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The Magic of Compounding - Buffett's story - investbullbear

Tan KW
Publish date: Tue, 07 Jan 2014, 05:20 PM
Tan KW
0 501,170
Good.

Sunday, January 5, 2014

 
Wealth takes time.

Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett's investing partner, put it best: "You don't have to be brilliant, only a little bit wiser than the other guys, on average, for a long, long time."
 
Warren Buffett is a great investor, but what makes him rich is that he's been a great investor for seven decades. Of his current $60 billion net worth, $59.7 billion was added after his 50th birthday, and $57 billion came after his 60th. If Buffett started saving in his 30s and retired in his 60s, you would have never heard of him. His skill is investing, but his secret is time.
 
Understanding the value of time is the most important lesson in all of finance. The single best thing we can do to improve the financial state of Americans is encourage people to save from as early an age as possible.





Buffett's wealth

For this discussion:  1 billion = 1,000 million.

He was born on 30th August 1930.

2014  Age 83  - $60 billion net worth

1990  Age 60 -  $ 3 billion net worth.

1980  Age 50 -  $0.3 billion or $300 million net worth



1980 - 1990
CAGR 25.89% over 10 years


1990 - 2014
CAGR 13.29% over 24 years


 

 

A billion is equal to how many million?

 
Answer:
In the 'short scale' a billion is 1000 million. The short scale is the system officially used in the USA, the UK and most English-speaking countries. 

In the 'long scale' it is a million million. More or less the rest of the world supposedly uses this terminology.

One million (1,000,000) or one thousand thousand.
One billion (1,000,000,000) or one million thousand.    

1. The cardinal number equal to 109.
2. Chiefly British The cardinal number equal to 1012
 

 

http://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2014/01/the-magic-of-compounding-buffetts-story.html

Discussions
2 people like this. Showing 7 of 7 comments

Chrollo

The power of compounding is truly magnificient..

2014-01-05 23:26

Tessa Joseph

I'm using the Rule of 72 to approximate how long it will take for an investment to double at a given interest rate.

2014-01-06 07:16

Jester

Dear Tessa,

Could you please enlighten your usage of Rule of 72 to the community here?
It would be best if you also state whether you follow the rule 100% or not.

Thanks~

2014-01-07 17:25

Tessa Joseph

The Rule of 72 is a simple formula used to estimate the length of time required to double an investment. For example an individual is earning 6% on their money market account would like to estimate how long it would take to double their current balance. In order for this estimation to be remotely accurate, we must assume that there will be no withdrawals nor deposits into this account. We can estimate that it will take approximately 12 years to double the current balance after dividing 72 by 6

2014-01-07 21:36

skyhawk

The Magical Rule of 72.....
Let say your returns on share investment is 8% a month..

72 divided by 8 = 9 months to double up your capital...provided no withdrawals and profits are reinvested...
8% a month is easily achievable if you have a good trading plan..

2014-01-07 22:59

Fat Cat Tim Buddy

he could die before his 50th, or 60th, but whatever it is, it does not matter, because the things you want at 15 , you probably does not want it at your 60.

you only live once, dont so kiam siap lah, spend some money and have fun spending.. knn..

2014-01-07 23:05

Jonathan Keung

to be honest. not everyone can lives to 80's or 90's. however, to save and invest over 10-15 years period( is good ). most of us started to invest only after 40's + 10 years = 50's .

enjoy what you can afford. after all life is short. not everyone can be a billionaire. happy trading

2014-01-08 10:56

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