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3 Views Apr 06, 2025 09:45 AM
Motley Fool - Article

You Don't Need Talent to Succeed: Lessons From Warren Buffett's Lifetime of Investing

Reuben Gregg Brewer, The Motley Fool

Warren Buffett is, perhaps, one of the most famous investors of all time. Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A)(NYSE: BRK.B), his investment vehicle, has trounced the S&P 500 over the long term. Yet, Buffett has said he has no special talent. It's a good thing for all of us that he also said that you don't need special talent to be a successful investor.

The talentless Mr. Buffett

Warren Buffett doesn't paint like Van Gogh, think like Einstein, or hit a home run like Babe Ruth (or Aaron Judge, if you are a modern Yankees fan). There aren't many people who have achieved such greatness. But this doesn't mean that Buffett hasn't achieved great things in his own right.

Since just the turn of the century, roughly 25 years, Berkshire Hathaway's stock price has risen over 1,300%. The S&P 500 index has risen only 280% or so over the same span. Include the reinvestment of dividends in the mix, and the S&P 500 index has provided investors with a total return of roughly 500%. Berkshire Hathaway doesn't pay dividends, so its total return is equal to its stock price performance, which still trounces the broader market.

It seems like it would be hard to argue that Warren Buffett has no special skill. It seems like his special skill is investing. But he still stated very clearly in Berkshire Hathaway's 2024 annual report: "Lacking such assets as athletic excellence, a wonderful voice, medical or legal skills or, for that matter, any special talents, I have had to rely on equities throughout my life."

You can rely on equities, too

Buffett, known for his colloquial wisdom, is making a very interesting statement. He can't do anything special (like hit three-pointers or write Oscar-worthy movies) that would create fame and wealth out of thin air. Very few of us can. But he can (and you can) buy good companies and benefit from their growth over time. That's basically all he's done, if you look at it in a big-picture way.

Sure, Buffett has a style of investing that has clearly worked well for him. But the core of what he is doing is pretty simple. He invests for the long term, and you don't have to be as good an investor as Buffett to make that work. Berkshire Hathaway has trounced the market, but even just tracking along with the market would result in a huge increase in your wealth.

As the chart above shows, a $10,000 investment in an S&P 500 index exchange-traded fund (ETF) in 2000 would be worth $38,000 today if you spent the dividends. If you'd dividend reinvested, the value would be $60,000. All you would have needed to achieve that was to buy one single index fund and stick it out through the good and bad times along the way.

Don't underestimate what being a long-term investor takes. Note that the Great Recession had the world worried about widespread economic collapse. But it is entirely possible, and anyone can do it. Moreover, buying the S&P 500 index is, basically, Warren Buffett's investment advice for the average investor.

Your biggest effect will be saving

Achieving market-like returns can have a massive effect on your wealth. All you need to do is stick it out through the market's inherent bull and bear cycles. Only that's not all you need to do. First, you need to start investing. Second, you need to save as hard as you can as early as you can and as often as you can. Imagine if you had invested $20,000 and not $10,000 in the example above. You would have twice as much money at the end. Now think about what would happen if it was $100,000.

Don't worry if you can't sing an aria, or even if you don't know how to pick stocks! Just buy the market and let the market do the work for you, which is all Buffett is suggesting you need to do. No talent? No problem! You can achieve huge success the Warren Buffett way, by saving and investing for the long term.

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Reuben Gregg Brewer has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Berkshire Hathaway. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

You Don't Need Talent to Succeed: Lessons From Warren Buffett's Lifetime of Investing was originally published by The Motley Fool

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