5 Timeless Warren Buffett Quotes That Could Transform Your Investment Approach and Grow Your Wealth

Key Points

Warren Buffett has uttered lots of words of wisdom, but they're more than just sound bytes. If you actually apply his investing method, or at least use it to inform your own, you could supercharge your investments.

Just look at his track record. Since Buffett took over Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) in 1965, it has returned an average annualized rate of 19.9% versus 10.4% for the S&P 500 , or a total of 5,502,284% versus 39,054%.

There are so many Buffett gems, but here is a curated list of actionable quotes that could help you achieve investing success.

5 Timeless Warren Buffett Quotes That Could Transform Your Investment Approach and Grow Your Wealth

1. "It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price."

Buffett credits Charlie Munger with transforming his own investment approach by giving him this advice. Prior to meeting Charlie, Buffett was a big follower of Ben Graham and his master work, The Intelligent Investor . Graham was a big proponent of value investing , or buying undervalued stocks and selling them when their values rose to market levels. Charlie said that this only works at small scale, but it wouldn't make sense at Berkshire Hathaway's size.

Buffett didn't fully give this up; he has said that only eight or nine of his moves have accounted for the vast majority of gains, and these are likely some of the deals he jumped on when they were at a severe discount. But for the most part, this transformed his investing style and allowed him to deploy capital over many years to make money for his shareholders.

Even the small-scale individual investor will have much greater success with this approach because it's geared toward long-term, hands-off investing, while focusing on less-than-stellar companies comes with greater risk to the novice.

2. "Charlie and I look for companies that have a) a business we understand; b) favorable long-term economics; c) able and trustworthy management; and d) a sensible price tag."

Here, Buffett gives you his bare-bones approach to great investing, with the four most important features to look for in a great stock. Some investors make the mistake of investing in whatever is hyped up at the moment, even if they don't understand exactly what it does. Buffett wasn't afraid to admit that he didn't understand a company, and then chose to stay away.

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