Buffett Backs Buying Beaten-Down Stocks, Citing 27% Gap at 3i Group
Updated
Updated · twelfthmagpie.com · May 25
Buffett Backs Buying Beaten-Down Stocks, Citing 27% Gap at 3i Group
6 articles · Updated · twelfthmagpie.com · May 25
Warren Buffett’s core advice in the latest commentary is that investors should welcome lower stock prices when they are still net buyers, rather than panic when markets fall.
That logic hinges on fundamentals: a cheaper share price is attractive only if the business remains sound, not if the drop reflects lasting competitive or regulatory damage.
3i Group is offered as a live example after its shares slid on slowing growth at Action, its top holding, creating what the article says is a 27% discount to net asset value.
The piece argues that gap has prompted a £750 million buyback and leaves investors with a 4.2% forward dividend yield, while the rest of 3i’s portfolio is still performing well.
The broader takeaway is classic Buffett: treat market sell-offs like storewide discounts and judge whether quality assets are temporarily marked down rather than permanently impaired.
Is 3i Group a true bargain or just a high-stakes bet on one company's risky American dream?
Why do we love a sale on coffee but panic when our favorite quality stocks go on sale?
Can European retailer Action survive its invasion of a US market already saturated by dollar store giants?