The stock market is filled with individuals who know the price of everything, but the value of nothing.
If the job has been correctly done when a common stock is purchased, the time to sell it is almost never.
I don’t want a lot of good investments; I want a few outstanding ones.
I have owned one stock since 1969, two since 1988 and one I started buying in 1986 or so. That's my portfolio. Six stocks. I once owned 17, but that was way too much.
I remember my sense of shock some half-dozen years ago when I read a recommendation to sell shares of a company . . . The recommendation was not based on any long-term fundamentals. Rather, it was that over the next six months the funds could be employed more profitably elsewhere.
Great stocks are extremely hard to find. If they weren’t, then everyone would own them.