[Event] Do You Believe in Long-Term Investing?

Warren Buffett once said:

“If you were given a punch card with only 20 holes for your entire investing life, each investment decision would use up one hole.” You’d probably think a lot harder before punching, right?

That’s the essence of long-term investing — being selective, patient, and focused on what you truly understand.

Most people chase the next hot stock. Buffett doesn’t. He simply buys great businesses — and holds them long enough to let compounding do the work.

How about you? Do you believe in long-term investing?

💬 How to Participate

Comment below and tell us:

  • Do you believe in long-term investing?

  • How many “punches” have you already used — and which stocks would you hold for years, no matter what happens? why?

📅 Event Duration

  • Nov 14 – Nov 21

# Buffett Farewell Letter: Is the Last Lesson Resonating With You?

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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  • koolgal
    ·11-14
    TOP
    🌟🌟🌟Do I believe in long term investing ?  Absolutely!  Because long term investing isn't just a strategy .  It is a philosophy.  A love letter to patience .  A punch card with only 20 holes as Warren Buffett once said .  Each punch must matter.  Each decision must not be taken lightly.

    I punched $DBS(D05.SI)$ not because it was trendy but because it ticks all the core fundamentals that I hold dear.

    I saw DBS as a fortress bank, a dividend machine and a symbol of Singapore's resilience .  I held through the cycles ,through the temptation to trade and today I am up 132 %.

    Long term investing is an emotional discipline .  It is watching my portfolio growing through the magic of compounding.

    @TigerEvents @TigerStars @TigerClub @Tiger_SG @CaptainTiger

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    • koolgalReplying toicycrystal
      Best of luck 🍀🍀🍀
      11-15
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    • koolgalReplying toicycrystal
      May you have a winning week ahead 🌈🌈🌈💰💰💰
      11-15
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    • koolgalReplying toicycrystal
      Happy weekend 🏖️🏖️🏖️
      11-15
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  • Shyon
    ·11-14
    TOP
    I absolutely believe in long-term investing. Buffett’s punch-card idea always reminds me that every decision should be intentional, not emotional. The fewer decisions I make, the more carefully I evaluate each one — and that mindset keeps me focused on sustainable growth instead of chasing short-term hype.

    If I had only 20 punches, I think I’ve used a handful so far on businesses I genuinely understand and believe in. Companies like Tesla and Palantir are part of that list — not because they’re “hot,” but because I see long-term potential in their technology, execution, and the markets they’re shaping. I’d hold them through volatility as long as their fundamentals and long-range trajectory stay intact.

    To me, long-term investing is about patience, conviction, and letting compounding do the heavy lifting. I’d rather own a few great companies for many years than constantly jump in and out of trades. Fewer punches — stronger conviction.

    @TigerEvents @Tiger_comments @TigerStars

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  • j islandfund
    ·11-15
    TOP
    I never gave enough thought to long term. trades here. my instant reaction was get in get out in a profit. but this whole time has taught me there's  no quick fixes. and the profits rarely cone when you need them ⭐🐯
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  • 1PC
    ·11-18
    Yes, I believe in long-term investing 🕰️📈! Buffett’s punch card wisdom hits hard — I’ve already used up mine as a rookie 😅. Can I get a new one please[Bless]? If I had to pick one stock to hold for years, it’s DBS 💼—strong fundamentals, steady dividends, and regional dominance. Long-term investing is about patience, conviction, and letting compounding do its magic ✨@JC888 @Barcode @Shyon @koolgal @Shernice軒嬣 2000 @Aqa @DiAngel
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  • Peter Soon
    ·11-15
    I believe in long term investing. I have been holding few Magnificent 7 companies since 2021. "Magni 7" companies like Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, Alphabet and Tesla, are all good fundamental company with huge market capitalization. They are stable and suitable for long term investing.
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  • Warren Buffet's advice is really spot on. And while it appears deceptively simple (and is indeed simple too), it is perhaps one of the more difficult ones to put into practice, especially when behavioral biases start playing their games. Therefore, prioritising "time in the market" over "timing the market," allows one to ride out short-term market volatility and benefit from the compounding effect of returns over time. This disciplined and patient strategy minimizes emotional decision-making that hampers returns.

    Reinvesting earnings to generate their own returns & exponential growth is a plus too. Going long term actually reduces the stress of investing - the amount of pressure investment decisions can give is incredible and if we can reduce it, is all the better: no wonder the "dead men's portfolio" tale is quite popular.

    I seriously believe in this approach though I am able to stick to such counters with only about 50% of portfolio: 3 Singapore banks, SingTel.

