• Tiger_storyTiger_story
      ·11-11

      📰Buffett’s Final Letter at 95: A Farewell and a New Chapter for Berkshire👋

      Warren Buffett, 95, is back in the headlines—not for a new blockbuster investment, but for writing what may be his final shareholder letter as CEO, announcing he will "go quiet" and formally hand the reins of Berkshire Hathaway to Greg Abel. The letter has gone viral not as a corporate update, but as the closing chapter of a legendary investor reflecting on a lifetime of lessons—and offering direction for Berkshire’s next era.$Berkshire Hathaway(BRK.B)$ , $Berkshire Hathaway(BRK.A)$When Buffett declared, "I will no longer be writing Berkshire’s annual report," Wall Street felt an indescribable mix of emotions—not shock, nor sorrow, but a sense of "we’ve finally reached this moment."Warren Buffett1. The
      3.24K2
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      📰Buffett’s Final Letter at 95: A Farewell and a New Chapter for Berkshire👋
    • Toastmaster02Toastmaster02
      ·10-29
      Nothing is too late or too small to start...that's my thought when I started my trading journey this February at late forties. Small beginnings allow me to learn, build capacity, and develop consistency before tackling bigger challenges. I don't need perfect conditions to begin. What matters most is to take action and start with what I have and wherever I am. I may not be able to hit my Buffett Moment anytime soon but I will continue to invest and reinvest my earnings consistently and work towards that moment.
      601Comment
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    • UrfriendUrfriend
      ·10-26
      Is the thrill of share trading addictive?? I would have to confess yes and I probably let it take too much of my thought life and focus. Don't find it easy to turn off then on. if you don't master your emotions they will master you, I'm just trying to keep everything in check, Any advice????
      855Comment
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    • chandon99chandon99
      ·10-11

      Cash Boost Lucky Draw

      Find out more here:Cash Boost Lucky Draw Hey friend! Tap to help me out and get a mystery gift for yourself—check it out now!
      553Comment
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      Cash Boost Lucky Draw
    • WeChatsWeChats
      ·10-10
      💡 Should You Diversify or Concentrate Your Portfolio? It’s one of the most timeless dilemmas in investing: 👉 Should I own many stocks, or focus on just a few? Before deciding, it helps to understand where each path truly leads. --- ⚔️ Option 1: Concentration — Depth Over Breadth You might recall Warren Buffett’s advice: > “Put all your eggs in one basket — and watch that basket carefully.” The philosophy behind concentration is deep conviction built on deep understanding. You invest heavily in a company because you’ve studied it far more deeply than most. You understand its moat, leadership, products, and culture better than 99% of investors — even Wall Street analysts. 🎯 The goal: Life-changing wealth. If your conviction is right — if you identify the next Nvidia or Amazon — your upsid
      2.23K4
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    • LawrenceSGLawrenceSG
      ·10-10
      macd. huat ah @Optionspuppy
      547Comment
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    • SarahdiyyahSarahdiyyah
      ·10-10
      761Comment
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    • chandon99chandon99
      ·10-10

      Cash Boost Lucky Draw

      Find out more here:Cash Boost Lucky Draw Hey friend! Tap to help me out and get a mystery gift for yourself—check it out now!
      706Comment
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      Cash Boost Lucky Draw
    • xemxem
      ·10-10

