Site icon Nairametrics

Young Investors can learn these tips from Warren Buffet

How to start investing- tips from Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett

“If I have seen further than others, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants” – Isaac Newton

We all know who Warren Buffett is, the legendary Oracle of Omaha and the greatest investor of our time. I personally count him as one of my virtual mentors as I’ve been studying him for years now.

Recently, I was doing a lot of research on him and I downloaded some of Berkshire Hathaway’s annual reports over the years and picked out numerous advice he gives to young ones who want to be successful not just in investing but in life.

[READ MORE: Too many side hustle ideas? Here are 11 questions to help you choose your best option]

News continues after this ad

Here’s what I learned;

Read:

He was once asked what advice he would give to new investors at the Berkshire Annual meeting in 2007 and below was his response;

“I think you should read everything you can. In my case, by the age of 10, I’d read every book in the Omaha public library about investing, some twice.

You need to fill your mind with various competing thoughts and decide which makes sense. Then you have to jump in the water – take some amount of money and do it yourself.

What do I read?

What decisions to make before investing:

As young investors, Buffett’s advice to us is to be ready to do lots of work and due diligence to ensure that we get our investment decisions right.

[READ MORE: Watch as Bill Gates and Warren Buffet light up customers’ faces at a restaurant]

Warren Buffett in the earlier years of his investing career made us aware of what was called the “Scuttlebutt Approach”. This approach meant that he would go out and talk to customers, suppliers, competitors and even ex-employees of a company he wanted to invest in.

How much it cost to have lunch with Warren Buffett

If for example, he was interested in an industry, say it was coal; he would go around and see every coal company. He would ask every CEO, “If you could only buy stock in one coal company that was not your own, which would it be and why?”.

Choose the right mentor/hero:

A lot of us think we are too smart and don’t need the help of the older generation.

A key decision we will make is choosing the right mentor to help guide you through the tough journey of life. You have to choose right because you are going to emulate your heroes and failure to do so will create situations that can get us into trouble.

The good thing is that mentors don’t have to be people we know in flesh, we can have virtual mentors by reading their books articles or publications, watching their videos, or even e-mailing them for advice.

Other valuable advice from Buffett to young investors

[READ MORE: Globacom Nigeria unveils strategic plans to rival competitors]

 

Exit mobile version