We’ve just been re-reading Peter Lynch’s classic book – One Up On Wall Street. In it, Lynch provides 27 timeless investing lessons. Here’s an excerpt from the book:

Sometime in the next month, year, or three years, the market will decline sharply Market declines are great opportunities to buy stocks in companies you like. Corrections—Wall Street’s definition of going down a lot—push outstanding companies to bargain prices Trying to predict the direction of the market over one year, or even two years, is impossible To come out ahead you don’t have to be right all the time, or even a majority of the time The biggest winners are surprises to me, and takeovers are even more surprising. It takes years, not months, to produce big results Different categories of stocks have different risks and rewards You can make serious money by compounding a series of 20–30 percent gains in stalwarts Stock prices often move in opposite directions from the fundamentals but long term, the direction and sustainability of profits will prevail Just because a company is doing poorly doesn’t mean it can’t do worse Just because the price goes up doesn’t mean you’re right Just because the price goes down doesn’t mean you’re wrong Stalwarts with heavy institutional ownership and lots of Wall Street coverage that have outperformed the market and are overpriced are due for a rest or a decline Buying a company with mediocre prospects just because the stock is cheap is a losing technique Selling an outstanding fast grower because its stock seems slightly overpriced is a losing technique Companies don’t grow for no reason, nor do fast growers stay that way forever You don’t lose anything by not owning a successful stock, even if it’s a tenbagger A stock does not know that you own it Don’t become so attached to a winner that complacency sets in and you stop monitoring the story If a stock goes to zero, you lose just as much money whether you bought it at $50, $25, $5, or $2—everything you invested By careful pruning and rotation based on fundamentals, you can improve your results When stocks are out of line with reality and better alternatives exist, sell them and switch into something else When favorable cards turn up, add to your bet, and vice versa You won’t improve results by pulling out the flowers and watering the weeds If you don’t think you can beat the market, then buy a mutual fund and save yourself a lot of extra work and money There is always something to worry about Keep an open mind to new ideas You don’t have to “kiss all the girls.” I’ve missed my share of tenbaggers and it hasn’t kept me from beating the market

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