Showing posts with label Grace Groner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grace Groner. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 November 2025

The five lessons helped an amateur investor turn $180 into $7 million. Who knows where they might lead you?

  •  41% of the S&P 500's total return from 1926-2006 came from reinvested dividends. Without dividends, $10,000 grew to $1 million. With dividends reinvested, it grew to $24 million.

  • The Lesson: When you invest in dividend-paying stocks, always opt for DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Plans). Treat dividends not as income to spend, but as employees that go out to recruit more workers (shares) for your wealth-building army.

Compounding is not a linear process; it's exponential. The most dramatic gains occur in the later years.


Be like Grace

5 Lessons From an Unlikely Millionaire

By Selena Maranjian 

April 8, 2010 

Lake Forest College administrators knew their school would receive most of Grace Groner's estate when she passed on, but they probably didn't expect much. Groner, who died in January at the age of 100, lived in a small one-bedroom house. She'd been a secretary once, but retired long ago.

So the college must have been surprised to receive a whopping $7 million from Groner's estate. How did this modest woman amass such wealth?

1. Buy stocks

Groner's wealth began with $180, which she invested in three shares of her then-employer, Abbott Labs (NYSE: ABT).  

Stocks are tied to brick-and-mortar-and-flesh companies -- real businesses that can grow robustly for years to come. That's why companies such as IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) outperformed the market for so long. When companies increase their profit margins, revenue, and market share over time, their stock prices will likely rise as well.

Over the long haul, stocks have outperformed other investments by leaps and bounds. Check out what just $1 invested in various ways between 1802 and 2006 would have grown to:

Investment Real Return, in 204 Years

Dollar $0.06

Gold $1.95

T-bills $301

Bonds $1,083

Stocks $755,163

Data: Jeremy Siegel, Stocks for the Long Run.

2. Respect your circle of competence

It's not just enough to buy stocks, of course -- you've got to buy the right stocks. Every year, public companies go bankrupt, and the money invested in them vanishes.

Restricting yourself to companies you understand will go a long way toward protecting your investments. Ms. Groner may or may not have understood pharmaceutical science, but she knew the company she worked for.

That applies to hobbies as well as professions. If you're an inveterate shopper, you'll have a sense of whether Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) and Best Buy (NYSE: BBY) are doing well, and you'll likely be able to learn their business models. If you read computer magazines for fun, you probably have a decent handle on the prospects of computer-related companies.

That said, familiarity alone doesn't make a company a good buy. If it isn't turning a profit, can't pay down its debt, or simply demands too lofty a price for its shares, you're better off looking elsewhere.

3. Be patient

Groner bought her three shares of Abbott Labs in 1935. That gave her 75 years of compounded growth!

The power of compounding is critical to developing wealth. If you average just 8% returns annually for 75 years, that's enough to turn $5,000 into $1.6 million.

Odds are you don't have 75 years left in you -- but even shorter periods are still quite powerful. For most of us, 30 years is a more realistic time frame. Combining three decades of compounded growth with strong, flourishing companies can make quite a difference indeed.


Company  Time Span   Avg. Annual Growth   Would Turn $10,000 Into...

PepsiCo   30 years  17.0%    $1.1 million

ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM)   30 years  15.4%    $740,000

3M (NYSE: MMM)  30 years   12.7%    $357,000

Data: Yahoo! Finance. Average annual growth includes splits and dividends.


Of course, we're never guaranteed long-term growth from one company, but a nest egg diversified across a bunch of solid and growing companies will tend to do well over long periods.

Just remember that letting a winner keep winning for decades means resisting the urge to sell just because the market swoons. Sell if the company no longer seems promising; otherwise, hold on.

4. Don't be afraid to start small

Groner's gift also demonstrates the power of modest amounts of money. Remember, she began with an investment of just $180 in 1935. Adjusted for inflation, that's the equivalent of less than $3,000 in today's dollars -- still not a king's ransom.

In other words, every little bit helps. Small sums invested regularly can go a long way to making us wealthy.

5. Reinvest those dividends

Instead of taking the payouts from her Abbott shares, Groner used them to buy additional shares of stock, which then grew on their own, paying out their own dividends. Over 75 years -- or even 20 or 30 -- those ever-accumulating payouts can become quite powerful.

My colleague Rich Greifner has pointed out that between January 1926 and December 2006, 41% of the S&P 500's total return came from dividends, not price appreciation. Over that time span (just a little longer than Groner had), an investment of $10,000 would have grown to $1 million without dividends. But with dividends reinvested, it would have totaled $24 million. 

Be like Grace

The five lessons listed above helped an amateur investor turn $180 into $7 million. Who knows where they might lead you?



The story of Grace Groner is one of the most elegant and powerful testaments to the quiet, patient power of investing. It's not a story of genius, but of profound simplicity and discipline. Let's elaborate and extract the timeless lessons.

