When ‘Long-Term Investing’ Becomes Dangerous
Long-term investing and value investing are related, but they are not the same thing. Long-term investing is simply about holding assets for many years, while value investing is a specific way of choosing which businesses to hold for the long term. A long horizon by itself does not make an investment safe. If you overpay for a weak or misunderstood business, holding it for 10–20 years can actually compound your mistakes.
Value investing starts with the idea of intrinsic value: what a business is truly worth based on the cash it can generate over time, not just where its stock price happens to trade today. A value investor wants to buy only when the price is below that intrinsic value, ideally with a margin of safety. Long-term holding then gives time for that value to show up, either through earnings growth, dividends, or the market eventually recognizing the company’s worth.
If you don’t understand the business model, its economics, and its risks, “just holding for the long term” is closer to blind faith than a strategy. Warren Buffett’s advice to never invest in a business you cannot understand is really a warning against this kind of long-term speculation. Long-term investing plus deep business understanding can be powerful; long-term investing without that understanding can be very dangerous, because time works against you in a deteriorating or overvalued business.
