Dwight Eisenhower liked to say that Napoleon’s definition of a military genius was “the man who can do the average thing when all those around him are going crazy.”
It’s the same in investing — especially as markets get wild, as they’ve been in recent weeks.
Doing well over time doesn’t require exceptional insight or complex strategies. What it requires is maintaining a level head during brief periods of upheaval.
… is that average returns sustained for an above-average period of time lead to extraordinary returns.
Billionaire investor Howard Marks once talked about an investor whose annual results were never ranked in the top quartile, but over a 14-year period he was in the top 4% of all investors.
If he keeps those mediocre returns up for another 10 years, he may be in the top 1% of his peers — one of the greatest of his generation despite being unmentionable in any given year.
… is on what people can do right now, this year, maybe next year.
“What are the best returns I can earn?” seems like such an intuitive question to ask.
But if you understand the math behind compounding, you realize the most important question is not “How can I earn the highest returns?” It’s this: “What are the best returns I can sustain for the longest period of time?” Just staying in the game, consistently, through chaos.
If you:
It doesn’t take much, but it makes all the difference in the world.