The Expansion: The Anatomy of a $7 Million Secret

Grace Groner's story is captivating precisely because of its modesty. The administrators at Lake Forest College knew a woman who lived humbly in a small, one-bedroom house. They had no idea she was a multimillionaire. The magic lies in how she transformed $180 into $7 million without a high-powered job, without complex trading strategies, and without any visible signs of wealth.

Her entire strategy can be visualized as a simple, five-step virtuous cycle that fueled its own growth for 75 years:























The visual above shows how these principles are not isolated steps, but interconnected forces that work together. Patience and reinvestment form the core engine that is fueled by a modest lifestyle and a simple, quality investment.


The Elaboration: Breaking Down the Five Principles

1. Buy Stocks (But Think Like a Business Owner)

  • The Action: Groner didn't "play the market." She bought a small piece of a real, thriving business she knew well—Abbott Labs, her employer.

  • The "Why": As the data shows, stocks are the greatest wealth-creating vehicle in history. A single dollar invested in stocks in 1802 would have grown to over $755,000 by 2006, dwarfing bonds, gold, and cash. Stocks represent ownership in enterprises that can grow, innovate, and profit for decades.

  • The Lesson: You aren't buying a ticker symbol; you are buying a share of a company's future profits. Adopt the mindset of a business owner, not a gambler.

2. Respect Your Circle of Competence

  • The Action: She invested in what she knew. As an Abbott Labs employee, she had a front-row seat to the company's culture, stability, and products.

  • The "Why": This principle, famously championed by Warren Buffett, protects you from fads and complex businesses you don't understand. It's easier to evaluate the long-term potential of a company whose business model is clear to you.

  • The Lesson: Your professional and personal life gives you expertise. A teacher might understand educational software, a mechanic might understand auto parts companies. Start your investment research within your own circle of knowledge.

3. Be Patient (The 75-Year Virtue)

  • The Action: Groner bought her three shares in 1935 and never sold them. She held through World War II, the Cold War, multiple recessions, and countless market crashes.

  • The "Why": Compounding is not a linear process; it's exponential. The most dramatic gains occur in the later years. The table in the article shows how $10,000 could grow over 30 years in great companies:

    • PepsiCo: $1.1 Million

    • ExxonMobil: $740,000

    • 3M: $357,000

  • The Lesson: The greatest barrier to wealth is not a lack of clever strategies, but a lack of patience. Time in the market is infinitely more important than timing the market. Sell a company if its fundamental promise is broken, not because the market is having a bad day.

4. Don't Be Afraid to Start Small

  • The Action: Her initial investment was just $180 (about $3,000 in today's dollars). She proved you don't need a fortune to start building one.

  • The "Why": Every great oak was once a tiny acorn. A small, disciplined start is far more powerful than a large, one-time investment that never happens because you're "waiting until you have enough money."

  • The Lesson: The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second-best time is now. Start with whatever you can, even if it feels insignificant. Consistency trumps size.

5. Reinvest Those Dividends (The Secret Engine)

  • The Action: This is perhaps the most critical lesson. Groner did not spend her dividend checks. She automatically used them to buy more shares of Abbott stock.

  • The "Why": This is the rocket fuel of compounding. Those new shares would then themselves pay dividends, which would buy even more shares. This creates a self-perpetuating, accelerating cycle of growth. The stunning statistic from the article bears repeating: 41% of the S&P 500's total return from 1926-2006 came from reinvested dividends. Without dividends, $10,000 grew to $1 million. With dividends reinvested, it grew to $24 million.

  • The Lesson: When you invest in dividend-paying stocks, always opt for DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Plans). Treat dividends not as income to spend, but as employees that go out to recruit more workers (shares) for your wealth-building army.


The Lessons We Can Learn: "Be Like Grace"

Grace Groner's life offers a philosophical blueprint for investing and living.

  1. Wealth is Often Invisible: True wealth isn't about flashy cars or big houses. It's about financial independence and security. Groner chose a life of simplicity, which allowed 100% of her investment returns to keep working for her. Her story frees us from the pressure of "lifestyle inflation."

  2. Simplicity is Sophisticated: In a world of complex financial products, day trading, and crypto-mania, Groner's strategy was breathtakingly simple: Buy a great company, reinvest the dividends, and hold forever. This is a strategy anyone can understand and implement.

  3. Your Legacy is Defined by Your Giving: Groner didn't hoard her wealth. She left it to her alma mater, transforming the lives of countless students. This mirrors the stories of Anne Scheiber and Warren Buffett. It teaches us that the ultimate purpose of wealth is not just personal security, but the ability to make a profound positive impact on the world.

