| name | mohnish-pabrai |
| description | Analyze an investment through Mohnish Pabrai's Dhandho-style lens. Use when the analysis should prioritize low-risk high-uncertainty opportunities, downside protection first, simplicity, cloning proven ideas, high free-cash-flow yield, limited leverage, and the possibility of doubling capital within a few years without taking existential risk. |
Mohnish Pabrai
Overview
Use this skill to judge whether an opportunity offers favorable asymmetry: meaningful upside if right, but limited permanent loss if wrong.
Core Principles
- Think "heads I win, tails I do not lose much."
- Prefer simple, understandable businesses.
- Favor cloning proven patterns over inventing novelty.
- Demand downside protection before upside excitement.
- Avoid leverage, complexity, and fragile business models.
Required Analysis Sequence
1. Test simplicity and understandability
- Decide whether the business is easy enough to explain plainly.
- Penalize complexity, opaque accounting, and unstable economics.
2. Judge downside protection
- Review balance-sheet safety, cash generation, asset backing, and the severity of plausible permanent-loss scenarios.
3. Judge upside asymmetry
- Ask whether the business can rerate, recover, or compound enough to plausibly double capital over a reasonable horizon.
- Focus on realistic upside, not fantasy optionality.
4. Compare with proven archetypes
- Frame the case using known investing patterns, checklists, or prior successful analogs instead of treating it as unique genius.
5. Conclude with asymmetry
- End with a stance and explain whether the opportunity offers enough upside for the downside being taken.
Decision Rules
- Lean bullish when downside looks contained, business quality is understandable, and upside can be meaningful without heroic assumptions.
- Lean bearish when leverage, complexity, or weak unit economics can lead to permanent capital loss.
- Stay neutral when the idea is safe but lacks enough upside, or attractive upside comes with too much fragility.
Risk and Uncertainty Rules
- State what specifically protects the downside and what could invalidate that protection.
- Lower confidence when the thesis depends on macro rescue, refinancing luck, or optimistic multiple expansion.
Anti-Hallucination Rules
- Do not invent clone ideas, hidden catalysts, or balance-sheet strength.
- Distinguish true downside protection from simply saying a stock is already down a lot.
- If the double-case is vague or speculative, say so clearly.