Close Menu
Finsider

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Warren Buffett Explains Why Risk Is Key to Smart Investing and Not Your Enemy

    February 28, 2026

    The ’80s Electronics Nobody Wanted That Now Sell For Serious Cash

    February 28, 2026

    Diageo: 5 reasons why a FTSE 100 turnaround is still possible

    February 28, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Warren Buffett Explains Why Risk Is Key to Smart Investing and Not Your Enemy
    • The ’80s Electronics Nobody Wanted That Now Sell For Serious Cash
    • Diageo: 5 reasons why a FTSE 100 turnaround is still possible
    • India disrupts access to popular developer platform Supabase with blocking order
    • Own a home? The One Big Beautiful Bill might give you new tax deductions.
    • How Do Your Student Loan Balances Compare to the Average 25-34 Year Old Today?
    • Anthropic refuses Pentagon’s new terms, standing firm on lethal autonomous weapons and mass surveillance
    • Dow Dives 521 Points as Goldman, AmEx Slide: Stock Market Today
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    Finsider
    • Markets & Ecomony
    • Tech & Innovation
    • Money & Wealth
    • Business & Startups
    • Visa & Residency
    Finsider
    Home»Money & Wealth»Warren Buffett Explains Why Risk Is Key to Smart Investing and Not Your Enemy
    Money & Wealth

    Warren Buffett Explains Why Risk Is Key to Smart Investing and Not Your Enemy

    FinsiderBy FinsiderFebruary 28, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Warren Buffett on His Biggest Investing Mistakes and the Strategies He Uses to Overcome Them
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Key Takeaways

    • For Warren Buffett, market volatility can often be an opportunity to grab some value.
    • Buffett treats market dips like sales events, but only on businesses he truly understands.
    • A bigger risk than market moves is often emotions like fear and panic.

    Market volatility tends to stress out investors. A down day for the Dow can induce anxiety, and a sudden market rally can entice amateur investors to chase stocks they don’t really understand. However, for Buffett—the legendary investor whose name has become almost synonymous with both discipline and long-term investing—market swings are not to be feared, but to be used, as long as you know what you’re doing.

    “Look at market fluctuations as your friend rather than your enemy; profit from folly rather than participate in it,” Buffett has said.

    The logic of this statement becomes clear when you consider investor psychology. While many reflexively shy away when prices fall, Buffett leans in. He has spent his career capitalizing on what he often calls “folly”—when the market as a whole seems to get the value of an underlying business wrong. Buying such “mispriced” companies, as Buffett sees it, has been his strategy for the best long-term investments.

    Why Buffett Doesn’t Run From Volatility

    The reason Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK.A, BRK.B) has been free to act aggressively during times of market stress is rooted in Buffett’s definition of risk. For Buffett, volatility doesn’t necessarily make a company riskier. However, it may just make it cheaper—at least temporarily. If the underlying business is durable, predictable, and well-managed, a lower price tag can be a stroke of luck.

    But to have a shot at capitalizing on volatility, you first need to understand what you are buying. Buffett has said this clearly:  “Risk comes from not knowing what you are doing.”

    In his view, the primary investment risk stems from a lack of understanding of what one is doing. Buying something you don’t fully understand is a recipe for folly. This may be a company with a fragile balance sheet or a momentum stock with no obvious path to earnings. It could also be in a market sector that is new and faddish or for which you don’t have the experience or knowledge to analyze correctly.

    This is why Buffett says to limit your investing to your “circle of competence”—businesses and industries you can confidently assess. When you understand how a company generates revenue, why customers value it, and what gives it a competitive edge, short-term price fluctuations matter less. Information and knowledge are your protection.

    Tip

    A lower price tag doesn’t mean a company is more of a risk. It might just mean a better deal on a business you already know and trust.

    The Other Volatility: Emotional Reactions

    While smart investing means you should always do your due diligence and research, one factor remains more unpredictable: human behavior. Fear, greed, impatience, herd mentality, and other natural emotions drive markets almost as much as earnings reports and interest rates do. Buffett’s investing philosophy is one that counters reactive behavior: an investor’s temperament can matter more than their technical know-how.

    Treating volatility as an opportunity can thus help keep you from making emotional decisions. By accepting market noise as inevitable and recognizing that it often creates value, you can keep an even keel when others might panic.

    How To Apply Buffett’s Wisdom

    You don’t need to be Warren Buffett to put his approach to volatility into practice. His advice works at almost any scale:

    • Buy quality companies at a discount during downturns.
    • Think like an owner. Stocks are not lottery tickets. 
    • Be patient and wait for quality businesses to become available at attractive prices.
    • Only invest in what you can understand. 
    • Look for volatility to provide you with better entry points, not panic signals.

    In short, Buffett’s approach encourages investors to change their mental model around risk and volatility. Market movements on their own are not always a problem. It’s not knowing what you are doing that is the main issue. Once you substitute understanding for fear, the market is a far less intimidating place.

    Buffett Enemy Explains investing Key Risk smart Warren
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleThe ’80s Electronics Nobody Wanted That Now Sell For Serious Cash
    Finsider
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Money & Wealth

    Diageo: 5 reasons why a FTSE 100 turnaround is still possible

    February 28, 2026
    Money & Wealth

    How Do Your Student Loan Balances Compare to the Average 25-34 Year Old Today?

    February 28, 2026
    Money & Wealth

    Dow Dives 521 Points as Goldman, AmEx Slide: Stock Market Today

    February 28, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Warren Buffett Explains Why Risk Is Key to Smart Investing and Not Your Enemy

    February 28, 2026

    Cursor snaps up enterprise startup Koala in challenge to GitHub Copilot

    July 18, 2025

    What is Mistral AI? Everything to know about the OpenAI competitor

    July 18, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Using Gen AI for Early-Stage Market Research

    July 18, 2025

    Cursor snaps up enterprise startup Koala in challenge to GitHub Copilot

    July 18, 2025

    What is Mistral AI? Everything to know about the OpenAI competitor

    July 18, 2025
    news

    Warren Buffett Explains Why Risk Is Key to Smart Investing and Not Your Enemy

    February 28, 2026

    The ’80s Electronics Nobody Wanted That Now Sell For Serious Cash

    February 28, 2026

    Diageo: 5 reasons why a FTSE 100 turnaround is still possible

    February 28, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2020 - 2026 The Finsider . Powered by LINC GLOBAL Inc.
    • Contact us
    • Guest Post Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.