Warren Buffett's Priceless Investment Advice

Recs

14

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

If you can grasp this simple advice from Warren Buffett, you should do well as an investor. Sure, there are other investment strategies out there, but Buffett's approach is both easy to follow and demonstrably successful over more than 50 years. Why try anything else?

Two words for the efficient market hypothesis: Warren Buffett
An interesting academic study (PDF file) illustrates Buffett's amazing investment genius. From 1980 to 2003, the stock portfolio of Berkshire Hathaway beat the S&P 500 index in 20 out of 24 years. During that same period, Berkshire's average annual return from its stock portfolio outperformed the index by 12 percentage points. The efficient market theory predicts that this is impossible, but the theory is clearly wrong in this case.

Buffett has delivered these outstanding returns by buying undervalued shares in great companies such as Gillette, now owned by Procter & Gamble. Over the years, Berkshire has owned household names such as Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS), Office Depot (NYSE: ODP), and H&R Block (NYSE: HRB).

Although not every pick worked out, for the most part Buffett and Berkshire have made a mint. Indeed, Buffett's investment in Gillette increased threefold during the 1990s. Who'd have guessed you could get such stratospheric returns from razors?

The devil is in the details
So buying great companies at reasonable prices can deliver solid returns for long-term investors. The challenge, of course, is identifying great companies and determining what constitutes a reasonable price.

Buffett recommends that investors look for companies that deliver outstanding return on capital and produce substantial cash profits. He also suggests that you look for companies with a huge economic moat to protect them from competitors. You can identify companies with moats by looking for strong brands, alongside consistent or improving profit margins and returns on capital.

How do you determine the right buy price for shares in such companies? Buffett advises that you wait patiently for opportunities to purchase stocks at a significant discount to their intrinsic values -- as calculated by taking the present value of all future cash flows. Ultimately, he believes that "value will in time always be reflected in market price." When the market finally recognizes the true worth of your undervalued shares, you begin to earn solid returns.

Do-it-yourself outperformance
Before they can capture Buffett-like returns, beginning investors will need to develop their skills in identifying profitable companies and determining intrinsic values. In the meantime, consider looking for stock ideas among Berkshire's own holdings.

As he recently wrote in a New York Times editorial, Buffett has been buying American stocks. It appears the Oracle of Omaha believes the sell-off in energy and financials was overdone: He significantly boosted his stake in ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP) last quarter, and scooped up more US Bancorp as well. These two positions are now among Berkshire's top 10 holdings, along with portfolio mainstays Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) and Wesco Financial (NYSE: WSC).

Another place to find great value-stock ideas is Motley Fool Inside Value. Philip Durell, the lead analyst for the service, follows an investment strategy very similar to Buffett's. He looks for undervalued companies that also have strong financials and competitive positions. This approach has allowed Philip to outperform the market since Inside Value's inception in 2004. To see his most recent stock picks, as well as the entire archive of past selections, sign up for a free 30-day trial today.

If investing in wonderful companies at fair prices is good enough for Warren Buffett -- arguably the finest investor on the planet -- it should be good enough for the rest of us.

This article was originally published on April 7, 2007. It has been updated.

John Reeves can't remember the last time he used a razor made by someone other than Gillette, and he wishes he'd owned shares in that company before P&G acquired it. John does not own shares of any companies mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway, which is an Inside Value and Stock Advisor recommendation. Walt Disney is a Stock Advisor selection. US Bancorp and Johnson & Johnson are Income Investor picks. The Fool has a disclosure policy.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On December 04, 2008, at 2:45 PM, player23m wrote:

    I get a laugh about all the ‘Outperformed’ the market by 5% to 25% comments here on Fools. So what does that mean, you only lost 25% compared to the 30-50% market crash. So I guess I did even better. I outperformed the market this year by 30-50% by simply keeping all the money in my bed mattress. What a bunch of maroons! You're right Buffett is priceless... too poop on!

  • Report this Comment On December 05, 2008, at 11:53 PM, koolguyme wrote:

    Player23m,

    Your comment is stupid. Did you ever hear of cash losing value over time because of inflation?

    People who put their cash under mattress, criticizing world's richest man..Yeah, right...

  • Report this Comment On December 06, 2008, at 12:39 AM, needsadime wrote:

    What is said here does not matter. Buffet will be the one laughing 10 years down the road.

  • Report this Comment On December 06, 2008, at 5:08 AM, energyconcepts wrote:

    check out this nut 0percent financing as a new way to stop nukes! success stories suggests buffett will make over 1 billion 100million on his best seller the snowball under new and uniqu eunderwriting guidlines alice Schroeder and Buffett could partner with success stories and loan money to anything with no intrest and sweep the world with a new way of finance barrowers have to be against nukes! How ridiculous is that?.

  • Report this Comment On December 07, 2008, at 12:55 PM, energyconcepts wrote:

    I,m supprise how few people have noticed this pearl in the fools woodpile BerkshireHathaway is without a question the only model for the foolish investor

Add your comment.

Compare Brokers

TD AMERITRADE
more info
ShareBuilder
more info
Power E*Trade

more info
Scottrade
more info
Fool Disclosure

DocumentId: 788120, ~/articles/ArticleHandler.aspx, 7/4/2009 9:18:04 AM

Report This Comment

Use this area to report a comment that you believe is in violation of the community guidelines. Our team will review the entry and take any appropriate action.

Sending report...

What Fools Are Saying

Get involved! »

Most Recent

Jul 2 at 4:22 PM

Market Summary

DJIA 8,280.74 -223.32 -2.63%
S&P 500 896.42 -26.91 -2.91%
NASD 1,796.52 +0.00 +0.00%
Sponsored by:

Related Tickers

ConocoPhillips

CAPS Rating 5/5 Stars

$40.96

-1.10 (-2.62%)

Outperform5072

Underperform133

Rate This Stock