When Value Investing Feels Broken: Graham and Buffett on Patience & Underperformance
Failed to add items
Add to cart failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
Written by:
About this listen
In this episode of Intelligent Investment Today, we explore one of the most frustrating experiences in investing: watching carefully chosen undervalued stocks underperform for months — or even years — while speculative assets surge.
Drawing on the teachings of Benjamin Graham, widely regarded as the father of value investing and mentor to Warren Buffett, we examine why value investing can feel ineffective in the short term — and why that discomfort may actually be part of the strategy’s long-term edge.
We revisit Graham’s timeless insights from The Intelligent Investor, including the famous “voting machine vs. weighing machine” analogy, and explore real-world case studies:
- Buffett’s early investment in GEICO
- Graham’s experience managing the Graham-Newman Partnership during the Great Depression
- The prolonged value investing slump following the 2008 Financial Crisis
Why do undervalued stocks sometimes keep falling?
Why does the market reward speculation over fundamentals?
And how can disciplined investors stay the course when value strategies lag behind growth stocks?
This episode breaks down the psychological challenges of value investing, the role of patience in long-term returns, and the critical difference between price and intrinsic value.
If you’re a long-term investor struggling with underperformance, market volatility, or doubts about your strategy, this episode will reinforce a timeless truth: value investing isn’t broken — but your patience might be tested.
Stay disciplined. Stay rational. And let the weighing machine do its work.
Support the show