      Cash Boost Lucky Draw

      Find out more here:Cash Boost Lucky Draw Hey friend! Tap to help me out and get a mystery gift for yourself—check it out now!
      830Comment
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      Cash Boost Lucky Draw
    • WeChatsWeChats
      ·10-10
      When the investing legend Peter Lynch recently nonchalantly confessed in an interview, “I don’t own a single AI stock,” and even admitted, “Until eight months ago, I couldn’t even pronounce ‘Nvidia’,” the reaction was explosive. Some scoffed: “Look — Lynch is past his prime. He can’t keep up.” Others — particularly AI sceptics — rushed to crow: “See? Not even Lynch is betting on AI! All you retail investors hyping it are fools.” Both camps, however, miss the forest for the trees. 🎯 The Real Lesson Isn’t About AI — It’s About Discipline Lynch and Buffett are not legends because they surfed every trend. They are legends because they wield unyielding discipline — only venturing inside their circle of competence. In One Up on Wall Street, Lynch hammered an enduring principle: > “Know what y
      1.62K2
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    • SK1512SK1512
      ·10-09
      .
      824Comment
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    • ReallyxxxReallyxxx
      ·10-09
      Now at age 60, I can see the “insane” compounding commencing. I will likely will die with far more wealth than I cld ever spend
      850Comment
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    • RickPANDARickPANDA
      ·10-09
      PCT: Charlie Munger: The First 100K Is Bitch v1.0 : PCT = Pandas Coffee Talk.
      955Comment
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    • IsleighIsleigh
      ·10-09
      💸 The Real Buffett Moment Isn’t About Age — It’s About Patience Warren Buffett didn’t suddenly “get smarter” after 65 — his wealth curve simply hit the exponential part of compounding. That’s the true Buffett Moment — when patience finally outpaces panic. For many of us, it’ll come earlier if we build conviction and consistency. The modern market compounds faster — AI growth cycles, ETF automation, and fractional investing let you achieve in 20 years what used to take 40. The secret isn’t chasing 100% returns; it’s stacking 10% returns for decades and never interrupting the compounding with emotional exits. I’d say my Buffett Moment begins once my portfolio earns more sleeping than working — when time becomes the main income engine. That’s the real freedom curve. Whether you’re 25 or 55,
      1.19KComment
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    • xemxem
      ·10-09

      Cash Boost Lucky Draw

      Find out more here:Cash Boost Lucky Draw Hey friend! Tap to help me out and get a mystery gift for yourself—check it out now!
      699Comment
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      Cash Boost Lucky Draw
    • WeChatsWeChats
      ·10-09
      The Power of the Mundane: My Mid-Career Embrace of ETFs If you look at my investment portfolio today, five years after I finally started, you wouldn't be impressed. It's not a flashy collection of meme stocks or the "next big thing" in disruptive tech. It is, quite simply, boring. And that, I’ve realized, is my single biggest advantage as a late starter. When I was 35, I was paralyzed by the fear of being behind. I felt the urgent need to "catch up" with friends who had been compounding wealth since they received their first paycheck. This anxiety is a trap; it pushes you toward high-risk decisions—like trying to pick the next winning stock—which, statistically, are most likely to set you back further. My saving grace was settling on Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs). It allowed me to trade the
      1.25K3
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    • ZarknessZarkness
      ·10-08
      To buy need to have vol with it
      1.39KComment
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    • ZarknessZarkness
      ·10-08
      I view it as sideway , and of cos the fundamentally good stock if u are buying .
      1.11KComment
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    • LanceljxLanceljx
      ·10-08
      Smart Money Concepts (SMC) explain how institutions hunt liquidity—price spikes to clear orders, then returns to fill the imbalance. Long logic holds only if support zones stay intact; a clean break means weak buying. Candlesticks show trader psychology. Long lower shadows near support reflect rejection of low prices and signal possible reversal—especially when confirmed by volume or a bullish engulfing candle. Bull flags indicate controlled pullbacks; a shorter flag suggests the trend remains strong. Buying near the lower flag line or after breakout-retest offers the best risk-reward. Fake reversals are common—wait for confirmation and retests before entry. Among indicators, volume, EMA 20/50, RSI (> 50), and Fibonacci (38–61 %) are most reliable for timing and confluence. Each school
      647Comment
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    • MaverickWealthBuilderMaverickWealthBuilder
      ·10-08

      The era of AI FOMO, What's important to investors?

