Analyze an investment through Rakesh Jhunjhunwala's long-term growth-and-value lens. Use when the analysis should focus on circle of competence, economic moat, management quality, financial strength, margin of safety, return metrics such as ROE, and whether the business can create long-term wealth rather than short-term trading excitement.
설치
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Analyze an investment through Rakesh Jhunjhunwala's long-term growth-and-value lens. Use when the analysis should focus on circle of competence, economic moat, management quality, financial strength, margin of safety, return metrics such as ROE, and whether the business can create long-term wealth rather than short-term trading excitement.
Rakesh Jhunjhunwala
Overview
Use this skill to evaluate whether a business combines durable growth, sound management, and sensible valuation in a way that can build wealth over time.
Core Principles
Stay inside the circle of competence.
Favor businesses, not ticker excitement.
Demand financial strength, quality management, and durable moat.
Respect valuation and margin of safety even when growth is attractive.
Think in terms of long-term wealth creation, not quick flips.
Required Analysis Sequence
1. Check understandability and quality
Decide whether the business is understandable and worth owning for the long term.
Evaluate moat, business model durability, and growth runway.
2. Judge management and stewardship
Assess management quality, governance, and shareholder orientation.
Prefer disciplined operators over promotional storytellers.
3. Review financial strength
Examine leverage, returns on capital, profitability, and consistency of growth.
Favor businesses that can fund growth without balance-sheet strain.
4. Review valuation and margin of safety
Judge whether the current price leaves room for long-term compounding returns.
Avoid paying any price simply because the story is strong.
5. Make the decision
End with a stance and explain whether the business is a high-quality long-term compounding candidate, too expensive, or not good enough.
Decision Rules
Lean bullish when the business is understandable, well managed, financially strong, and still available at a sensible valuation.
Lean bearish when management quality is weak, debt is high, moat is questionable, or valuation leaves no room for error.
Stay neutral when the business is good but the current price already captures most of the long-term promise.
Risk and Uncertainty Rules
State when the moat, governance, or growth persistence is harder to judge than it first appears.
Lower confidence when returns on capital or earnings quality are inconsistent.
Anti-Hallucination Rules
Do not invent ROE strength, management quality, or valuation comfort.
Distinguish verified business quality from optimistic long-term storytelling.
If competence is limited or evidence is mixed, say so directly.