If that were true, investing would be nothing more than reading last year’s scoreboard and placing a bet on whoever looked strongest. But business is not a one season sport. It is a long game of discipline, resilience, and intelligent capital allocation.
A company can have a spectacular year because conditions were perfect. Demand surged, costs were low, and credit was cheap. Everything lined up. That does not automatically make it a great business. It may simply mean the wind was blowing in the right direction.
Another company may struggle for a year. Earnings decline, headlines turn negative, and the stock price falls. Yet beneath the surface, the fundamentals remain intact, strong management, durable competitive advantage, loyal customers, and healthy balance sheet. That is not weakness. That is a temporary storm passing over solid ground.
When you focus only on one year, you are behaving like a speculator chasing excitement. When you focus on long term earning power, you are thinking like an owner. The intelligent investor asks different questions.
Is this business understandable? Does this company have pricing power? Does it have a moat that protects it from competition? Does management treat shareholders like partners? Does it generate consistent free cash flow over time? Does management allocate capital wisely? Will this business still be relevant ten or twenty years from now?
Time is the friend of a wonderful business but the enemy of a mediocre one.
The temptation to judge quickly is strong. We live in a world of quarterly results and daily price movements. But wealth is built by those who are willing to look beyond the noise and study the economics of the enterprise itself.
If you train yourself to see the whole film instead of reacting to a single frame, you will not only invest better. You will think better.*
And in this game, clear thinking is the rarest asset of all...
A company can have a spectacular year because conditions were perfect. Demand surged, costs were low, and credit was cheap. Everything lined up. That does not automatically make it a great business. It may simply mean the wind was blowing in the right direction.
Another company may struggle for a year. Earnings decline, headlines turn negative, and the stock price falls. Yet beneath the surface, the fundamentals remain intact, strong management, durable competitive advantage, loyal customers, and healthy balance sheet. That is not weakness. That is a temporary storm passing over solid ground.
When you focus only on one year, you are behaving like a speculator chasing excitement. When you focus on long term earning power, you are thinking like an owner. The intelligent investor asks different questions.
Is this business understandable? Does this company have pricing power? Does it have a moat that protects it from competition? Does management treat shareholders like partners? Does it generate consistent free cash flow over time? Does management allocate capital wisely? Will this business still be relevant ten or twenty years from now?
Time is the friend of a wonderful business but the enemy of a mediocre one.
The temptation to judge quickly is strong. We live in a world of quarterly results and daily price movements. But wealth is built by those who are willing to look beyond the noise and study the economics of the enterprise itself.
If you train yourself to see the whole film instead of reacting to a single frame, you will not only invest better. You will think better.*
And in this game, clear thinking is the rarest asset of all...