Charlie Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago (edited) It all depends on price. If you can buy Berkshire cheap buy a lot. I wouldn´t buy the S&P 500 at record high. That´s probably not a good idea. Buy it when it is off 30-50% of record high. Beware of low quality companies, low quality managment, low quality countries and companies with too much leverage. Every point can kill you. You have to have conviction in your investments and you have to be right. And don´t buy crypto. Edited 10 hours ago by Charlie
pine Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Almost all the capital I have given my nine-year old is in Berkshire. For me it was the mixture of safety, maybe 9% growth and its being diversified. I am a lazy investor and also I didn't want tax activity.
boilermaker75 Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 4 hours ago, pine said: Almost all the capital I have given my nine-year old is in Berkshire. For me it was the mixture of safety, maybe 9% growth and its being diversified. I am a lazy investor and also I didn't want tax activity. I did the same for our daughter starting about 25 years ago. With apologies to the Chinese proverb about trees, The best time to buy BRK was 20 years ago and the second best time is today.
73 Reds Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 8 minutes ago, boilermaker75 said: I did the same for our daughter starting about 25 years ago. With apologies to the Chinese proverb about trees, The best time to buy BRK was 20 years ago and the second best time is today. Likewise. When my kids were growing up I'd buy them small amounts of several stocks each year, Berkshire always being among them. Happily, they still own all their shares.
Viking Posted 58 minutes ago Posted 58 minutes ago (edited) 17 minutes ago, 73 Reds said: Likewise. When my kids were growing up I'd buy them small amounts of several stocks each year, Berkshire always being among them. Happily, they still own all their shares. @boilermaker75 and @73 Reds and @pine, thanks for sharing. My three kids started down a similar path 4 years ago (early 20's). Today they each have almost 100 shares of Fairfax (they have all been aggressive buyers in recent months). The kicker is in Canada we have lots of tax free accounts (FHSA, TFSA, RRSP, RESP). And capital gains are taxed at a low rate (50% of the gain is tax free). What is better than a high CAGR over 20 years? A high CAGR that is tax free. In 20 years time, I think my kids will be very happy with the result. The set-up for young people in Canada to grow wealth with financial assets is amazing. Edited 53 minutes ago by Viking
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now