Final Summary:

Grace Groner proved that you don't need a high income, expert knowledge, or luck to build extraordinary wealth. You need a simple, disciplined strategy applied with immense patience. Her $7 million was not the result of a single brilliant decision in 1935, but the result of a quiet, steadfast commitment to doing the right things—and, most importantly, not doing the wrong things like selling, speculating, or spending her dividends—for three-quarters of a century. Her legacy is a powerful reminder that the most reliable path to wealth is open to everyone.

Wednesday, 19 November 2025

Learning the stories of Some Successful Individual Investors.

 Learning the stories of Some Successful Individual Investors.

Section 4

This section shifts from theoretical principles to powerful, real-world proof. It presents a series of case studies—"mental models"—of successful investors from diverse backgrounds. The purpose is to make the abstract concepts of investing tangible by showing that success is achievable through a few consistent, disciplined habits, regardless of one's starting point or profession.

Each story highlights a different facet of the intelligent investing philosophy:

Section 4a: The Story of Anne Scheiber

  • Profile: A retired, low-income IRS auditor with a frugal lifestyle.

  • The Strategy & Key Lessons:

    1. Time in the Market: Scheiber started serious investing at age 51 and held her stocks for decades, proving it's never too late to start and that patience and consistency are everything.

    2. Focused Investing: Unlike conventional advice to over-diversify, she built immense wealth by concentrating a significant portion of her portfolio in a handful of high-quality companies she believed in, like Schering-Plough.

    3. Compound Growth: She religiously reinvested all her dividends, allowing her returns to generate their own returns, which created a snowball effect over 50 years.

    4. Hard Work & Diligence: She was an active owner, studying companies and attending shareholder meetings, embodying the "intelligent effort" of Graham's enterprising investor.

Section 4b: The Story of Uncle Chua

  • Profile: A barely literate elderly man who built a S$17 million portfolio.

  • The Strategy & Key Lessons:

    1. Simplicity Over Complexity: Uncle Chua knew nothing about complex market analysis or Teletext. His success came from a simple, unwavering strategy, not from sophisticated knowledge.

    2. Dividend Income Focus: His portfolio was constructed to generate a massive and growing stream of dividend income. This provided him with cash flow and demonstrated the power of owning high-quality, cash-generating businesses.

    3. Long-Term Business Ownership: He treated his stocks as ownership in real businesses and held them for the very long term, ignoring short-term market noise.

Section 4c: Warren Buffett – A Closet Dividend Investor

  • Profile: The world's most famous investor.

  • The Strategy & Key Lessons:

    1. The "Yield on Cost" Miracle: This story illustrates one of Buffett's greatest secrets. By buying wonderful companies (like Coca-Cola) at good prices and holding them forever, the dividend income he receives relative to his original cost becomes astronomically high (e.g., a 29% yield on cost for KO).

    2. Business-Like Investing: Buffett doesn't trade stocks; he buys businesses. He looks for companies with strong competitive advantages that generate excess cash flow, which is then returned to shareholders via dividends or reinvested for growth.

    3. Time is the Friend of the Wonderful Business: His quote emphasizes that for a truly great company, the passage of time dramatically increases the value of the original investment.

Section 4d: The Millionaire Tramp (Curt Degerman)

  • Profile: A Swedish tramp who collected cans and bottles for recycling.

  • The Strategy & Key Lessons:

    1. Financial Literacy is for Everyone: Degerman proved that investing acumen is not tied to wealth or social status. He educated himself by reading the financial pages in the public library.

    2. Frugality and Saving: His extreme frugality allowed him to save a high percentage of his meager income to invest.

    3. Astute Asset Allocation: Despite his circumstances, he understood advanced concepts, allocating his capital wisely between stocks (for growth) and gold (a safe-haven asset), and even using a Swiss bank account for tax efficiency.

Section 4e: Be like Grace (Grace Groner)

  • Profile: A retired secretary who lived a simple life in a one-bedroom house.

  • The Strategy & Key Lessons:

    1. The Power of Starting Small: Her fortune began with a single, small investment of $180 in 1935 in her employer, Abbott Labs. This demonstrates that you don't need a large capital base to start.

    2. Respect Your Circle of Competence: She invested in the company she knew and understood from working there.

    3. Ultra-Long-Term Patience: She held her shares for 75 years, allowing the power of compounding to work through multiple generations.

    4. Reinvesting Dividends: Like Scheiber, she reinvested all dividends, which was the primary engine of her wealth creation, turning a tiny seed into a mighty oak.


Summary of Section 4

Section 4 provides tangible proof of the intelligent investing philosophy through the inspiring stories of five successful individuals, demonstrating that wealth-building is accessible to anyone who applies key principles consistently.

The common threads that unite all these diverse stories are:

  • The Power of Compounding: Each story is a masterclass in letting returns generate further returns over a long period.

