@GSpier@BeckyQuick Guy, you are truly amazing and I have learned so much from you. I owe you a huge debt of gratitude 🙏 and I’m so thankful I read your book and followed you closely ever since. Your passion for what is right and just is inspiring. Lots of love. Andrew
@MohnishPabrai@GSpier@BeckyQuick I had tears watching this wonderful interview. I’ve learned so much from you guys and Becky. I can’t thank you enough for what you have done for me over the years. Love to all of you. Andrew
Investing is like planting a fruit tree.
In the early years, there is nothing to show for your effort. You prepare the soil, choose the right tree, water it, protect it from pests and storms, and wait. There is no fruit.
The work is minimal, the output is abundant, and the results feel inevitable in hindsight. What once required patience now delivers freedom.
Most people never reach this stage because they keep pulling the tree out of the ground to see if it’s growing.
Last week Apple CEO and Nike board member Tim Cook bought $3m worth of Nike. Today it was announced Nike CEO Elliot Hill bought $1m worth. Directors and executives sell shares for all sorts of reasons, but they only buy them for one reason.
is one of the most powerful wealth-building decisions an investor can make.
Dividends are not a bonus. Reinvested they are the backbone of long-term wealth creation.
What You Do With Dividends Matters!
One of the most underestimated drivers of long-term wealth creation is dividends — and more importantly, what you choose to do with them.
If you continually spend your dividend income rather than reinvesting it,
compounding loop is what quietly separates average outcomes from extraordinary ones.
Spending dividends too early may feel rewarding in the short term, but reinvesting them — particularly during your accumulation years —