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Author Morgan Housel simplifies his finances with basic index funds. He argues that lifetime investment success depends more on longevity than on annual returns. Being a passive, average investor for 50 years will likely place you in the top 1% due to compounding and avoiding costly mistakes.

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Howard Marks highlights a pension fund that, by never ranking above the 27th or below the 47th percentile annually, achieved 4th percentile performance over 14 years. This mathematical paradox demonstrates that avoiding major losses is more powerful for long-term compounding than chasing huge, inconsistent wins.

Drawing from Sun Tzu and Charlie Munger, the key to long-term investment success is not brilliance in stock picking, but systematically avoiding common causes of failure. By identifying and steering clear of ruinous risks like excessive debt, leverage, and options, an investor is already in a superior position.

Trying to beat the market by active trading is a losing game against professionals with vast resources. A simple, automated strategy of consistently investing in diversified ETFs or index funds mitigates risk and leverages long-term market growth without emotional decision-making.

Superior long-term returns come from consistency, not chasing top rankings each year. A pension fund that never ranked above the 27th percentile in any single year ended up in the top 4% overall after 14 years. The key is to avoid big losses and let steady compounding win over time.

High-excitement investments like day trading are often a form of gambling that leads to financial loss. True, sustainable wealth is built through a deliberately boring strategy, such as consistent, long-term investments in broad-market index funds.

Data over the last decade shows that 97% of professional stock pickers, despite their resources, fail to beat a basic market index. Ambitious individuals often fall into the trap of thinking they're the exception. The most reliable path to market wealth is patient, consistent investing in low-cost index funds.

Buffett's legendary wealth isn't just from being a smart investor, but from being a good investor for 80 years. The vast majority (99%) of his net worth was accumulated after age 60, highlighting the insane power of long-term compounding.

The stock market is like a casino rigged for savvy players. Instead of trying to beat them at individual games (stock picking), the average investor should "bet on the game itself" by consistently investing in broad market index funds. This long-term strategy of owning the whole "casino" effectively guarantees a win.

While institutional money managers operate on an average six-month timeframe, individual investors can gain a significant advantage by adopting a minimum three-year outlook. This long-term perspective allows one to endure volatility that forces short-term players to sell, capturing the full compounding potential of great companies.

The secret to top-tier long-term results is not achieving the highest returns in any single year. Instead, it's about achieving average returns that can be sustained for an exceptionally long time. This "strategic mediocrity" allows compounding to work its magic, outperforming more volatile strategies over decades.