      Amid the AI boom, corporate wealth creation surges relentlessly—from $Broadcom(AVGO)$ to $NVIDIA(NVDA)$ , from $Advanced Micro Devices(AMD)$ to $Dell Technologies Inc.(DELL)$ the semiconductor sector has clearly shrugged off macro market fluctuations, setting new highs in wave after wave.But how does the current situation differ from the dot-com bubble two decades ago? Analyzing from the perspectives of user adoption, corporate implementation, capital investment, energy infrastructure, and potential bubble risks, we must neither lose enthusiasm for AI investment nor overlook the need to guard against supply-demand imbalan
      11.90K3
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      The era of AI FOMO, What's important to investors?
    • Tiger_storyTiger_story
      ·11-11

      📰Buffett’s Final Letter at 95: A Farewell and a New Chapter for Berkshire👋

      Warren Buffett, 95, is back in the headlines—not for a new blockbuster investment, but for writing what may be his final shareholder letter as CEO, announcing he will "go quiet" and formally hand the reins of Berkshire Hathaway to Greg Abel. The letter has gone viral not as a corporate update, but as the closing chapter of a legendary investor reflecting on a lifetime of lessons—and offering direction for Berkshire’s next era.$Berkshire Hathaway(BRK.B)$ , $Berkshire Hathaway(BRK.A)$When Buffett declared, "I will no longer be writing Berkshire’s annual report," Wall Street felt an indescribable mix of emotions—not shock, nor sorrow, but a sense of "we’ve finally reached this moment."Warren Buffett1. The
      3.24K2
      Report
      📰Buffett’s Final Letter at 95: A Farewell and a New Chapter for Berkshire👋
    • MaverickWealthBuilderMaverickWealthBuilder
      ·10-08

      The era of AI FOMO, What's important to investors?

      Amid the AI boom, corporate wealth creation surges relentlessly—from $Broadcom(AVGO)$ to $NVIDIA(NVDA)$ , from $Advanced Micro Devices(AMD)$ to $Dell Technologies Inc.(DELL)$ the semiconductor sector has clearly shrugged off macro market fluctuations, setting new highs in wave after wave.But how does the current situation differ from the dot-com bubble two decades ago? Analyzing from the perspectives of user adoption, corporate implementation, capital investment, energy infrastructure, and potential bubble risks, we must neither lose enthusiasm for AI investment nor overlook the need to guard against supply-demand imbalan
      11.90K3
      Report
      The era of AI FOMO, What's important to investors?
    • WeChatsWeChats
      ·10-10
      💡 Should You Diversify or Concentrate Your Portfolio? It’s one of the most timeless dilemmas in investing: 👉 Should I own many stocks, or focus on just a few? Before deciding, it helps to understand where each path truly leads. --- ⚔️ Option 1: Concentration — Depth Over Breadth You might recall Warren Buffett’s advice: > “Put all your eggs in one basket — and watch that basket carefully.” The philosophy behind concentration is deep conviction built on deep understanding. You invest heavily in a company because you’ve studied it far more deeply than most. You understand its moat, leadership, products, and culture better than 99% of investors — even Wall Street analysts. 🎯 The goal: Life-changing wealth. If your conviction is right — if you identify the next Nvidia or Amazon — your upsid
      2.23K4
      Report
    • Tiger_commentsTiger_comments
      ·10-07

