biases that cause investors to make repeated errors. Rather than focusing on what to buy, Munger focused on how to think when uncertainty is unavoidable and emotions run high.
You’ll learn why Munger emphasized temperament over intellect, why avoiding stupidity can be more powerful than seeking brilliance, and how clear thinking—not prediction—can become a durable edge in investing. These principles aren’t about constant activity or clever trades. They’re about patience, discipline, and positioning yourself to benefit from long-term compounding.
Whether you’re a long-term investor, student of value investing, or simply interested in better decision-making, this episode offers timeless insights into how great investors approach risk, uncertainty, and opportunity.
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