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Warren Buffett

Buffett’s Verdict: Why This 5/10 India-Heavy Portfolio Lacks a Moat

Warren Buffett is roasting your portfolio

Roasted on April 28, 2026

Indian
US Market
26 assets

Asset Class

Industrials30.8%
Technology14.4%
Finance12.4%
Other42.2%

Region

Emerging Markets57.1%
North America (Developed)32.7%
Cash Reserves10.0%

Strategy

Growth (Explosive)55.3%
Speculation (Moonshots)17.9%
Core (Steady)16.6%
Cash Reserves10.0%

Top Holdings by Weight

1
Amba Enterprises Limited
AEL
9.7%
2
Ind Renewable Energy Limited
INDRENEW
7.4%
3
Saboo Sodium Chloro Limited
SABOOSOD
4.8%
4
Apple Inc.
AAPL
4.4%
5
Meta Platforms, Inc.
META
4.4%
6
NIO Inc.
NIO
4.3%
7
Teledyne Technologies Incorporated
TDY
4.3%
8
Filtra Consultants and Engineers Limited
FILTRA
4.1%
9
Indian Toners & Developers Limited
INDTONER
4.1%
10
Pinterest, Inc.
PINS
4.1%
💵
Cash Reserves
10.0%
Intro

Grab a Cherry Coke and Let's Talk

Pull up a chair. I’ve just poured myself a Cherry Coke, and Charlie Munger's ghost is looking over my shoulder as we review your portfolio. I have to say, looking at this mix of investments is like walking into a buffet restaurant where half the trays are filled with prime rib and the other half are serving mystery meat. You’ve built a fascinating, globe-trotting portfolio split between a US market basket and a heavy foray into the Indian stock exchange. While I applaud your curiosity to look beyond your own backyard, it seems you’ve let Mr. Market’s mood swings dictate a little too much of your shopping list. Let’s look at the underlying businesses you own, because remember—we aren't buying wiggling lines on a chart, we are buying pieces of actual businesses.

Analysis

Looking Under the Hood of Your Businesses

First off, I see you are sitting on roughly 10% in cash reserves. I commend you for that. Cash is a terrible long-term investment, but it's the absolute best thing to hold when Mr. Market gets depressed and puts wonderful businesses on sale. Having dry powder means you aren't forced to sell when prices are down, and you have the flexibility to swing hard when a fat pitch comes across the plate.


When we look at your geographic exposure, you’ve parked over 57% of your capital in Emerging Markets, primarily in India, leaving about 33% in North America. Sector-wise, you are betting heavily on Industrials at nearly 31%.


I see you own some wonderful businesses that I understand very well. Apple is a magnificent company with phenomenal switching costs and brand loyalty—we own a bit of it at Berkshire, as you might know. Wells Fargo is a familiar old friend with a massive scale advantage. Meta and Pinterest benefit from incredible network effects. However, when I look at the strategy breakdown, my eyebrows go up. Over 55% of your money is chasing "Growth" and nearly 18% is pure "Speculation." Charlie and I have always said that growth and value are tied at the hip, but paying a premium for growth without a margin of safety is a good way to lose your shirt.

Red Flags

Where the Castle Walls are Crumbling

🚩 The "No Moat" Epidemic

This is the single most terrifying thing in your portfolio: 34.5% of your capital is parked in businesses with absolutely no competitive moat. A business without a moat is like a beautiful sandcastle sitting right at the edge of the tide. Amba Enterprises makes up nearly 10% of your total wealth, and it lacks any durable competitive advantage. The same goes for Indian Toners and Saboo Sodium Chloro. Capitalism is brutal; if a business is making good money but has no moat, competitors will swarm in and eat their lunch.


🚩 Speculating Instead of Investing

You have nearly 18% of your money explicitly tied up in speculative holdings like Ind Renewable Energy (7.4%) and Filtra Consultants. Charlie used to call this kind of gambling "rat poison." If you don't understand exactly how a business will generate cash flows for the next ten years, you have no business owning it. The stock market is designed to transfer money from the active to the patient, and speculation is just a casino in disguise.


🚩 Chasing Capital-Intensive Growth

You're holding NIO at over 4%. I've seen a lot of auto companies come and go in my 90-plus years. It is a fiercely competitive, capital-intensive industry with historically terrible margins. Chasing EV growth trends without a massive, undisputed competitive advantage is a dangerous game. A fair company at a wonderful price is okay, but a highly speculative company in a brutal industry is a recipe for heartburn.

Verdict

The Oracle's Two Cents

I give this portfolio a 5 out of 10. Your solid American mega-caps and sensible cash position are acting as a life raft for a portfolio that is otherwise drowning in emerging market speculation and moat-less industrial stocks.


Here is what you should do when the market opens on Monday:

1. Weed the Garden: Take a hard look at that 34.5% of your portfolio lacking a moat. If a business (like Amba Enterprises or Ind Renewable Energy) cannot defend its profits against competitors for the next 20 years, take your money out and put it back into your cash reserves.

2. Demand a Margin of Safety: Stop paying up for "Growth" and "Speculation." Only buy when Mr. Market offers you a wonderful company at a price that leaves room for error.

3. Stick to Your Circle of Competence: If you intimately understand the Indian industrial sector, wonderful. But if you're just buying tickers because they're going up, you're playing with fire. Broaden your exposure to durable businesses with intangible assets and scale.


As I've said many times: "It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price." Right now, you own too many fair-to-poor companies. Clean up your castle, dig your moats deeper, and let the magic of compounding do the heavy lifting!

About This Analysis

This portfolio roast was generated by PortfolioGlance’s AI, analyzing your portfolio from the perspective of Warren Buffett. The analysis evaluates asset allocation, sector concentration, geographic diversification, risk factors, and provides actionable recommendations.

This is an AI-generated educational analysis, not financial advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.