      At What Age Will You Hit Your “Buffett Moment”? 🧐💰

      Have you ever wondered why some people only achieve true financial freedom later in life?Warren Buffett is the perfect example — most of his wealth came from the power of compounding after age 65.How far are you from your own “Buffett moment”? Buffett’s wealth growth is a perfect case of patience and compounding.Teenage years: Started exploring stocks. Before reading The Intelligent Investor, he relied on charts and market rumors, with mediocre results.Age 19: Earned $9,800 in capital through pinball machines, delivering newspapers, and selling second-hand golf balls.Age 21: Tried to work at Graham’s company for free but was rejected. However, after researching Graham’s position as GEICO’s chairman, he invested 50–75% of his net worth in GEICO stock.Age 22: When GEICO stock rose nearly 50%
      14.71K41
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      At What Age Will You Hit Your “Buffett Moment”? 🧐💰
    • WeChatsWeChats
      ·10-10
      When the investing legend Peter Lynch recently nonchalantly confessed in an interview, “I don’t own a single AI stock,” and even admitted, “Until eight months ago, I couldn’t even pronounce ‘Nvidia’,” the reaction was explosive. Some scoffed: “Look — Lynch is past his prime. He can’t keep up.” Others — particularly AI sceptics — rushed to crow: “See? Not even Lynch is betting on AI! All you retail investors hyping it are fools.” Both camps, however, miss the forest for the trees. 🎯 The Real Lesson Isn’t About AI — It’s About Discipline Lynch and Buffett are not legends because they surfed every trend. They are legends because they wield unyielding discipline — only venturing inside their circle of competence. In One Up on Wall Street, Lynch hammered an enduring principle: > “Know what y
      1.62K2
      Report
    • WeChatsWeChats
      ·10-09
      The Power of the Mundane: My Mid-Career Embrace of ETFs If you look at my investment portfolio today, five years after I finally started, you wouldn't be impressed. It's not a flashy collection of meme stocks or the "next big thing" in disruptive tech. It is, quite simply, boring. And that, I’ve realized, is my single biggest advantage as a late starter. When I was 35, I was paralyzed by the fear of being behind. I felt the urgent need to "catch up" with friends who had been compounding wealth since they received their first paycheck. This anxiety is a trap; it pushes you toward high-risk decisions—like trying to pick the next winning stock—which, statistically, are most likely to set you back further. My saving grace was settling on Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs). It allowed me to trade the
      1.25K3
      Report
    • Toastmaster02Toastmaster02
      ·10-29
      Nothing is too late or too small to start...that's my thought when I started my trading journey this February at late forties. Small beginnings allow me to learn, build capacity, and develop consistency before tackling bigger challenges. I don't need perfect conditions to begin. What matters most is to take action and start with what I have and wherever I am. I may not be able to hit my Buffett Moment anytime soon but I will continue to invest and reinvest my earnings consistently and work towards that moment.
      601Comment
      Report
    • koolgalkoolgal
      ·10-07
      🌟🌟🌟Warren Buffett built his fortune on patience and compounding.  Not drama.  Not speed.  Just time, discipline and the quiet power of letting growth unfold.  He called it a snowball.  I call it a rock rolling down a hill - steady, silent and unstoppable. My goal is FIRE - Financial Independence Retire Early. I invest mainly in Index ETFs - $SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 ETF(SPLG)$ $STI ETF(ES3.SI)$ and $Vanguard Total World Stock ETF(VT)$. These ETFs are not flashy but they are global, resilient and quietly magnificent.  They mirror the world's progress, not its noise. Each dollar I invest in is a step towards FIRE.  Not to es
      3.13K15
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    • UrfriendUrfriend
      ·10-26
      Is the thrill of share trading addictive?? I would have to confess yes and I probably let it take too much of my thought life and focus. Don't find it easy to turn off then on. if you don't master your emotions they will master you, I'm just trying to keep everything in check, Any advice????
      855Comment
      Report
    • IsleighIsleigh
      ·10-09
      💸 The Real Buffett Moment Isn’t About Age — It’s About Patience Warren Buffett didn’t suddenly “get smarter” after 65 — his wealth curve simply hit the exponential part of compounding. That’s the true Buffett Moment — when patience finally outpaces panic. For many of us, it’ll come earlier if we build conviction and consistency. The modern market compounds faster — AI growth cycles, ETF automation, and fractional investing let you achieve in 20 years what used to take 40. The secret isn’t chasing 100% returns; it’s stacking 10% returns for decades and never interrupting the compounding with emotional exits. I’d say my Buffett Moment begins once my portfolio earns more sleeping than working — when time becomes the main income engine. That’s the real freedom curve. Whether you’re 25 or 55,
      1.19KComment
      Report
    • LanceljxLanceljx
      ·10-08
      Smart Money Concepts (SMC) explain how institutions hunt liquidity—price spikes to clear orders, then returns to fill the imbalance. Long logic holds only if support zones stay intact; a clean break means weak buying. Candlesticks show trader psychology. Long lower shadows near support reflect rejection of low prices and signal possible reversal—especially when confirmed by volume or a bullish engulfing candle. Bull flags indicate controlled pullbacks; a shorter flag suggests the trend remains strong. Buying near the lower flag line or after breakout-retest offers the best risk-reward. Fake reversals are common—wait for confirmation and retests before entry. Among indicators, volume, EMA 20/50, RSI (> 50), and Fibonacci (38–61 %) are most reliable for timing and confluence. Each school
      647Comment
      Report
    • ShyonShyon
      ·10-07
      Warren Buffett’s journey shows that real wealth often comes later in life through patience and compounding. He built his foundation early, but it was decades of steady growth that turned $1 million at age 30 into over $150 billion by 95. That perspective reminds me that wealth isn’t about quick wins — it’s about consistency over time. I believe strongly in compounding, which is why I focus on building quality positions and holding them long term. My style isn’t identical to Buffett’s, but I share his focus on fundamentals and discipline rather than chasing short-term gains. Technically, I prefer using daily and weekly candles since my investment horizon is mid- to long-term. Higher timeframes filter out noise and reveal stronger trends and key levels. In the 5-second candlestick test, the
      9452
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    • MHhMHh
      ·10-07
      Below 30 years old [Facepalm] I definitely believe in the power of compounding; isn’t called the 8th wonder of the world for nothing. It happens to our bank deposits and investments, and unfortunately also to debts if not well-managed. I align to his strategy of value investing and also his advice of buying just ETFs for the noob investor. That was how I started out and is still my main strategy today as I don’t have a lot of time to spend studying and monitoring the stock market. I still have my main day job that takes away a fair bit of my time. Unfortunately, with the recent high valuations, it is hard to bargain hunt and I believe that is why Buffett is sitting on more cash than ever. Cash erodes so I do try a bit of swing trading now to try to maximise my returns in a short time and
      1.60K3
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    • DiAngelDiAngel
      ·10-07
      Buffett achieved 1Mn much earlier than me. [Happy][LOL][Smile][Chuckle] It is best to be late then never. I didn’t get into equities market until 2017. In addition, I didn’t sit down to work out my wealth until 2-4 years ago. 😱. Maybe all the while I am an extremely conservatives person. Parked my fund in FD. Moreover I set a KPI for myself to save $x amount at x age for my early retirement. When I achieved that, all my friends chided me for having an easy going job (KLKK) and why retire when company pays for my mobile and broadband. Of course, at times, I m running a mad house. But such incident is getting lesser and lesser. At times, I can’t help thinking I m already in semi-retirement mode 2-3 years ago. Coaching junior staff. I will only get my hands dirty when junior staff cannot ha
      767Comment
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    • KienBoonKienBoon
      ·10-07
      Hi. Indicators are more for short term and speculative investment. If go long term, we should need to identify suitable counters in terms of their dividend policy, quarterly net profit, stable business nature, company direction moving forward and expansion plan, to name a few. Companies like banks and energy industries, etc.  should have much higher chance of good and stable growth with regular consistent dividend as well. Nevertheless it may be suitable to allocate certain minor percentage of portfolio for more volatile counters like Tech companies. Cheers. [Smile] [Smile]
      911Comment
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    • chandon99chandon99
      ·10-11

