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AT A GLANCE
INVESTING STYLE
George Soros
Soros doesn't use a fixed strategy. He uses a theory.
He calls it reflexivity — the idea that market participants don't just react to fundamentals, they influence them. House prices going up makes people confident.
Confident people borrow more. Borrowing pushes prices higher.
Until it doesn't. Markets create self-reinforcing loops that diverge from reality for a long time before snapping back.
In practice, this meant making very large macro bets — currencies, interest rates, commodities, whole stock markets — when he believed a loop had gone too far. He didn't diversify to reduce risk.
He concentrated into high-conviction positions and used leverage. He famously said: "It's not whether you're right or wrong, but how much money you make when you're right and how much you lose when you're wrong."
Charlie Munger
Munger's whole thing is mental models. The idea is simple: instead of being an expert in one field, you learn the core concepts from as many different fields as possible — psychology, biology, physics, economics, history — and then use that whole toolkit to think about problems.
He calls it a latticework of mental models. It sounds like a self-help concept.
It's actually how he consistently made better decisions than almost everyone around him. On investing, he pushed Buffett away from his old mentor's approach — which was basically "find dirt-cheap companies and flip them fast" — toward something more durable: find the best businesses in the world and hold them forever.
The key word he uses is moat. A business so dominant that competitors can't touch it.
Think Coca-Cola. He was also deeply influenced by psychology, particularly the ways humans reliably fool themselves.
He gave a famous talk called "The Psychology of Human Misjudgment" listing 25 ways our brains get things wrong. Reading it once will change how you make decisions.
FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY
George Soros
He believes in fallibility — specifically, that every market participant is operating on imperfect information, including himself. His approach: form a hypothesis, bet on it, watch for signals that the hypothesis is wrong, and change course decisively when those signals arrive.
He is explicitly anti-certainty. He thinks the most dangerous investor is the one who mistakes confidence for competence.
His philosophy of the open society — the political version — applies equally to markets: no position is so right that it can't be challenged.
Charlie Munger
Invert. Always invert.
That's his most famous rule — borrowed from the mathematician Jacobi. Instead of asking "how do I succeed?" ask "what would guarantee failure, and then avoid those things." It sounds obvious.
Almost nobody actually does it. He believes the secret to a good life and good investing is the same: figure out what you want to avoid, avoid it relentlessly, and most good things follow.
On wealth: getting rich isn't the hard part — keeping it is. Most people blow up by using borrowed money, getting greedy at the top, or panicking at the bottom.
Don't do those things. On decisions: only make the big bet when you're very sure.
Be patient for a long time, then move fast when the opportunity is obvious.
RISK TOLERANCE
George Soros
He had an unusual relationship with physical discomfort as a risk signal. He's talked about trusting his back pain — when a position was going wrong, he'd feel it before he saw it in the numbers.
That's either profound intuition or a good story. Either way, he wasn't a systematic rule-follower.
He made enormous bets and reversed course on short notice when the thesis broke. His risk management wasn't "don't lose money." It was "don't lose so much that you can't play again."
Charlie Munger
Munger's approach to risk: don't take risks you don't understand, and don't take risks you don't need to. He kept things simple.
He concentrated into a small number of businesses he understood deeply. He never used borrowed money.
He kept large cash reserves. His view on diversification was almost the opposite of what most financial advisors tell you — he thought spreading money across 50 stocks was an admission that you hadn't done enough homework.
If you've done the work, you concentrate. If you haven't, maybe don't invest at all.
THE PLAYBOOK
George Soros
He lives in New York and his estate in the Hamptons. He donated over $32 billion — more than 80% of his peak wealth — to the Open Society Foundations.
He's been married three times; his third wife Tamiko Bolton is 42 years younger than him. He plays tennis.
He's in his mid-90s and still occasionally publishes essays on markets and geopolitics. He handed chairmanship of the Open Society Foundations to his son Alexander in 2023.
Charlie Munger
Munger lived in the same house in Los Angeles for most of his adult life. He was famously frugal — not in a miserable way, but in a "I genuinely don't care about most things money buys" way.
He flew commercial until fairly recently. He read obsessively.
He described himself as a book with legs. His children joked that he was more interesting to talk to than almost anyone alive, but would only engage on topics he found intellectually stimulating.
He donated massively to education — hundreds of millions to Harvard Law School, the University of Michigan, and other institutions, often with very specific conditions attached. He designed buildings as a hobby and funded their construction himself.
He died at 99 worth around $2.6 billion — extraordinary by any measure, and somehow modest given he sat next to one of the richest men in history for 45 years.
BIGGEST WIN
George Soros
September 16, 1992. Black Wednesday.
Soros had been building a short position against the British pound for months. Britain was in the Exchange Rate Mechanism — a system that required it to keep the pound within a fixed band against other European currencies.
He believed the pound was overvalued and Britain couldn't sustain the interest rates needed to defend it. He was right.
The Bank of England spent billions trying to hold the peg. It failed.
Britain withdrew from the ERM. Soros made approximately $1 billion that day.
Total profits in the surrounding weeks were closer to $2 billion. He became known as the man who broke the Bank of England.
Charlie Munger
See's Candies. In 1972, Munger convinced a reluctant Buffett to pay what seemed like an expensive price — $25 million — for a California candy company.
Buffett thought it was too much. Munger held firm.
