Talking Billions with Bogumil Baranowski

Richard Oldfield: Simple But Not Easy — What It Really Takes to Invest Well

Feb 23, 2026
Richard Oldfield, founder of Oldfield Partners and author with four decades in finance, shares his market origin story and hard-won lessons. He talks Warburg’s ethos, surviving Black Monday, and the family office freedom to be unconventional. He explores why investing is simple in theory but hard in practice, how to judge managers beyond track records, and preparing for deep market declines.
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ANECDOTE

Black Monday Tree Metaphor Teaches Distance

  • Richard Oldfield returned from holiday to the 1987 storm and Black Monday, seeing fallen trees as a metaphor for price moves versus reality.
  • Back in the office he was swept into market gloom and learned to avoid the crowd and wholesale asset-allocation swings.
INSIGHT

Simplicity Of Fundamentals Versus Execution

  • Investing fundamentals are simple: companies have revenues, costs, profits and balance sheets, but professionals obscure this with jargon and self-interest.
  • The hard part is execution because most managers underperform after fees and costs, so patience and process matter.
ADVICE

Choose Passive If You Lack Patience

  • If you can't commit to the patience required for active management, go passive.
  • Active strategies require sticking through painful underperformance or they will fail the investor's time horizon.
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