      Cash Boost Lucky Draw

      Find out more here:Cash Boost Lucky Draw Hey friend! Tap to help me out and get a mystery gift for yourself—check it out now!
      553Comment
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      Cash Boost Lucky Draw
    • chandon99chandon99
      ·10-10

      Cash Boost Lucky Draw

      Find out more here:Cash Boost Lucky Draw Hey friend! Tap to help me out and get a mystery gift for yourself—check it out now!
      706Comment
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      Cash Boost Lucky Draw
    • xemxem
      ·10-10

      Cash Boost Lucky Draw

      Find out more here:Cash Boost Lucky Draw Hey friend! Tap to help me out and get a mystery gift for yourself—check it out now!
      830Comment
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      Cash Boost Lucky Draw
    • MikasallaMikasalla
      ·10-08

      Cash Boost Lucky Draw

      Please click and help me. Find out more here:Cash Boost Lucky Draw Hey friend! Tap to help me out and get a mystery gift for yourself—check it out now!
      323Comment
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    • OptionspuppyOptionspuppy
      ·10-08

      Cash Boost Lucky Draw

      Find out more here: Cash Boost Lucky Draw Hey friend! Tap to help me out and get a mystery gift for yourself—check it out now!
      296Comment
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      Cash Boost Lucky Draw