The Mistakes Every Investor Makes | Warren Buffett
In 1964, Warren Buffett made a decision in five seconds of anger that he would later estimate cost him $200 billion in lost compounding. Sixty years later, with over $100 billion to his name, he still lives in the same house he bought in 1958 for $31,500. He buys a $3 breakfast at McDonald's every morning. He used a $20 flip phone until 2020. What looks like eccentricity is actually mathematics. This video extracts five practical financial principles from Warren Buffett's actual decisions — the textile mill that nearly cost him everything, the candy company that reshaped his entire philosophy, the dot-com bubble he refused to participate in — and translates each one into a specific action you can apply to your own money this week. Not motivation. Not folksy wisdom. The actual operating system of the world's most successful investor. ⚠ DISCLAIMER EDUCATIONAL CHANNEL: Independent analysis and commentary. Not affiliated with or endorsed by Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway, or any companies referenced. NARRATIVE FORMAT: Stories are dramatized for educational storytelling. Quotes and dialogue may be paraphrased from public sources for clarity. NO ADVICE: Content is for education and entertainment only. Nothing on this channel is financial, legal, or investment advice. Keywords: warren buffett advice warren buffett investing how to turn 100 into 1000 turn 100 into millions investing small money warren buffett investing philosophy value investing strategy long term investing wealth building strategy investing mindset warren buffett daily routine for investing warren buffett investing habits warren buffett long term investing strategy #warrenbuffett #wealthbuilding #personalfinance #financialfreedom #moneyhabits #wealthmindset #financialeducation #middclasstrap #selfimprovement #money
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