Top 35 Quotes & Sayings by Li Lu

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American businessman Li Lu.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Li Lu

Li Lu is a Chinese-born American value investor, businessman and philanthropist. He is the founder and chairman of Himalaya Capital Management. Prior to emigrating to America, he was one of the student leaders of the 1989 Tiananmen Square student protests. In 2021, he also co-founded The Asian American Foundation and serves as its chairman.

With free market and free man, if you remove one of them, it is not called capitalism in my dictionary.
Only by a process of peaceful evolution can China accomplish its own goals of being a free, prosperous, and strong country.
I have three lovely children. They are beautiful, talented, and kind-hearted. I'm most proud of them. I love them so much that I will never want to burden them with a large amount of inherited wealth.
I graduated from Columbia University in 1996 and founded my investment company in 1997, thus starting my professional investment career. — © Li Lu
I graduated from Columbia University in 1996 and founded my investment company in 1997, thus starting my professional investment career.
At various stages in my life, I could have stopped, or took the long rest. For some reason, my heart told me otherwise. I just kept going. Half of the time, I wasn't sure where I was heading. The other half, I was probably taking the wrong turns. No matter.
Without a free man, there is no free market. That's called exploitation.
A 'competence' that has no defined borders cannot be called a true competence.
In my view, the biggest investment risk is not the volatility of prices, but whether you will suffer a permanent loss of capital. Not only is the mere drop in stock prices not risk, but it is an opportunity. Where else do you look for cheap stocks?
The game of investing is a process of discovering who you are, what you're interested in, what you're good at, what you love to do, then magnifying that until you gain a sizable edge over all the other people.
For the vast majority of mankind's history, economic activity consisted of finding energy and using energy.
All companies incur expenses, some of which are fixed and bear no relation to sales volumes. In this way, profits can grow at a faster rate than sales.
Everyone has blind spots, and even the brightest people are no exceptions.
The whole thing is, really, money makes money. That's the whole thing about capitalism. Without the capital, there is no -ism.
When I first came to Columbia University, I was dirt poor. I did not choose to come here - I just ended up here because I had nowhere else to go, having just escaped from China after Tiananmen. I was in a new country where I didn't understand the language, didn't know anybody, and didn't have a penny to my name. So I was desperate and afraid.
Politically, China suppresses its people, but because the government allows some freedom in economic matters, business has become the ultimate expression of individuality.
Tiananmen did not fail.
I was a college student in 1989 when I participated in the demonstration at Tiananmen Square. I was one of the organizers.
Mao Zedong's way was to make people crazy. It was like a religious cult.
In my 40s, the two cultures finally came to peace with one other inside me, and I have come to identify myself as both 100% Chinese and 100% American simultaneously.
Free market never succeeded without free men and free society.
To us, anyone who opposes dictatorship is our friend. Those who support it, our enemy.
Part of the game of investing is to come into your own. You must find some way that perfectly fits your personality because there is some element of a zero sum game in investing. If you buy, somebody else has to sell. And when you sell, somebody has to buy. You can't both be right.
I was born and grew up in China during the 1960s.
I was born in April of 1966, on the eve of the Cultural Revolution. Soon after, my parents and grandparents all lost personal freedom simply for being intellectuals. So I spent most of my childhood rotating between adopted families of peasants and coalminers.
I grew up in Communist China and never had much money to my name, and then, all of a sudden, I had giant student loans.
You can't imagine a free market coupled with a dictatorship.
Management is always part of the equation of making the company successful, so the quality of management always matters. — © Li Lu
Management is always part of the equation of making the company successful, so the quality of management always matters.
I think we Chinese are just as capable, as diligent, as hardworking, as peace-loving, and as creative as people everywhere.
The financial crisis of 2008-09 was in large part the result of the so-called 'success' of people who did not understand their fiduciary duty. This kind of 'success' is extremely harmful to all of society.
Whatever you are is because of what your ancestors have done.
Investing is about predicting the future, and the future is inherently unpredictable. Therefore, the only way you can do better is to assess all the facts and truly know what you know and know what you don't know. That's your probability edge.
Investing is about intellectual honesty. You want to know what you know. You want to know, mostly, what you don't know.
No dictatorship can be sustained within the context of an information revolution.
Rock and roll was a revelation for me.
Management always has a big influence on your success, no matter how good or how bad the business is itself.
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