Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Akre's massive success with American Tower, held since its 1998 IPO through multiple crashes, exemplifies how wealth is built by holding businesses with multi-decade runways and strong compounding characteristics, rather than by market timing.

Related Insights

Recognizing that top companies compound long after going public, Sequoia created the "Sequoia Capital Fund." Instead of distributing shares to LPs who often sell immediately, this vehicle holds positions in their best public companies. This strategy has generated an additional $6.7 billion in gains simply through patience.

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.

While Buffett's 22% annual returns are impressive, his fortune is primarily a result of starting at age 11 and continuing into his 90s. Had he followed a typical career timeline (age 25 to 65), his net worth would be millions, not billions, demonstrating that time is the most powerful force in compounding.

Success for a year or even five is common; success for decades is rare and contains unique lessons. Prioritize durability above all else by studying and speaking with people who have maintained high performance over extremely long periods. This provides a filter for timeless, compoundable wisdom.

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.

AMT's long-term incentive plan avoids common pitfalls by focusing 80% of its weighting on AFFO per share and average ROIC. This structure incentivizes management to prioritize profitable growth and capital efficiency, aligning their compensation directly with shareholder value creation.

Over 58 years, Warren Buffett made ~400 investment decisions, but only 12 truly mattered—a 4% hit rate. The crucial insight is not just buying right, but holding these few exceptional businesses for decades, allowing compounding to work its magic.

Extraordinary long-term investment returns often come from seemingly boring, overlooked companies. Eddie Elfenbein points to examples like Lancaster Colony (croutons) and Nathan's Famous (hot dogs), whose stocks have crushed the market over decades. This highlights the power of consistent, high-quality businesses that don't attract speculative hype.

Founders Fund's investment in SpaceX is cited as one of the best ever, largely because they held the position for over a decade. This contrasts with the common VC practice of distributing shares at IPO, demonstrating that true generational returns come from long-term conviction, not quick exits.

The dot-com bubble didn't create wealth in 1999; it destroyed it. Generational wealth came from buying and holding survivors like Amazon *after* its stock had fallen 95%. The winning strategy isn't timing the crash, but surviving it and holding quality assets through the long recovery.

Investor Chuck Akre's 28,000% Return on American Tower Shows Power of Long-Term Compounding | RiffOn