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Just noticed something interesting about how billionaires approach completely different things. Most treat cars like status symbols—constant upgrades, latest models, the whole flex. But Warren Buffett? He's basically treating car shopping like a chore to minimize, which honestly tells you a lot about how he thinks.
The man is 94 and still driving a 2014 Cadillac XTS. Not because he can't afford better. Because he's decided that spending half a day at a dealership negotiating is just... not worth it. Back in 2001, he laid it out perfectly: "It would take me half a day to buy a car, and that's just a half a day I don't want to give up." When he finally needed to replace his old one, he didn't even go himself—his daughter Susie handled it, went undercover as a regular customer, grabbed the XTS, done.
That was over a decade ago. He's still driving it. Puts maybe 3,500 miles on it annually.
Here's what gets me: this isn't about being cheap. It's about how he calculates value. A car is transportation. Safety, reliability, utility. Everything else is noise. Same exact framework he applies to investing—buy something solid, hold it, only sell when it genuinely makes sense. Don't chase every shiny thing that comes along.
Most people waste insane amounts of time hunting "upgrades" that don't actually improve their life. New car, new phone, new whatever. Meanwhile, time is literally the one resource you can't manufacture more of. Buffett gets that at a fundamental level.
Whether you're managing billions or just your own portfolio, the principle stays the same: focus on what actually matters, ignore the status games, and remember that time compounds faster than money ever will.