KEY POINTS
  • Around the time of Berkshire Hathaway's 1994 annual meeting, Warren Buffett discovered the company's stock had significant so-called stop-loss orders involving hundreds of shares. Buffett doesn't understand why investors use stop-loss orders.
  • It "has always struck me as like having a house that you like, and you're living in, and, you know, it's worth $100,000 and you tell your broker, 'You know, if anybody ever comes along and offers $90 [thousand], you want to sell it,'" Buffett joked.
  • The 88-year-old investor says he never tries to figure out where a stock is going to be in the next six months.
Warren Buffett

Many investors use a common way of trading, but not Warren Buffett. The "Oracle of Omaha" says it's too short-term focused and not based on his favored long-term, buy-and-hold method.

At his 1994 annual meeting, Buffett recalled a time when he was talking to Berkshire Hathaway's NYSE specialist, the late James Maguire. Maguire mentioned the company's stock has some "significant stop-loss orders on the books ... involving some hundreds of shares."