  • Long-Term Horizon: None of them were traders. They were long-term owners of businesses, holding their investments for decades.

  • Discipline and Patience: They stuck to their strategy through market ups and downs, never being swayed by short-term sentiment.

  • Focus on Quality: They invested in what they understood, often in high-quality companies with strong brands or market positions.

  • The Critical Role of Dividends: Reinvesting dividends was a fundamental wealth-building tool for most of them.

These stories demystify investing, showing that you don't need a finance degree, a large starting capital, or inside information. You need a sound philosophy, discipline, and time.

Wednesday, 4 March 2015

The Most Successful Dividend Investors of all time


The Most Successful Dividend Investors of all time


Dividend investing is as sexy as watching paint dry on the wall. Defining an entry criteria that selects quality dividend stocks with rising dividends over time and then patiently reinvesting these dividends while sitting on your hands is not exciting. While active traders have a plethora of hedge fund managers on the covers of Forbes magazine there are not many well-publicized successful dividend investors. Even value investing has its own superstars – Ben Graham and Warren Buffett.

I did some research and uncovered several successful dividend investors, whose stories provide reassurance that the traits of successful dividend investing I outlined in a previous post are indeed accurate.

The first investor is Anne Scheiber, who turned a $5,000 investment in 1944 into $22 million by the time of her death at the age of 101 in 1995. Anne Scheiber worked as an IRS auditor for 23 years, never earning more than $3150/year. The one important lesson she learned auditing tax returns was that the surest way to become rich in America is by accumulating stocks. She accumulated stocks in brand name companies she understood andthen reinvested dividends for decades. She never sold, in order to avoid paying taxes and commissions. She also never sold even during the 1972-1974 bear market as well as the 1987 market crash because she had high conviction in her stocks picks. She also held a diversified portfolio of almost 100 individual securities in brand names such as Coca-Cola (KO), PepsiCo (PEP), Bristol-Myers (BMY), Schering Plough (acquired by Pfizer in 2009). She read annual reports with the same inquisitive mind she audited tax returns during her tenure at the IRS and also attended annual shareholders meetings. Anne Scheiber did her own research on stocks, and was focusing her attention on strong franchises which have the opportunity to increase earnings and pay higher dividends over time.

In her later years she reinvested her dividends into tax free municipal bonds, which is why her portfolio had a 30% allocation to fixed income at the time of her death. At the time of her death, her portfolio was throwing off $750,000 in dividend and interest income annually. She donated her whole fortune to Yeshiva University, even though she never attended it herself.

The second investor is Grace Groner, who turned a small $180 investment in 1935 into $7 million by the time of her death in 2010. Ms Groner, who worked as a secretary at Abbott Laboratories for 43 years invested $180 in 3 shares of Abbott Laboratories (ABT) in 1935. She then simply reinvested the dividends for the next 75 years. She never sold, but just held on to her shares.


She was frugal, having grown up in the depression era, and was the classical millionaire next door type of person who was not interested in keeping up with the Joneses. Grace Groner left her entire fortune to her Alma Mater. Her $7 million donation is generating approximately $250,000 in annual dividend income. 


The reason why dividend investors are not highly publicized is because dividend investing is not sexy enough to be featured in the financial mainstream media. In addition to that, it is not profitable for Wall Street to sell you into the idea that ordinary investors can invest on their own. Compare this to mutual funds, annuities and other products which generate billions in commissions for Wall Street, despite the fact that they might not be in the best interest of small investors.

The third dividend investor is Warren Buffett, the Oracle of Omaha himself. In a previous article I have outlined the reasoning behind my belief that Buffett is a closet dividend investor. He explicitly noted in his 2009 letter that "the best businesses by far for owners continue to be those that have high returns on capital and that require little incremental investment to grow". His investment in See's Candy is the best example of that.

Some of Buffett's best companies/stock that he has owned such as Geico, Coca Cola , See's Candy are exactly the types of investments mentioned above. He has mentioned that at Berkshire he tries to stick with businesses whose profit picture for decades to come seems reasonably predictable. Per Buffett the best businesses by far for owners continue to be those that have high returns on capital and that require little incremental investment to grow. In addition, his 2011 letter discussed his dividend income from all of Berkshire Hathaway investments, including his prediction that Coca Cola dividends will keep on increasing, based on the pattern of historical dividend increases.

In this article I outlined three dividend investors, who managed to turn small investments into cash machines that generated large amounts of dividends. They were able to accomplish this through identifying quality dividend growth companies at attractive valuations, patiently reinvesting distributions and in two out of three cases maintaining a diversified portfolio of stocks. These are the lessons that all investors could profit from.






http://www.dividendgrowthinvestor.com/2012/06/most-successful-dividend-investors-of.html