You don’t need a Bloomberg terminal, trading desk, or six-figure fund manager to build serious wealth. You need a handful of rules: the same ones Warren Buffett has been writing about for sixty years, and the ones that have outperformed nearly everyone who tried something cleverer. Each rule below is anchored to a specific moment, number, or outcome.
Rule 1: Doing Nothing Beat a Hundred Hedge-Fund Professionals
In 2008, Buffett bet $1 million that a Vanguard S&P 500 index fund would beat five hand-picked fund-of-funds over ten years. By 2017, the result was decisive: the index returned 125.8% (8.5% annualized); the hedge-fund average returned 36.3% (3.0% annualized). More than a hundred professionals produced less than a third of what sitting still delivered. If you want to understand why passive index funds keep winning, that bet is your answer.
Rule 2: A 50% Loss Requires a 100% Gain Just to Break Even
Losses don’t offset symmetrically. A 30% drop needs a 43% gain to recover; a 50% drop needs 100%; a 60% drop needs 150%. This is the math behind Buffett’s Rule #1 (never lose money) and Rule #2 (never forget Rule #1). Investors who sell in fear at the bottom rarely catch back up. Those who stand still almost always do.
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Rule 3: Buffett’s Own Widow Is Getting an Index Fund
His estate directive: 90% in a low-cost S&P 500 index fund, 10% in short-term government bonds. No private placements, no sector rotation, no celebrity managers. When the most famous stock-picker in history tells his own family to stop picking stocks, that’s worth pausing on. Here’s the case for holding an index fund for decades.
Rule 4: Every Dollar in Fees Is a Dollar That Never Compounds
Buffett’s “Gotrocks parable” describes a family that collectively owns every US corporation until brokers, managers, and consultants convince them to trade with one another for a fee each time. Their total wealth falls by exactly what the “Helpers” take. Buffett called this his fourth law of motion: for investors as a whole, returns decrease as motion increases. Over 40 years, even a modest annual fee quietly transfers a meaningful share of retirement wealth to someone else.
Rule 5: Berkshire’s Own Stock Dropped 59%. Leverage Would Have Wiped You Out.
From 1973 to 1975, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK.B | BRK-B Price Prediction) shares fell 59%. An investor on 2-to-1 margin would have been force-liquidated near the bottom, missing the substantial recovery that followed. A fixed-rate, non-callable mortgage on a home is survivable debt. A broker who can sell your securities the moment the market panics is not.
Rule 6: Only Buy What You Can Explain in Plain Language
Buffett avoided tech for decades because he couldn’t predict 20-year dominance. He bought Apple only after reframing it as a consumer-products company with an unbreakable ecosystem and customers who refuse to switch. Read more on how that Apple reframe played out. If you can’t describe a business’s moat in a sentence a friend would understand, you don’t own a thesis, you own a story.
Rule 7: You Only Need Twenty Great Decisions in a Lifetime
Buffett’s “punch card” thought experiment asks you to imagine only 20 investment decisions for your entire life. Most investors fail because they feel the need to have an opinion on every company and act on every trend. A small number of high-conviction decisions held for decades builds serious wealth. The market transfers money from the active to the patient.
Rule 8: Cash Isn’t Trash. It’s Oxygen.
In late 2025, Berkshire Hathaway held roughly $373 billion in cash. That’s not timidity, it’s optionality. When credit markets seize and forced sellers appear, a buyer with cash acquires quality assets at salvage prices. Why Buffett hoards cash is worth understanding before you dismiss it. For individuals, the translation is simple: build a real emergency fund before investing a dollar. An investor forced to liquidate at a market low to cover a surprise bill doesn’t get to wait the market out.
None of these rules require talent, insider access, or a trading edge. They require the rarer skill of sitting still while the industry around you insists you should be doing something. That’s the whole game.