Brian Feroldi (🧠,📈) Profile picture
Aug 6 15 tweets 6 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
I've been investing for 19 years.

Here are 10 painful investing lessons I learned the hard way: Image
1: You don't need leverage

Margin & options are fun on the way up, but BRUTAL on the way down.

I’ve lost more than 100% on investments before.

Why? Leverage.

Buffett & Munger said it best:
Image
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2: Optimize for longevity, not upside

Compound interest is the most powerful wealth-building force that exists.

But it only works if you SURVIVE long enough for it to work.

I used to optimize for upside. Now, I use the barbell method to optimize for longevity. Image
3: High conviction does not mean I'm correct

I convinced myself several times that a stock could only go up.

I was right on some. On others, I lost 70% (!!)

Conviction is useful, but just because you think you are right doesn’t mean you are.

Allocate accordingly.
4: Stock prices & business results are 0% correlated in the short-term and 100% correlated in the long-term

I’ve sold future mega-winners because their stocks were down (dumb).

I was watching the stock, not the business.

Now, I do the reverse. Image
5: Not having a system

I used to keep everything in my head, which was dumb (and impossible).

I didn't use checklists, journals, or watchlists, which are invaluable free tools.

This caused me to make tons of mistakes.

Now, I have a system: Image
6: Not understanding valuation

I passed on high p/e ratio stocks (that went up big).

I bought low p/e ratio stocks (that went down big).

Why? I didn’t understand the business growth cycle.

Now, I know WHICH valuation metrics to use (and WHEN to use them). Image
7: Panic selling and panic buying

My emotions have caused me to panic buy hype stocks and panic sell future mega-winners.

It’s easy to say you’ll be greedy when others are fearful, and visa-versa.

It’s damn hard to actually do it. Image
8: I didn't study history

Human nature is remarkably consistent. The same forces that drove markets 100+ years still exist in all of us today.

There’s always a smart-sounded reason to sell.

I didn't understand that. Now, I do. Image
9: I focused on what I can't control

I used to follow stock prices + the news closely, watching for clues to predict the market.

This was time poorly spent. Macro factors matter, but I have no control over them.

I now focus far more on what I can control. Image
10: Not changing my mind

This one is REALLY hard, but it’s necessary to do well.

Changing your mind is hard. Admitting you're wrong is hard.

But @JeffBezos said it best: Image
I learned all of these lessons the expensive way.

Want to fast-track your learning?

Join me tomorow for my LIVE course, Valuation Explained Simply.

Interested? DM me for a coupon code.

https://t.co/FN0VAheL4Gmaven.com/brian-feroldi/…
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Last one:

Stay humble yet optimistic.

If you invest, you're going to be wrong. A lot.

Don't beat yourself up. That's just how you get better.

Saving money is hard. Investing is hard. The world is complex.

Invest & stay optimistic anyway. Image
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More from @BrianFeroldi

Aug 4
10 BRAND NEW charts every stock investor needs to see:

1: The YTD rally has caused the forward P/E ratio to trade near its 2022 peak Image
2: While high, the S&P 500's forward p/e ratio is still WITHIN one standard deviation of its 25-year average. Image
3: The 10 biggest companies in the S&P 500 ($AAPL, $MSFT, $GOOG, $AMZN, $NVDA, $TSLA, $BRK-B, $META, $V, $UNH) now comprise 31.8% of the total market cap, a 25-year high Image
Read 14 tweets
Aug 1
Capitalism is brutal.

If you invest, you MUST know how to identify a moat.

Here are 9 financial “rules of thumb” that Warren Buffett uses to tell if a company has one: Image
1: Gross Margin

Found: Income Statement

Formula: Gross Profit / Revenue

Moat: Consistently above 40%

No Moat: Under 40% & volatile Image
Buffett’s logic:

A consistently high gross margin signals that the company isn’t competing exclusively on price.

A high gross margin also provides ample gross profit to pay expenses and leaves money for shareholders.
Read 25 tweets
Jul 30
I’ve been investing for 19 years.

I've bought DOZENS of bad stocks that lost me money.

Here are 8 unforgettable failures (and the expensive lesson I learned the hard way):🤦‍♂️ Image
Loser #1 - 3D System - $DDD

3D printing was all the rage in 2013.

3D Systems was a top dog & first mover. The business was BOOMING (so was the stock).

With "unlimited" growth potential, I bought into the hype.
After a massive run-up in 2013, the bubble burst in 2014

3D System’s growth started to slow and the stock fell HARD

I didn't understand the hype cycle, which cost me a bundle

Lesson: The hype cycle is real. Study this image! Image
Read 21 tweets
Jul 28
The P/E ratio SUCKS.

It’s a flawed metric that deceives investors.

Here are 8 reasons why the P/E ratio can be INCREDIBLY misleading (and what to do instead): Image
What’s wrong with the price-to-earnings ratio?

It all boils down to the many ways that “earnings” can be misleading.

The P/E ratio becomes useless if “earnings” aren’t sustainable or artificially inflated/depressed.

Here are 8 reasons why that can happen:
1: Accrual Accounting

The GAAP income statement uses accrual accounting.

Accrual accounting is useful, but it’s basically an accountant’s opinion.

Here are some of the expenses that can cause “earnings” to be higher or lower than the actual cash flow of a business Image
Read 23 tweets
Jul 26
I've been investing for 19+ years.

Here are 10 expensive lessons I had to learn the hard way: Image
1: You don't need leverage

Margin & options are fun on the way up but BRUTAL on the way down.

I’ve lost more than 100% on investments before.

Why? Leverage!

Buffett said it best: Image
2: Optimize for longevity, not upside

Compound interest is the most powerful wealth-building force that exists.

But it only works if you SURVIVE long enough for it to work.

I used to optimize for upside potential. Now, I use the barbell method to optimize for longevity. Image
Read 14 tweets
Jul 24
Peter Lynch LOVED the PEG ratio.

He popularized it in "One Up On Wall Street."

However, the PEG ratio actually SUCKS.

Here’s why: Image
Assume you’re considering investing in one of three companies.

Which is the better buy? Image
This is where the PEG ratio is useful.

PEG stands for “Price-to-Earnings-to-Growth”.

Divide the trailing P/E ratio by the estimated 5-year earnings growth rate.

The lower the number, the better.

The PEG makes it clear that Company ZYX is the best choice. Image
Read 15 tweets

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