Rift between Warren Buffett and Bill Gates grows
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Warren Buffett's snowball metaphor explains how small, consistent efforts compound into extraordinary results over time in investing and in life.
Warren Buffett handed the reins of Berkshire Hathaway to Greg Abel with a war chest of nearly $400 billion sitting in T-bills, and buried inside that famously concentrated portfolio are five deeply discounted stocks that quietly reward shareholders with dividends every single year.
Greg Abel's loudest move was a $2.65 billion airline. His most telling one, a department store, cost a fraction of that.
Warren Buffett's 90/10 investment strategy for average investors is simple to implement but requires discipline and patience over the long haul.
Some investors see a problem in Alphabet's pullback. Buffett and Abel see an opportunity.
The chain in question was Domino’s Pizza, which stock analysis outfit The Motley Fool reports was a Buffett favorite: the former Berkshire Hathaway CEO acquired new shares in the sauce joint for six quarters in a row,
Buffett has often said that the investment with the highest return is not a stock or a property, but yourself.
The Oracle of Omaha's protege gave Domino's Pizza the heave-ho in favor of an artificial intelligence (AI) applications pioneer whose shares have gained more than 13,300% since its IPO.
