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Just been thinking about why so many successful investors obsess over compound interest. Buffett calls it the 8th wonder of the world, and honestly, once you really get it, you can't unsee how powerful it is.
The concept is deceptively simple - your money earns returns, then those returns earn returns, and it just keeps rolling. Buffett uses this snowball metaphor perfectly: imagine a snowball rolling down a hill, picking up more snow as it goes. That's exactly how wealth compounds over decades.
What strikes me most is that compound interest doesn't care about your starting point. You don't need to be born rich. Buffett bought his first stock at 11, but the real power isn't about starting young - it's about starting at all. Anyone can build serious wealth if they're willing to let time do the heavy lifting.
The 8th wonder of the world isn't some secret formula. It's just consistency + patience. Most people want quick wins, but Buffett's approach is the opposite. He holds positions for 20-30 years because he knows the longer the money compounds, the more insane the growth becomes. Berkshire's portfolio proves this works.
Here's what most people miss: compound interest does the work for you. Once you invest, it keeps growing without needing constant intervention. Set it up right, and the snowball keeps rolling on its own.
The gap between people who understand this and people who don't is the gap between building generational wealth and staying stuck. It's not luck, it's not timing the market - it's just letting time and consistency compound your advantage. That's why Buffett keeps coming back to this principle. It actually works.