The Singhs are big admirers of Warren Buffett's simple but shrewd approach to investment.
Highlights
- Paul Singh, son built thriving businesses and became multi-millionaires
- They are big admirers of Warren Buffett's approach to investment
- Preferring the ETFs, neither father nor son invest in stocks
Omaha, US: The father and son, both successful entrepreneurs, made the pilgrimage together to the US city of Omaha to bask in the wisdom of billionaire Warren Buffett, whose simple approach to investing -- and whose mistrust of Wall Street -- they share.
Both Paul Singh, who is 68, and son Jay Phoenix Singh, 32, built successful businesses that they were then able to sell for premium prices, making both men multi-millionaires.
Despite their difference in age, the Singhs -- one a Baby Boomer, the other a millennial, both from Fairfax, Virginia -- share a long-time devotion to the words of Warren Buffett, 88, owner of the third-largest fortune in the world.
"Warren Buffett is the quintessential American dream of coming from very little and being able to really make a name for yourself," said Jay Phoenix, standing before the relatively modest home of the American billionaire, just a few minutes from the center of Omaha in the heartland state of Nebraska.
They were drawn to Omaha by the annual shareholders meeting of Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway holding company, which gives them, and others like them, a chance to soak up the market-moving wisdom of the "Oracle of Omaha."
The Singhs are big admirers of Buffett's taste for discretion and his simple but shrewd approach to investment.
"You buy only things that are useful," said Paul. "Money doesn't mean that you have to show off and buy cars with a big torque (or) houses that you don't need."
The father and son were drawn to Omaha by the annual shareholders meeting of Warren Buffett's company.
Paul follows that advice in his own life: he sports no bling or other showy external signs of wealth.
"I am still driving my 2004 Honda... and I live with my parents," said Jay Phoenix, before adding, "but as Warren says, what matters is your long-term vision, your long-term plan."
$50 In His Pocket
Paul Singh arrived in the United States at the age of 20 to pursue his graduate studies with "50 dollars" in his pocket.
Coming from a poor family in northern India, he managed to gain acceptance to Harvard, where he earned an MBA degree in 1982.
Riding the wave of telecoms deregulation, he founded three successive companies, of which the latest -- Primus Telecommunications -- achieved turnover of $1 billion just six years after its creation.
In the 2000s, this father of two -- married to a British woman -- created the Rezon8 fund, investing in American startups specializing in software and information technology.
While Paul has been a mentor to his son, he did not give him the capital for his own startup: "I didn't want my father to give me money," said Jay Phoenix. "I have some savings (and)... was able to count on it."
With doctorates in psychiatry and psychology, Jay Phoenix has been one of the youngest lecturers at some of the most prestigious US and British universities (Princeton, Harvard, Oxford, Cambridge).
He established the Violence Research Center, dedicated to the study and prevention of interpersonal violence.
After selling it in 2017, he created TheModelMan.com, a matchmaking site for businessmen with no time to play conventional dating games.
Neither father nor son invests in stocks, preferring the ETFs (exchange-traded funds) that are less speculative but still provide attractive returns.
"I really tried to become (financially) literate the last couple of years... about different kinds of securities, like stocks and bonds etc. -- and the living legend of this is Warren Buffett," said Jay Phoenix.
Among the lessons the Singhs have learned from closely studying Buffett's now famous letters to investors: invest for the long term, and don't be afraid to make a mistake.
"Those lessons are good lessons... not being scared by things," said Paul Singh. "Sometimes the market goes down and other times it goes up."
"It's very refreshing. You don't see or hear that on Wall Street."