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The Story of Anne Scheiber

November 24th, 2008 | 7 Comments | Posted in International, Investment Articles, Tutorials

In his book The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership, John Maxwell says that becoming a leader is a lot like investing successfully in the stock market. If you hope to make a fortune in a day, you won’t be successful. What matters most is what you do day by day over the long haul. This, he terms as The Law of Process.

Maxwell recounts the story of Anne Scheiber, an elderly and thrifty lady who lived in New York and worked for the Inland Revenue Service. When Scheiber retired at age fifty-one, she was only making $3,150 a year. She was treated poorly by her employer and was never promoted. Yet when Anne Scheiber died in 1995 at the age of 101, it was discovered that she left an estate to Yeshiva University worth US$22 million!

How did a public service worker with minimal salary accumulate such a staggering wealth? Here’s Maxwell’s take on it:

“By the time she retired from the IRS in 1943, Anne Scheiber had managed to save $5,000. She invested that money in stocks. By 1950 she had made enough profit to buy 1,000 shares of Schering-Plough Corporation stock, then valued at $10,000. And she held on to that stock, letting its value build. Today those original shares have split enough times to produce 128,000 shares, worth $7.5 million.

The secret to Scheiber’s success was that she spent most of her life building her worth… When she earned dividends – which kept getting larger and larger – she reinvested them. She spent her whole lifetime building…. When it came to finances, Scheiber understood and applied the Law of Process.”

The above story of Anne Scheiber was actually used by leadership guru Maxwell to illustrate an important leadership principle. But it can be equally applied to investing. I’m not sure if Maxwell got the facts right, but we can certainly learn a couple of important principles here:

1. Time in the Market
It is now how you start that is important. It is what you do day to day, and how you finish that counts. Sure it’s nice to time the market correctly but if you’re looking to make some serious bucks, time in the market counts.

Patience and consistency is everything!

2. Focused Investing
Most of Scheiber’s wealth was in a handful of stocks, the largest one being Schering-Plough. Like Warren Buffett, Scheiber is a Focused Investor. A Focused Investor puts meaningful amounts of money in a few things. Scheiber liked companies which are leading brands in their market.

Anne Scheiber's Portfolio

Anne Scheiber

Most of us will not have the experience of picking one company which will ride on a tsunami wave. If you had bought a piece of Microsoft or Berkshire Hathaway when they started business, you would have the same ecstasy… but how many companies are like that? What are your chances of picking such companies? Nevertheless it is not impossible… imagine if you had bought and held on to Public Bank since inception. Now isn’t it worth a little time and effort to research and identify the next Public Bank?

3. Compound Growth
Whether the stock went up or down, she never thought, I’m finished building; now it’s time to cash out. She was in for the long haul, the really long haul. We are told that Anne Scheiber reinvested all of her dividends. She didn’t say lets take out some money and buy the latest LV handbag.  In fact Anne Scheiber was frugal to the point of being miserable. She lived in a rent-controlled apartment, wore the same clothes year in year out, didn’t own a car and even went to shareholder meetings so she could take home bags of food.

Don’t get me wrong… I’m not saying you shouldn’t reward yourself once in a while. In fact I would say there is a thin line between extreme thrift and greed. If you are blessed with so much money, spend some of it, give it away or whatever. Not only will you bless others, you release yourself from the trappings of greed :)

“Keep your lives free from the love of money”
Hebrews 13:5 (NIV)

The important lesson here is to realize the power of regular investment and compound returns. When you invest in good things and you invest regularly, your wealth will eventually multiply.

Remember attending one of those Unit Trust presentation and the Agent puts up that Regular Investment & Compound Return chart? Then everyone’s jaw would drop because your RM100/month savings can turn into a six figure sum when you retire? Start early, invest and have the discipline to keep re-investing…

Anne Scheiber loved stocks for her whole life and it is likely that she started investing much earlier than 1943 (the time she retired). Although she met with limited success initially, she came out tops in the end.

4. Hard Work
Anne Scheiber worked on her investments. She studied the companies she invested in, attended shareholder meetings and asked many questions to satisfy her curiousity and passion. Hard work with laser-like focus usually pays off.

“Successful leaders are learners. And the learning process is ongoing, a result of self-discipline and perseverance. The goal each day must be to get a little better, to build on the previous day’s progress.”
John C. Maxwell

Replace the word leaders with investors. Makes sense, wouldn’t you agree?

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7 Responses to “The Story of Anne Scheiber”

  1. Lisa Says:

    hey, this is a great piece of article and having said that i believe she and warren buffet are the same type of people in a way…

    “She didn’t say lets take out some money and buy the latest LV handbag. ” <<– same way as Warren as well, he lives moderately and still stays at the small little house he stays since like …forever =D

  2. Neo Says:

    I wonder how small is Wareen Buffett’s small little house? It’s perhaps 5 times the size of mine and worth 20 times as much…

  3. banking88 Says:

    yes, the key is to invest for the long-term…your wealth would multiply with componding returns…now it’s a good time to enter the market using the dollar cost averaging method…

  4. larry Says:

    Thanks Lisa, yes I think u r right. Warren Buffett reputedly lives in the same house he bought in 1958 for $31,500. It is in Omaha Nebraska.

    Neo – your house is definitely more expensive than that, u must be richer than Warren Buffett :) BTW If you are aiming high, check out Larry Ellison (of Oracle) who has a house that cost more than US$100 million to build. It is a Japanese style imperial villa or palace rather.

    Banking88 – I agree with you absolutely. I am averaging down for sure, hoping that the market will drop further actually :) Go for stocks with clear cut earnings growth or good dividends. Avoid highly geared companies and those with more than 10x PE. Eg TMI.

  5. Neo Says:

    Shhhhh…. I wanna stay low profile.

  6. Lee Says:

    Wow, great. If she could make it, then we could all make it. We could easily reach our investment goal if we do it properly.

    You could share your posts at: ArticlePinger.com too. :)

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