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Warren Buffett

Buffett Roasts This 4/10 Portfolio: Too High on Emerging Market Risk

Warren Buffett is roasting your portfolio

Roasted on May 13, 2026

Frontier Alpha & Tech Growth
14 assets

Asset Class

Technology38.5%
Broad Market (Indexes/ETFs)20.3%
Bonds & Fixed Income12.6%
Other28.6%

Region

Emerging Markets87.2%
Asia-Pacific (Developed)8.2%
Cash Reserves4.6%

Strategy

Growth (Explosive)52.3%
Speculation (Moonshots)18.6%
Income (Yield)17.4%
Other11.7%

Top Holdings by Weight

1
iShares J.P. Morgan USD Emerging Markets Bond ETF
EMB
12.6%
2
iShares MSCI India ETF
INDA
10.3%
3
Taiwan Semiconductor (ADR)
TSM
9.2%
4
MercadoLibre Inc
MELI
8.4%
5
Tencent Holdings Ltd
0700.HK
8.2%
6
Reliance Industries Ltd
RELIANCE.NS
7.1%
7
Nu Holdings Ltd
NU
6.7%
8
KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF
KWEB
6.1%
9
PDD Holdings Inc (ADR)
PDD
5.4%
10
Alibaba Group (ADR)
BABA
5.2%
💵
Cash Reserves
4.6%
Intro

A Long Way From Omaha

Well, pull up a chair and let me open a Cherry Coke, because looking at this portfolio is making me sweat right through my suit. If Charlie Munger were still sitting next to me, he’d probably look at this and ask if you threw a dart at a map of the world while blindfolded.


You’ve built a portfolio that reads like a travel brochure for places I don't understand and therefore don't invest in. I’ve always said that investing is about staying within your "circle of competence," and unless you are a geopolitical diplomat with a side hustle in international e-commerce, I suspect you've strayed quite a bit from yours. You’ve got a real appetite for adventure, but the stock market isn't a casino, and it certainly isn't an exotic vacation. Let’s look under the hood and see what kind of business we actually own here.

Analysis

Moats in Unfamiliar Waters

Let's start with your geographic exposure, which is frankly astonishing. A staggering 87.2% of your capital is parked in Emerging Markets, with another 8.2% in the Asia-Pacific. I’ve spent my entire life betting on the American economic tailwind, and you seem to have actively bet against it.


Now, I will give you credit where it's due: you clearly understand what a competitive advantage is. I see that over 40% of your holdings benefit from network effects, and another 21% rely on scale advantages. Companies like Taiwan Semiconductor at a hefty 9.2% weight and MercadoLibre at 8.4% have real, durable economic moats. You aren't just buying cigar butts; you're buying dominant businesses. Tencent and NuBank also fit that bill—wonderful companies, assuming you're paying a fair price.


However, your sector breakdown shows nearly 40% in Technology, and your strategy leans overwhelmingly heavily toward Growth (over 52%). You are paying up for future promises. And let's talk about your cash reserves, sitting at a meager 4.6%. I’ve always believed that cash is a call option with no expiration date. An idle 4.6% means your elephant gun is empty. If Mr. Market wakes up depressed tomorrow and offers you a screaming bargain, you won't have the dry powder to take advantage of it.

Red Flags

What Keeps Me Up at Night

🚩 Regulatory Roulette

You have substantial exposure to Chinese tech through Alibaba (5.2%), Tencent (8.2%), PDD, and the KWEB ETF. Charlie always liked China more than I did, but even he learned a tough lesson with Alibaba. A moat doesn't protect a castle if the local government decides to drain the water and seize the drawbridge.


🚩 Missing the Margin of Safety

With nearly 20% of your portfolio categorized as outright Speculation (I'm looking at Grab, Sea Limited, and your Vietnam ETF), you are straying from investment into gambling. "Growth" is just one component of calculating value; it isn't a license to ignore the price you pay today.


🚩 An Empty Elephant Gun

Running at 4.6% cash is a dangerous game when you're heavily invested in the world's most volatile regions. When emerging markets catch a cold, they tend to get pneumonia. Without a thicker cushion of cash, you have absolutely zero flexibility to buy when blood is in the streets.


🚩 Geographic Over-Concentration

Diversification is protection against ignorance. I don't like over-diversifying when I know what I'm doing, but having almost 90% of your money in emerging markets is a massive, unhedged bet on global macroeconomics and foreign currency stability.

Verdict

The Oracle's Prescription

Score: 4/10


You have a good eye for identifying dominant businesses with real network effects, but your risk management and geographic concentration are terrifying. You're trying to clear a 10-foot hurdle in a windstorm when there are plenty of 1-foot hurdles back home you could step over.


Here is what I recommend you do:

1. Build Your Cash Cushion: Get that cash reserve up to at least 15-20%. Stop being fully invested in highly speculative assets. You need dry powder for the inevitable rainy day.

2. Bring Some Money Home: You urgently need exposure to stable, core, developed markets. Find wonderful, boring companies with predictable cash flows to anchor this wild ship.

3. Trim the Speculation: Take a hard look at Grab, Sea Limited, and that Vietnam ETF. If you can't accurately predict their cash flows 10 years from now, you have no business owning them today.

4. Re-evaluate China Risk: Ask yourself if you are truly getting a margin of safety on BABA and Tencent to compensate for the sovereign and regulatory risks.


Remember: "Risk comes from not knowing what you're doing." Start investing in businesses you can understand in jurisdictions you can trust.

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.