Where to Start with Mohnish Pabrai: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Mohnish Pabrai — how to approach The Dhandho Investor, his value investing framework inspired by the Patel motel owners: low risk, high return, asymmetric bets. A complete reading guide.
By Marcus Webb
Mohnish Pabrai (born 1964) is an Indian-American investor and founder of Pabrai Investment Funds, which has compounded at rates significantly above market averages since its founding in 1999. He is a devotee of Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger — he paid over $650,000 at auction for a lunch with Buffett — and his investment philosophy is a direct application of their principles, filtered through his own experience as an entrepreneur and the conceptual lens of dhandho, a Gujarati concept of business wisdom he absorbed from his community. The Dhandho Investor (2007) is his account of this framework: short, direct, and more original in framing than most investment books in the value tradition.
Where to Start: The Dhandho Investor (2007)
The essential Mohnish Pabrai — and one of the freshest voices in value investing literature. The Dhandho Investor opens with a story that is the book’s central metaphor and most memorable contribution: how the Patel community from Gujarat came to dominate the US motel industry. Arriving in America with almost no capital and very limited options, Patel immigrants in the 1970s began buying distressed motels at steep discounts — properties already generating cash flow but burdened by poor management, deferred maintenance, or owner distress. They lived on-site, reducing labour costs. They borrowed at rates available to owner-operators. They inherited an asset that was already producing revenue, which meant their downside was limited to the gap between purchase price and liquidation value, while their upside — with competent management — was the full going-concern value.
The Patel motel bet, Pabrai argues, was an asymmetric bet: the structure of the opportunity meant that even in bad outcomes, losses were small; in good outcomes, gains were large. “Heads I win, tails I don’t lose much” is his formulation. The book’s project is to show how the same asymmetric logic can be applied to stock market investing through the value framework Pabrai learned from Buffett and Munger.
The Dhandho framework has nine principles, each illustrated through case studies ranging from the Patel motels to Buffett’s early investments to turnaround businesses Pabrai analysed. The most important principles: buy businesses, not stocks — understand the underlying business before considering the price; buy distressed businesses in distressed industries — maximum pessimism creates maximum discount from intrinsic value; buy businesses with durable moats — competitive advantages that will persist and allow the business to generate returns above its cost of capital for years; and use a margin of safety — require a significant discount from your conservative estimate of intrinsic value before buying.
The concentration argument is where Pabrai departs most sharply from conventional investing advice. He argues for few bets, big bets, infrequent bets: concentrating a portfolio in a small number of high-conviction positions rather than diversifying across dozens of holdings. Diversification, in this view, is a hedge against not knowing enough about your businesses. If you have done the analytical work to understand a business’s intrinsic value with confidence, buying a small position is irrational. Pabrai himself runs a concentrated portfolio and acknowledges the volatility this implies — the Pabrai Funds had a significant drawdown in 2008 before recovering strongly.
Reading Mohnish Pabrai
The Dhandho Investor is Pabrai’s essential and most widely read book. It stands alone and requires no prior knowledge of value investing, though readers with some background in investment basics will get more from the case studies.
For the full Mohnish Pabrai bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Mohnish Pabrai author page on Editors Reads.
Affiliate disclosure: Links to Amazon on this page are affiliate links. We earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Mohnish Pabrai?
The Dhandho Investor (2007) is Pabrai's essential book — a value investing framework built on the philosophy of the Patel community's motel business model: buy distressed assets cheaply, operate conservatively, and exploit asymmetric bets where the downside is limited and the upside is substantial. Pabrai applies this 'heads I win, tails I don't lose much' philosophy to stock market investing in the tradition of Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger, with a personal voice and directness rare in investment literature.
What is the Dhandho framework?
Dhandho is a Gujarati word meaning 'endeavors that create wealth while taking the least risk.' Pabrai illustrates the concept through the story of the Patel community's domination of the US motel industry: Patel immigrants bought distressed motels in the 1970s, lived on-site to reduce costs, borrowed at low rates, and exploited an inherent asymmetry — the motel was already generating revenue, so the downside was limited, while the upside of competent management was large. Pabrai applies the same logic to stock investing: concentrate on a small number of high-conviction bets on distressed, undervalued businesses where the margin of safety is large.
How does The Dhandho Investor compare to other Buffett-style investing books?
Pabrai is a devoted student of Buffett and Munger, and the framework is explicitly in their tradition — value investing, margin of safety, moat analysis. What distinguishes Dhandho is its emphasis on asymmetry and concentration: fewer bets, bigger bets, higher conviction. Pabrai argues that diversification is a hedge against ignorance — if you know a business well enough to be confident, you should bet large. This is a more aggressive interpretation of the Buffett tradition than most comparable books take.
What should I read after The Dhandho Investor?
After The Dhandho Investor, Benjamin Graham's The Intelligent Investor is the foundational text of value investing and the source from which both Buffett and Pabrai draw. Robert Hagstrom's The Warren Buffett Way is the most complete account of Buffett's investment philosophy in book form. For Munger's mental models framework that Pabrai also employs, Poor Charlie's Almanack is the essential companion.