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  • TLim
    ·11-14
    Long-term investing only applies to good companies or simply just invest in low cost S&P500 ETF. Invest long-term in lousy companies will still produce crappy results.
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  • It's great to hear Warren Buffett says there are 20 chances. But if you only had one shot at success, like Doctor Strange facing Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War, what would you do? [Thinking]
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  • Frisbee
    ·11-20
    Yes, I do. Historical data shows that long-term investors tend to achieve stronger and more consistent returns compared to frequent short-term trading. @Shop @luv2trade
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  • deal2deal
    ·11-20
    Yes, I believe in long-term investing. While markets fluctuate, a long-term approach allows me to stay patient and benefit from overall market growth. @Frisbee @onlyYou
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  • AhGong
    ·11-20
    Yes, I believe in long-term investing because it aligns with my goal of building sustainable wealth and taking advantage of compounding over the years. @nickname168 @luv2trade
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  • Yes, I believe in long-term investing. It helps me stay focused on my financial goals without being overly affected by short-term market fluctuations. @Shop @AhGong
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  • onlyYou
    ·11-20
    Yes, I believe in long-term investing because it provides a more stable and disciplined approach to building wealth, allowing investments the time they need to compound and deliver sustainable returns. @Frisbee @deal2deal
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  • Aqa
    ·11-19
    I must have believed in long-term investing to be still standing tall after the CLOB clobbing, Asian Financial Crisis and the Subprime crash which led to severe economic recession. Long-term investing includes holding individual stocks, ETFs, or bonds for years to benefit from gradual appreciation and compounding. Key strategies include focusing on strong companies with good fundamentals, consistent earnings growth, a competitive advantage, and a history of paying good dividends. Use as many “punches” as we can with dollar cost averaging regularly to build a resilient portfolio including $Apple(AAPL)$, $American Express(AXP)$, $Bank of America(BAC)$, $Coca-Cola(KO)$ and $DBS(D05.SI)$. Thanks @TigerEvents @TigerStars @Tiger_SG @icycrystal @1PC Thanks for tag. Cheers!🥂
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    • Aqa
      @1PC Thanks for the invite! 🍺
      11-19
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  • zerolih
    ·11-18
    After trying out a few trades, I realized I’m more comfortable with long-term investing. DCA into solid companies or ETFs like VOO feels lower-risk and gives me peace of mind.
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  • Yes absolutely. I believe assent allocate into correct place and let the time to do the compounding work, it will keep generating cash. The longer the time, the higher the compound rate. So we should stay healthy , live longer and DCA to what we believe in
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  • peakaboo
    ·11-16
    Long term investment in the strong fundamental company is a sure win for your future freedom. Spend money on your freedom, buy your freedom, compound it and the more you spend the more time you have for your own. You can decide your life direction when you have the freedom.

    DCA is also a good strategy when combine with buying when discount. 😉

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  • Lanceljx
    ·11-15
    Long-term investing works only when the underlying business can survive shocks, keep generating cash, and stay relevant for decades. Time amplifies quality—but it also punishes weak companies—so “hold forever” applies only to firms with moats, discipline, and low existential risk.

    If I had a limited number of lifetime “punches,” I would reserve them for a few durable names:

    Berkshire Hathaway for its cash strength and crisis resilience.
    Microsoft for its irreplaceable software ecosystem.
    Alphabet for search, YouTube and its data moat.
    Amazon for AWS and its unmatched logistics.
    Visa/Mastercard for their global payment rails.
    Costco for a membership model that compounds steadily.
    Nvidia only with careful sizing, given its AI leadership but higher volatility.

    These are the types of companies I would hold for years through any cycle, because their business models age well rather than fade with trends.

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  • L.Lim
    ·11-15
    Long term investing and compounding should be the main form of investing for common users.
    Speculating the market, trying to cash in and out quickly, carries risks that most normal investors are not prepared for.
    If anything, expert insiders would have already cashed in before common users have the chance to enter the market.

    I invest in brands that I use or work with, and have a focus on dividend paying stocks. If their fundamentals are sound, I am willing to stick with them for the long haul. I have had maybe 6 "punches".

    I used to strongly believe in the us markets, but it is extremely concerning how their president behave so erratically. I am left wondering if the system will actually collapse by the end of his reign.

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  • Mrzorro
    ·11-15
    Of course, I believe in long-term investing! I believe every beautiful or successful thing takes time. For example bread, it just takes a few simple ingredients like water, flour, egg, yeast etc, what makes it beautiful and tasty is the proofing process ( which is time). Stick to the stock you believe and let's times work out for you. [Miser]
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