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I've been thinking a lot about Charlie Munger's investment wisdom lately, especially after revisiting some of his old quotes about market timing and stock selection. The guy passed away last November at 99, but his influence on how we think about investing is still massive. What struck me most was this one line he shared with Buffett years ago: if you simply bought high-quality stocks whenever they pulled back to their 200 week moving average, you'd crush the S&P 500 over time. Sounds almost too simple, right? But that's the thing about great investing advice – it usually is.
I've actually been running this strategy in my own portfolio for years without even realizing I was following Munger's playbook. The core idea is dead simple: forget about chasing cheap stocks just because they look beaten down. Instead, focus on buying wonderful companies – the real industry leaders with fortress balance sheets – but only when the market gives you a gift and prices them at reasonable levels.
When you look at the chart patterns of elite companies, this 200 week moving average becomes almost like a gravitational pull. Take Apple. For over two decades, AAPL has respected this level like nothing else. The stock went from split-adjusted $2 all the way to $244, and even during the 2008 financial crisis panic, it held the line. That's the kind of institutional quality Munger was talking about – the stocks that big money gravitates toward.
Nvidia's story is even more dramatic. Back in 2022 when the tech sector was getting absolutely decimated and semiconductor stocks were toxic, NVDA crashed two-thirds from its highs. But here's where patience pays: when the stock finally retreated to that 200 week moving average in late 2022, it set up one of the most profitable entry points of the decade. Same thing happened with Microsoft – after years of consolidation, MSFT pulled back to its 200 week MA in late 2022 and then doubled from there. Even MicroStrategy, the Bitcoin proxy, gave an incredible signal when it crashed from $132 down to the $30s range and touched that moving average. Patience was rewarded when it eventually hit $540.
What I love about this approach is that it forces you to think like a contrarian. When everyone's panicking and sentiment is at rock bottom, that's often when the 200 week moving average becomes most powerful. It's not about predicting the future – it's about recognizing when quality assets are being unfairly punished.
Advanced Micro Devices is actually showing this setup right now. AMD's fundamentals remain solid despite the recent sentiment shift, and the stock is making a rare retreat toward its 200 week moving average. While everyone's obsessing over the DeepSeek headlines and what they might mean for AI spending, AMD continues to benefit from the broader AI infrastructure build-out. The price-to-book ratio just hit levels we haven't seen since 2023, when the stock went on to make a massive run higher.
The real lesson from Munger and Buffett isn't that technical analysis is everything – it's that combining quality stock selection with patience and discipline beats almost any other approach. You don't need to be a balance sheet wizard to profit from this. Just focus on the industry leaders, wait for the inevitable pullbacks, and let the 200 week moving average do the heavy lifting. That's the kind of timeless wisdom that still works in 2026.