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Compounding Discipline: One Rule Beats Ten Indicators

Compounding Discipline: One Rule Beats Ten Indicators

Every indicator you add creates another branch in your decision tree. More branches means more hesitation, more second-guessing, and more impulse trades.

The 200-week line simplifies that tree. It standardizes when you review a stock and when you ignore it.

The Real Cost of Complexity

A noisy workflow creates three hidden costs:

  • You spend more time interpreting charts.
  • You change your rules mid-cycle.
  • You cannot compare opportunities on the same basis.

A single weekly anchor fixes all three.

What to Do Instead

Build your workflow around one trigger:

  • Track quality companies.
  • Define a near-line threshold.
  • Run research only when a name enters the zone.
  • Predefine position sizing and invalidation rules.

This is the practical takeaway behind the widely cited Munger 200-week quote. The point is not to be clever. The point is to stay consistent.

Compounding Is a Process Outcome

Consistency compounds. Noise does not. If your process is stable, your decisions become easier to audit and improve.

Signals are informational only and not financial advice.

DISCIPLINE, AUTOMATED

Be early, not noisy.

Get a clean signal when price approaches the 200-week line. Stop checking charts every day.

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Signals are informational only. Not financial advice.