See's has since generated over $2 billion in profit for Berkshire, basically funding dozens of other acquisitions. It also taught Buffett the single most important lesson of his career: paying a fair price for a great business beats getting a cheap price for a mediocre one.
That one deal changed the entire direction of Berkshire Hathaway.
BIGGEST MISTAKE
George Soros
2000. Soros had been warning about the dot-com bubble for years.
He was right about it being a bubble. But he kept buying tech stocks because he thought the momentum would continue a little longer.
It didn't. The Quantum Fund lost $3 billion in a matter of months.
He later said: "I was too early and then I panicked." That's a remarkable thing for someone of his stature to say. The lesson: being right about the direction of a trade doesn't mean you're right about the timing.
Charlie Munger
Munger is famous for avoiding mistakes more than for making spectacular wins — his whole philosophy is about not doing stupid things. But he's admitted to a few.
He said Berkshire was too slow to move into BYD, China's electric vehicle company, despite knowing it was exceptional for years before they finally bought in. He also held too much Wesco Financial for too long when the money could have been put to better use elsewhere.
His most honest self-criticism: he wished he had moved faster when the evidence was already clear. For a man who spent his career warning others about psychological biases, he wasn't immune to them.
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
George Soros
George Soros was born György Schwartz in Budapest in 1930. His family survived the Nazi occupation by obtaining forged papers and hiding.
He saw up close what happens when governments go bad. He fled Hungary after the war, worked as a railway porter and waiter in London, and studied philosophy at the London School of Economics — where he became a student of Karl Popper, whose big idea was that open societies are better than closed ones.
That stuck.
He moved to New York in 1956 and spent the next decade working at brokerages and learning the markets. In 1973 he co-founded the Quantum Fund with Jim Rogers.
From 1970 to 2000, the fund averaged roughly 30% annual returns. That's the second-best sustained hedge fund record in history, behind only Jim Simons.
He stepped back from active management gradually through the 2000s and has spent most of his time on philanthropy ever since.
Charlie Munger
Charlie Munger grew up in Omaha — same city as Buffett, but they didn't know each other yet. His father was a lawyer.
So was his grandfather. Charlie became one too, but he was clearly more interested in figuring out how the world worked than in courtrooms.
He studied math at the University of Michigan, got drafted into World War II, trained as a meteorologist, and somehow ended up at Harvard Law School without ever finishing an undergraduate degree. Harvard took him anyway.
He graduated in 1948 and moved to California to practice law. He was good at it.
He was also quietly building a real estate business on the side that made him more money than law ever did. He and Buffett met at a dinner in Omaha in 1959.
Munger was 35. Buffett was 28.
By the end of the night, Buffett was trying to convince Munger to go into investing full time. It took about a decade.
Munger ran his own investment partnership from 1962 to 1975 — returned 24% annually while the market did 6.4%. Then he fully merged his career with Buffett's at Berkshire, where he stayed until his death in 2023.
COMPANIES & ROLES
George Soros
Soros Fund Management is the vehicle. The Quantum Fund, which ran under it, returned roughly 30% annually for three decades.
The 1992 trade — shorting £10 billion of British sterling — was the most famous single day in hedge fund history, but the 30-year sustained record is the real story.
He stepped down from managing outside money in 2011 and converted to a family office. He's donated over $32 billion to the Open Society Foundations, which funds democracy and civil society programs in over 120 countries.
That's more money than he kept for himself.
Charlie Munger
Munger's main stage was Berkshire Hathaway, where he served as Vice Chairman from 1978 until he died. His role was hard to define on paper — he didn't run a fund or manage a portfolio.
What he actually did was talk to Buffett. That was worth a trillion dollars.
Before Berkshire, he ran his own investment partnership from 1962 to 1975 that crushed the market. He also controlled Wesco Financial, a small insurance and financial company he ran as a personal Berkshire subsidiary from 1973 to 2011, until Berkshire fully absorbed it.
Outside finance, he was obsessed with architecture — he personally designed several buildings, including a dormitory at the University of Michigan that his own architecture school rejected for violating design principles. He funded it anyway.
EDUCATION
George Soros
London School of Economics, BSc and MSc in Philosophy, 1952. Student of Karl Popper.
He's credited Popper's concept of the open society as the foundation of both his philanthropic work and his investment theory.
Charlie Munger
University of Michigan, mathematics — left for World War II without graduating. US Army Air Corps, meteorology training.
Harvard Law School, JD 1948 — admitted without an undergraduate degree, which Harvard is apparently capable of when it wants to be.
BOOKS & RESOURCES
George Soros
Beyond his own writing: Karl Poppers The Open Society and Its Enemies is the philosophical foundation of everything Soros believes
You can't fully understand him without it
Includes a long interview with Soros worth tracking down
The story of Long-Term Capital Management's collapse — the best account of what happens when extremely smart macro traders get their risk management catastrophically wrong
As an Amazon Associate, Netfigo earns from qualifying purchases. Book links above may be affiliate links.
Charlie Munger
Munger endorses it, Buffett calls it the best investing book ever written, and they're both right
Munger recommended this for years as the best book on human psychology. He believed understanding psychological biases was essential to investing
Written as a synthesis of Munger's thinking, often recommended by Munger himself
As an Amazon Associate, Netfigo earns from qualifying purchases. Book links above may be affiliate links.

