My Value Picks

25.8K posts

My Value Picks banner
My Value Picks

My Value Picks

@myvaluepicks

Buffett-Munger style. Moats, margins of safety, compounding, patience. Opinions are my own. Mostly on the sidelines...

Katılım Eylül 2016
697 Takip Edilen93K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
“The best times to buy India is when foreigners are selling.” — Prashant Jain
English
8
11
120
6.3K
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
@nikitabier @MarioNawfal Many handles edit original videos and add their own X handle names directly into the content. Curious how the algorithm treats this. Is this considered attribution, or does it cross into copyright violation?
English
0
0
1
903
Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🚨 BREAKING: 🇺🇸 Footage from ABC News has captured the moment shots were fired outside the White House. Key details: -ABC News footage captured audio of the gunfire in real time -Roughly 20 to 30 rounds were reported fired outside the White House -The Secret Service rushed press from the North Lawn into the briefing room The situation remains active and developing No confirmation yet on injuries, a suspect, or motive President Trump's status not yet confirmed Source: ABC News
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🚨🇺🇸 BREAKING Secret Service sniper teams are now reportedly visible on the White House roof. That is a standard protective response after a security incident, with teams deploying to elevated positions to secure the grounds. It fits the active posture following the earlier reports of gunfire and the press being moved inside. Source: @Spectator_MENA

English
281
529
3.3K
2.5M
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
Monthly Active Users (2025)
My Value Picks tweet media
English
0
6
8
1.6K
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
Self‑control is the missing skill we stopped teaching kids. Most adult struggles aren’t about intelligence. They’re about choosing between now and ten years from now. #DelayedGratification
Sukh Sroay@sukh_saroy

A team of researchers in New Zealand followed 1,037 babies from the day they were born for the next 45 years to find out what actually determines a successful adult life, and the strongest predictor they found had almost nothing to do with intelligence or family wealth. The findings have been published in the most prestigious scientific journals in the world. Almost no parent has heard of them. His name is Avshalom Caspi. Her name is Terrie Moffitt. They are a husband and wife research team based at Duke University and King's College London, and the study they have spent their careers running is called the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study. It started in 1972 in a single hospital in Dunedin, New Zealand. Every baby born there in a 12-month window was enrolled. 1,037 of them. The study is still running today. The retention rate is the part that should astonish anyone familiar with how research usually works. After more than 45 years, over 90 percent of the original participants are still being tracked. Most longitudinal studies lose half their sample inside ten years. The Dunedin team has lost almost nobody. They measured everything. Blood. DNA. Brain scans. Income. Criminal records. Romantic relationships. Drug use. Dental health. Sleep. Mental health. Lung function. They flew participants who had moved abroad back to Dunedin every few years for a full day of assessments. Some of those people now live in seven different countries. They still show up. For the first decade of life, the team did something nobody else was doing systematically. They measured each child's self-control. Not IQ. Not family income. Not parenting style. Self-control. They watched 3-year-olds in a research lab and rated their ability to wait, regulate frustration, follow instructions, and resist impulsive reactions. They added teacher ratings. They added parent ratings. They added the children's own self-reports as they grew older. They combined all of it into a single highly reliable score. Then they did the thing nobody else had the patience to do. They waited. When the data came in at age 32, the result was so consistent it should be illegal to teach a child without it. The children who scored lowest on self-control at age 3 grew into adults with worse physical health, more substance dependence, lower incomes, more credit card debt, higher rates of single parenthood, more criminal convictions, and worse mental health than the children who scored highest. The pattern was not subtle. It was a clean gradient. Every step up in childhood self-control produced a measurable step up in adult outcomes across every domain the team could measure. The detail that should disturb every parent reading this is what happened when the researchers controlled for the obvious objections. When they controlled for IQ, the effect held. When they controlled for family income and social class, the effect held. When they compared siblings inside the same family, the sibling with lower self-control still had worse adult outcomes than the sibling with higher self-control. Same parents. Same house. Same dinner table. The trait was running independently of everything researchers expected to explain it. The paper landed in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 2011. The title was as plain as it gets. "A gradient of childhood self-control predicts health, wealth, and public safety." It has been cited thousands of times since. Almost no policy maker has acted on it. The reason most people resist this finding is that it sounds like a sentence handed down before the child could speak. If the trait that determines your adult life is locked in by age 3, the rest of your life is a formality. The Dunedin researchers say that is the wrong way to read the data. They found something else in the same paper that almost nobody quotes. Some of the children whose self-control scores improved between childhood and adolescence ended up with adult outcomes far better than their early scores predicted. The trait is not destiny. It is a muscle. Children who learned to wait, regulate, and resist between ages 5 and 15 caught up with kids who started ahead. Self-control is the one childhood trait nobody seems to teach on purpose anymore. Schools focus on test scores. Parents focus on activities. Coaches focus on performance. The part of the brain that decides between five seconds from now and five years from now is left to develop on its own, and the data shows it usually does not. The most uncomfortable part of the research is the cost calculation Moffitt and Caspi ran. They estimated that if a country could move the bottom 20 percent of children up one rung on the self-control ladder, it would measurably reduce healthcare spending, welfare dependency, and incarceration costs at the national level. The intervention is cheaper than almost any other public health investment available. Almost no country has tried it at scale. The reason adults struggle with money, weight, addiction, and relationships is rarely intelligence. It is the gap between what you want right now and what you want in ten years, and which side of that gap your nervous system is built to listen to. Most people lost that fight at age 4 and never went back to learn the technique. You were not behind because life dealt you a bad hand. You were behind because the part of you that decides between right now and the rest of your life was never taught how to choose. The good news is the muscle is still there. Almost nobody trains it after age 10. You can be the one who does.

English
0
3
5
2.3K
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
Let winners grow and remove losers.
My Value Picks tweet media
English
0
8
36
2.4K
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
@sa8ypr Agree, if you’re paying in dollars. At the same time, we earn more from exports.
English
0
0
0
13
Satya P (Fighter)
@myvaluepicks At the end, X has added something. It means, if rupees became half, it doesn't make our savings exactly half but import related things will affect us. Oil, gold, even mobiles and laptop will be affected.
English
1
0
0
22
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
Most people in India earn, spend, save, invest, and retire in rupees.
English
11
1
14
7.3K
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
FIIs continue to pull out from Financials #ET
My Value Picks tweet media
English
1
2
38
3.5K
Peri
Peri@bigblackeey·
@myvaluepicks Different view are ok But it should be factually correct Country should be first not any political party agenda
English
1
0
1
34
Peri
Peri@bigblackeey·
@myvaluepicks Boss show me your grocery bill and portfolio I will tell you whether your expenses is happening in INR or Dollar
English
1
0
0
49
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
@chirag Converting INR to dollars is something NRIs tend to do. People living in India usually don’t think in those terms.
English
1
0
0
688
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
@bigblackeey Converting INR to dollars is something NRIs tend to do. People living in India usually don’t think in those terms.
English
1
0
0
55
Peri
Peri@bigblackeey·
@myvaluepicks 😂😂😂 So you don't use petrol U don't use electronics U don't use soap, shampoo ( Palm oil imports ) U don't eat food ( Urea , fertilizer ) These are handles are giving investment tips Show me your grocery bill and portfolio I will expose you Blind bhakat Don't block
English
1
1
2
70
My Value Picks
My Value Picks@myvaluepicks·
@bigblackeey I do use imported items. My daily life still runs on rupees, not dollars.
English
1
0
0
90
Peri
Peri@bigblackeey·
@myvaluepicks So you don't use any imported items !!!!
English
1
0
1
107