We ‘Can't Determine Whether We are Dealing With a Pet Rock or a Barbie’: Warren Buffett Warns Investors to Only Invest In Industries They Know

Bottom Line Up Front: Warren Buffett warns investors that keeping it simple is a critical part of seeing success when investing. Buffett says that even if he spent years studying some of the most critical technology sectors on the planet, he still wouldn’t be able to tell which are winners and losers. Rather, he says he sticks to what he knows, and that has helped him consistently produce astronomical returns over decades. 

The Details: Legendary investor Warren Buffett has long challenged the idea that risk can be reduced to neat equations. In Berkshire Hathaway’s (BRK.B) (BRK.A) 1993 shareholder letter, the then-CEO offered a clear critique of finance theory that relies heavily on volatility-based measures such as beta. Buffett wrote, “The theoretician bred on beta has no mechanism for differentiating the risk inherent in, say, a single-product toy company selling pet rocks or hula hoops from that of another toy company whose sole product is Monopoly or Barbie.” 

 

This simple analogy reflects the reality that pet rocks and hula hoops were short-lived trends, while Monopoly and Barbie have been winners for decades. What makes one a winner and the other a loser? Buffett isn’t really sure, but that’s why he doesn’t step out of his wheelhouse. Rather, he makes sure to invest in what he knows well. 

Further helping improve his rate of success is that he often does not rush into decisions, and actively tries to only make a few good decisions in a lifetime. Buffett explains this concept by saying, “In many industries, of course, Charlie and I can't determine whether we are dealing with a 'pet rock' or a 'Barbie’. We couldn't solve this problem, moreover, even if we were to spend years intensely studying those industries.” 

Buffett continues, “Did we foresee thirty years ago what would transpire in the television-manufacturing or computer industries? Of course not. (Nor did most of the investors and corporate managers who enthusiastically entered those industries.) Why, then, should Charlie and I now think we can predict the future of other rapidly-evolving businesses? We'll stick instead with the easy cases. Why search for a needle buried in a haystack when one is sitting in plain sight?”

The passage reflects a central tenet of Buffett’s investing philosophy: the true risk of owning a stock is not primarily the fluctuation of its price, but the durability of the underlying business. In Buffett’s framing, two companies can share the same industry label and even similar statistical profiles – yet one may be fragile and faddish, while the other possesses enduring brand strength, pricing power, and consumer loyalty. In other words, the nature of risk is more a reflection of quality than simple measures of numbers, data, and financial modeling. 

Buffett extends the point beyond critique and into a practical approach for everyday investors. He argues it is “quite possible for ordinary investors” to distinguish between a short-lived “pet rock” and a long-lived “Barbie” if they understand consumer behavior and what creates long-term competitive strength. That emphasis on fundamental understanding aligns with Berkshire’s broader method: buying businesses based on sustainable economics rather than market signals. In the same passage, Buffett acknowledges that mistakes are inevitable, but suggests they can be minimized by focusing only on a “relatively few, easy-to-understand cases,” where informed judgment can assess risks “with a useful degree of accuracy.”

The quote also explains something equally important: what Buffett and his late business partner, Charlie Munger, chose not to do. They openly admitted that in many industries they could not confidently determine whether a company’s future resembled the fleeting success of a fad or the staying power of a franchise. Buffett notes that even years of effort may not overcome either their own limitations or the structure of certain industries, pointing specifically to businesses shaped by rapid technological change. The conclusion is straightforward: they “stick instead with the easy cases,” preferring a clear opportunity over an uncertain search “for a needle buried in a haystack.” 

In practice, this means that instead of trying to find “the next Apple,” they would instead choose to invest in Apple (AAPL) itself, once they have proven they are THE Apple. Why risk wading through hundreds of soon-to-be-failures in hopes of getting your moonshot when you can invest in a drink that people have been buying for 100 years, or a leading phone maker that people buy every year?

This philosophy continues to resonate with modern markets. Investors regularly face periods where narratives, momentum, and statistical screens can dominate decision-making, particularly in fast-evolving sectors where forecasts are inherently unstable. Buffett’s message remains timely because it reframes risk as something rooted in economic reality: competitive advantage, customer behavior, and the predictability of long-term business outcomes. In an era where abundant data can create the illusion of precision, his 1993 argument underscores a durable principle: not every risk worth measuring can be captured by a model, and not every measurable metric captures what matters most.


On the date of publication, Caleb Naysmith did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.

 

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