Quote of the Day by Warren Buffett: ‘Only buy something that you’d be…’

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Berkshire Hathaway founder, billionaire and ace investor Warren Buffett believes that investment decisions should be based on solid reasoning and thought-out choices, rather than following the trends.

Warren Buffett Likely to Give Away $6B in Berkshire Stock Soon. How Much He’ll Have Left.Warren Buffett Likely to Give Away $6B in Berkshire Stock Soon. How Much He’ll Have Left.

Berkshire Hathaway founder and chairman, Warren Buffett has offered a wealth of investment advice over the years. Known for his long-term approach to stocks, sticking to fundamentals, and taking calculated but thoughtful risks, the so-called ‘Oracle of Omaha's’ wisdom often makes the rounds online.

In the investment circles, Buffett and his long-time business partner and friend, the late Charlie Munger, are known for their no-nonsense approach to doing business and relatively frugal lifestyles when compared to their immense wealth.

Quote of the Day by Warren Buffett

“Only buy something that you’d be perfectly happy to hold if the market shuts down for ten years.”

What does Warren Buffett's quote mean?

Through the years, Buffett's investing philosophy has focused on companies with an “economic moat” around them, and those with a strong competitive advantage and growth prospects in the long run. He often advices investors to make considered choices rather than trying to time or predict the markets, believing that investing in a company with good fundamentals will inevitably pay off in the long run.

He also often suggests not overpaying for stocks because of hype or blindly following trends; but to rather “think a long time before every investment decision”. Buffett has always advised investors to focus on businesses and sectors they truly understand and focusing on value proposition, i.e. well-established companies with a clear growth path.

Ultimately, he also believes that the longer you hold stocks the less risky they become and investment takes more than smarts, it takes the patience and doing nothing. To illustrate, he has spoken about selling Disney stock in 1967, just a year after acquiring 5% in the company. He sold it for a 50% profit, but looking back, waiting on the company would have yielded better results in the longer term. As on date now, the same 5% stake in Disney would be worth somewhere between $8-10 billion. He sold it for $6 million.

Who is Warren Buffet — the ‘Oracle of Omaha’?

Buffett and Munger were the architects who over nearly 60 years transformed Berkshire Hathaway Inc. from a failing textile maker into an empire, worth billions. Decades of compounded returns made the pair billionaires and folk heroes to adoring investors.

Notably, in January this year, Buffett handed over the reins and CEO position to successor Greg Abel. But his “bull run” with Berkshire has been legendary — gaining more than 55,00,000% returns over 60 years (1964-2024), to building the group to $1.2 trillion, and expanding Class A shares to worth $167 billion.

Known as the ‘Oracle of Omaha’ for his uncanny prediction on stocks, Buffett gained fame and investor confidence for handpicking companies (Apple, Bank of America, Coca-Cola, etc.) that exploded and now account for 70% of Berkshire's $263 billion stock portfolio. He termed this as “one wonderful business can offset the many mediocre decisions that are inevitable”.

Buffett's net worth is estimated at $152 billion, making him the 10th richest person in the world, according to the Bloomberg Billionaire Index.

Disclaimer: This story is for educational purposes only. The views and recommendations made above are those of individual analysts or broking companies, and not of Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before making any investment decisions.

About the Author

Jocelyn Fernandes

Jocelyn Fernandes is a journalist and editor with nearly 13 years of experience covering the business, corporate, economy and markets beats in news.<br> As chief content producer for around three years at Livemint (Hindustan Times), Jocelyn publishes breaking stories, explainers, features and live blogs on a range of business and economy topics, including the Budget, corporate developments, stock markets, income tax, money and personal finance, cryptocurrency, government policy, impact of US tariffs, international developments and more.<br> Jocelyn's writing philosophy is focused on delivering news in an accurate and accessible format for readers. She thus focuses her news coverage on explainers and FAQs in order to breakdown business, corporate, economic, and policy topics that are of importance to everyday readers.<br> She holds a Bachelors in Mass Media (BMM) and Post Graduate Diploma (PGD) in Journalism and Communication and has previously written for online business and markets news site Moneycontrol (Network18), Business-to-business (B2B) trade publications — the industry magazines Power Today and Solar Today (ASAPP Media), and the national news agency United News of India (UNI).<br> Outside of work, Jocelyn keeps up-to-date with local and international news, enjoys reading fiction books, novels and short stories, and enjoys movies, travelling and art. <br> She can be found on X and LinkedIn, and reached by email: <a href="jocelyn.fernandes@htdigital.in">jocelyn.fernandes@htdigital.in</a> <br> X/ Twitter handle: <a href="https://x.com/scribeJocelyn">@scribeJocelyn</a> <br> LinkedIn: <a href="https://in.linkedin.com/in/jocelyn-fernandes-journalist">LinkedIn</a>

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