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%, he strictly followed Graham’s investment principles and sold. The stock kept rising, prompting him to reflect on his approach.
Ages 24–26: Worked under Graham for two years, growing his wealth to $140,000. By then, he had mastered the fundamental logic of investing and began planning for future wealth.
Age 31: Personal assets exceeded $1,000,000
Age 34: Assets surpassed $4,000,000
Age 39: When dissolving his partnership fund, his assets reached $26,500,000
After age 65: Wealth entered a high-speed snowball phase, with compounding fully taking effect, growing his net worth to over $150B by age 95.
At age 30, Warren Buffett's wealth was 1Mn. At 95, his wealth is 150Bn+; this is a staggering 150,000x growth in wealth. Wealth doesn’t come just from early brilliance — it comes from patience, compounding, and the principles of value investing.
🔥 Discussion:
At what age do you feel closest to Buffett’s wealth?
Do you believe in the magic of compounding?
Is your investment style aligned with Buffett-style value investing, or do you prefer other strategies?
10.8 Quick Test | 5 Seconds to Decide: Buy or Sell?
Technical indicators are key in investing. Every day, we see people sharing all kinds of indicators to spot buy or sell points.
Today, let’s do a quick test: Look at this candlestick chart. You have just 5 seconds—would you choose long (buy) or short (sell)?
✅ Correct answer: long (buy)
Why go long? Let’s look at it from different angles:
1.Institutional Money Logic (Smart Money Concepts)
Price first spikes up to clear orders, then pulls back to the “price gap” area.
The support zone below is a good buying point. Price is now rebounding, but keep an eye on the second support zone. If it breaks, buying pressure is weak, and the long logic fails.
2.Candlestick Analysis
Drawing lines connecting highs and lows shows possible stop points. The second-to-last candlestick touches the support line but doesn’t break it, signaling a possible reversal.
The last two falling candlesticks have long lower shadows, confirming the likelihood of a rebound.
In real trading, you can use Fibonacci levels to confirm reversal points and combine with volume and other indicators to increase confidence.
3.Bull Flag Pattern
You can see a bull flag (downward channel). The flag’s length is shorter than the flagpole, so overall, the bias is still bullish.
Buy at the bottom, then decide whether to continue long or trade within the range.
4.Practical Tips
First reversal breaks can be fake; it’s better to wait for a breakout and then a pullback to short. During high-level sideways moves, shorting opportunities are rare. Upper shadows are often caused by large orders pushing price up before it falls back immediately. $Berkshire Hathaway(BRK.A)$ $Berkshire Hathaway(BRK.B)$
💬 Questions for you:
How do you view the analysis from different technical schools?
Which indicators do you rely on to decide buy or sell points?
Did you have a different answer or insight for this test?
Which indicator works best for you?
Comments
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 escape work but Freedom. Freedom to spend more time with my loved ones and to travel the world.
My FIRE goal is still a work in progress but I am happy that it is on track. My aim is to live life fully and tick all my bucket lists.
Thank Warren Buffett for your wisdom.
@Tiger_comments @TigerStars @Tiger_SG @CaptainTiger @TigerClub
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 support zone and long shadows made “long” a logical choice. I rely on multiple signals rather than a single indicator to build confidence in my decisions.
@Tiger_comments @TigerStars
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 to minimise my risk of holding on to the stock should the price drops drastically. It has worked well so far except I have yet to master options which Buffett is also skilful in.
Check them in the history - “community distribution“[Tongue][Shy]
For every Buffett, there's probably hundreds of buffet (get it? they get feasted on instead of feasting on the market), so we just try our best to invest and not be greedy and hoping to all become Buffett.
I would love to have my Buffett moment at 65 too, but I won't lose sleep if it doesn't happen
沃伦·巴菲特在65岁之后并没有突然“变得更聪明”——他的财富曲线只是达到了复利的指数部分。这才是真正的巴菲特时刻——耐心最终超过恐慌。
对我们许多人来说,如果我们建立信念和一致性,它会来得更早。现代市场的复合速度更快——人工智能增长周期、ETF自动化和部分投资可以让你在20年内实现过去需要40年的目标。秘诀不是追求100%的回报;而是追求100%的回报。几十年来,它积累了10%的回报,并且从未因情绪退出而中断复利。
我想说,一旦我的投资组合睡眠收入超过工作收入,我的巴菲特时刻就开始了——当时间成为主要收入引擎时。这才是真正的自由曲线。
无论你是25岁还是55岁,每个月稳定的贡献都会推动你的曲线向前发展。
我不是财务顾问。同志们,明智交易!💰📈