1

Look at stocks as parts of business. Ask yourself, 'How would I feel if the Stock Exchange was closing tomorrow for the next three years?' If I am happy owning the stock under that circumstance, I am happy with the business. That frame of mind is important to investing.

 

2

 The market is there to serve you and not to instruct you. It is not telling you whether you are right or wrong. The business results will determine that.

 

 

3

You can't precisely know what a stock is worth, so leave yourself a margin of safety. Only go into things where you could be wrong to some extent and come out OK.

 

4

Borrowed money is the most common way that smart guys go broke.

 

5

The stock doesn't know you own it. You have feelings about it, but it has no feelings about you. The stock doesn't know what you paid. People shouldn't get emotionally involved with their stocks.

    

 

Warren Buffett advice quotes

Business schools reward complex behavior more than simple behavior, but simple behavior is more effective Example Case study success story

Warren Buffet

Berkshire