Warren Buffett Said ‘Bad News Is an Investor’s Best Friend’ and If You’re Not Ready for Stocks to Drop 50%, You Shouldn’t Be Investing

Warren Buffett Said 'Bad News Is an Investor's Best Friend' and If You're Not Ready for Stocks to Drop 50%, You Shouldn't Be Investing
Warren Buffett Said ‘Bad News Is an Investor’s Best Friend’ and If You’re Not Ready for Stocks to Drop 50%, You Shouldn’t Be Investing

The stock market is taking a beating—again. The Nasdaq just hit its lowest level since 2020, the S&P 500 is deep in the red, and investors are scrambling. Recession fears, inflation worries, and policy uncertainty have Wall Street on edge.

But Warren Buffett? He’s been here before. And if history is any guide, he’d tell you that now is not the time to panic—it’s the time to pay attention.

Buffett has spent decades reminding investors that bad news is often their best opportunity. During the depths of the 2008 financial crisis, he penned a New York Times op-ed titled “Buy American. I Am.” The market was tanking, fear was at an all-time high, and yet Buffett was buying.

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Why? Because, as he put it, “bad news is an investor’s best friend.” Economic downturns bring stock prices down, giving long-term investors the chance to buy great companies at a discount. The trick isn’t predicting what the market will do next—it’s understanding the difference between price and value.

Buffett has always dismissed the idea of timing the market. “Will stocks decline in the coming days, weeks, and months? This is the wrong question to ask… primarily because it is entirely unanswerable,” he said. What really matters is whether stocks are selling for less than they’re worth.

And he’s been right. The S&P 500 kept dropping after his 2008 op-ed, losing another 26% before finally turning around in March 2009. But those who listened to Buffett and bought during the chaos ended up reaping massive gains in the years that followed.

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Buffett has a simple rule: “Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful.” That lesson has held true in every major market crash, from the Great Depression to 2008 to COVID-19.

At Berkshire Hathaway’s (NASDAQ:BRK, BRK.B)) 2020 shareholder meeting, Buffett compared fear to the virus itself: “Some people are more subject to fear than others.” He argued that some investors “really shouldn’t own stocks” because they panic when prices drop and sell at exactly the wrong time.

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