The ideal portfolio consists of high-quality businesses you can hold for years without constant monitoring. This strategy is best suited for managing "forgotten money"—capital that clients don't need short-term but cannot afford to lose, allowing for a truly long-term horizon.

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Some companies execute a 3-5 year plan and then revert to average returns. Others 'win by winning'—their success creates new opportunities and network effects, turning them into decade-long compounders that investors often sell too early.

The typical 'buy and hold forever' strategy is riskier than perceived because the median lifespan of a public company is just a decade. This high corporate mortality rate, driven by M&A and failure, underscores the need for investors to regularly reassess holdings rather than assume longevity.

Simply "thinking long-term" is not enough. A genuine long-term approach requires three aligned components: 1) a long-term perspective, 2) an investment structure (like an open-ended fund) that doesn't force short-term decisions, and 3) a clear understanding of what "long-term" means (10 years vs. 50 years).

Investors Nick Sleep and Kay Zakaria built their careers on holding just three core stocks for decades. Their lesson is to fight the impulse to trade winners after a quick gain. The greatest returns come from identifying exceptional businesses and practicing the 'active patience' required to hold them for multi-year periods.

To combat the urge for constant activity, which often harms returns, investor Stig Brodersen intentionally reviews his portfolio's performance only once a year. This forces a long-term perspective and prevents emotional, short-sighted trading based on market fluctuations.

The effort to consistently make small, correct short-term trades is immense and error-prone. A better strategy is focusing on finding a few exceptional businesses that compound value at high rates for years, effectively doing the hard work on your behalf.

To combat emotional decision-making, Eddie Elfenbein’s strategy mandates replacing exactly five of 25 stocks each year. This rigid structure forces patience and prevents impulsive trades, even when he feels tempted to sell a poorly performing stock. This system prioritizes long-term strategy over short-term reactions.

Buy businesses at a discount to create a margin of safety, but then hold them for their growth potential. Resist the urge to sell based on price targets, as this creates a "false sense of precision" and can cause you to miss out on compounding.

In a market dominated by short-term traders and passive indexers, companies crave long-duration shareholders. Firms that hold positions for 5-10 years and focus on long-term strategy gain a competitive edge through better access to management, as companies are incentivized to engage with stable partners over transient capital.

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.

The Best Investments Are 'Forgotten Stocks' Held with 'Forgotten Money' | RiffOn