--- title: "Some basic lessons for new investors to live by: 1/ Ignore the crowd. You make money by going again" description: "Some basic lessons for new investors to live by: 1/ Ignore the crowd. You make money by going against the consensus.2/ Always pick stocks where you feel you have a research edge.3/ You rarely go wron" type: "topic" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/topics/100000000427818.md" published_at: "2026-01-27T15:51:44.000Z" author: "[Gary Black Tracker](https://longbridge.com/en/profiles/17077344)" --- # Some basic lessons for new investors to live by: 1/ Ignore the crowd. You make money by going again Some basic lessons for new investors to live by: 1/ Ignore the crowd. You make money by going against the consensus. 2/ Always pick stocks where you feel you have a research edge. 3/ You rarely go wrong investing in the company with the best product. 4/ Don’t listen to management. They are paid to be bullish. 5/ Study competitors, suppliers, and customer behavior. Be a product junkie. 6/ Have in your mind what you think a stock is worth, which is different from price. 7/ Be able to articulate in one sentence why you own a stock. 8/ Develop specific downside scenarios that would cause you to sell the stock. 9/ The highest quality of growth is unit growth, then pricing, then margin expansion, then cash reinvestment. 10/ Be wary of companies that grow by buying other companies. 11/ Sell discipline is selling a stock once it exceeds your price target, or if your investment thesis changes. 12/ Short stocks that have bad businesses, and not because they trade at high P/Es. 13/ Two big value creators are brand extension and TAM expansion stories. 14/ High P/Es are a function of high future growth rates, and not the industry. 15/ When investing in growth stocks always look for a controversy (“fight”). 16/ Buy stocks that can leverage key secular megatrends, and avoid those that will be hurt by them. 17/ Always consider cannibalization of existing products when sizing up new product opportunities. 18/ Be wary of “hockey stick” sales forecasts absent new products or expansion to new distribution channels. 19/ Stock buybacks are accretive if the E/P ratio exceeds the after tax cost of debt or return on cash. 20/ Price cuts rarely add value since they often create a race to the bottom. 21/ Stocks are cheap if price is less than the present value of future cash flows. A high P/E does not make a stock expensive. --- > **Disclaimer**: This article is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice.