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The Swarm Lounge
General Investing and Economics Discussion - No Politics
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<blockquote data-quote="LibertyTurns" data-source="post: 695967" data-attributes="member: 789"><p>[USER=274]@CuseJacket[/USER] Not bashing Berkshire or Buffet, but his hey day was 1986-2004. I bought my first Berkshire shares in 1997. It’s currently about 2% of my entire portfolio. Returns above 25% were not uncommon on an annual basis, but 5 and 10 year returns are on a downslope and have been for quite some time. Berkshire is good for a hair better than market average these days. The question I ask myself is would I buy any more of an average stock and that answer is no. I can buy the top half of the S&P and beat Berkshire by a solid margin, year in and year out. Takes work but if you’re serious about your finances my recommendation to anyone is learn to invest shrewdly. If not stocks like Berkshire, S&P indexes, etc are better for you. </p><p></p><p><a href="https://kunaldesai.blog/berkshire-hathaway-returns/" target="_blank">https://kunaldesai.blog/berkshire-hathaway-returns/</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LibertyTurns, post: 695967, member: 789"] [USER=274]@CuseJacket[/USER] Not bashing Berkshire or Buffet, but his hey day was 1986-2004. I bought my first Berkshire shares in 1997. It’s currently about 2% of my entire portfolio. Returns above 25% were not uncommon on an annual basis, but 5 and 10 year returns are on a downslope and have been for quite some time. Berkshire is good for a hair better than market average these days. The question I ask myself is would I buy any more of an average stock and that answer is no. I can buy the top half of the S&P and beat Berkshire by a solid margin, year in and year out. Takes work but if you’re serious about your finances my recommendation to anyone is learn to invest shrewdly. If not stocks like Berkshire, S&P indexes, etc are better for you. [URL]https://kunaldesai.blog/berkshire-hathaway-returns/[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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