Based on Lin Qi (林奇), 雪球投资:像滚雪球一样积累财富 (Snowball Investing: Accumulating Wealth Like a Rolling Snowball)
Lin Qi's Snowball Investing takes its name from Warren Buffett's famous metaphor: "Life is like a snowball. All you need is wet snow and a really long hill." The wet snow represents quality investments with good returns. The long hill represents time. The snowball itself is your wealth, growing larger as it rolls, picking up more snow with each revolution.
This book adapts the snowball compounding philosophy specifically for Chinese investors operating in the A-share market. While the intellectual roots are firmly in the Buffett-Munger tradition, the practical application addresses the unique challenges and opportunities of the Chinese investment landscape.
Lin Qi writes from the perspective of a practitioner who has successfully applied Western value investing principles in the Chinese market over an extended period. He is part of a growing community of Chinese value investors who have proven that long-term fundamental investing works in A-shares, despite the market's reputation for speculation and volatility.
The central argument is that wealth creation through investing is not about finding the next hot stock, timing the market, or trading cleverly. It is about finding high-quality businesses that compound economic value at above-average rates, buying them at reasonable prices, and holding them long enough for compounding to work its extraordinary mathematics.
THE SNOWBALL EQUATION:
Wealth = Principal × (1 + Return Rate) ^ Time
The three variables:
1. Principal — How much you invest (save more)
2. Return Rate — How well you invest (select quality)
3. Time — How long you invest (be patient)
Most investors focus on Return Rate (stock picking).
The most powerful variable is actually Time.
Example:
¥100,000 at 20% for 10 years = ¥619,174
¥100,000 at 20% for 20 years = ¥3,833,760
¥100,000 at 20% for 30 years = ¥23,737,631
The second decade produced 5x more than the first.
The third decade produced 6x more than the second.
Compounding is back-loaded — patience is everything.
"Wet snow" in investing means:
Not all returns are equal. A company earning 20% ROE that can reinvest most of its earnings at the same rate is far more valuable than a company earning 20% ROE that must pay out most of its earnings because it has no growth opportunities.
The "long hill" means:
COMPOUNDING VISUALIZATION — ¥1,000,000 at 18% ANNUAL RETURN:
Year 0: ¥1,000,000
Year 5: ¥2,287,758 (+¥1.3M in 5 years)
Year 10: ¥5,233,836 (+¥2.9M in next 5 years)
Year 15: ¥11,973,748 (+¥6.7M in next 5 years)
Year 20: ¥27,393,035 (+¥15.4M in next 5 years)
Year 25: ¥62,668,627 (+¥35.3M in next 5 years)
Year 30: ¥143,370,638 (+¥80.7M in next 5 years)
Each 5-year period adds MORE than all previous periods combined.
This is the snowball effect — and it requires patience to realize.
Lin Qi identifies the primary reasons Chinese investors fail to capture compounding returns:
Lin Qi provides a systematic framework for identifying companies that can compound wealth:
QUALITY COMPANY CHECKLIST:
BUSINESS MODEL (商业模式):
□ Easy to understand — can you explain it to a child?
□ Repeat purchase — customers buy again and again
□ Pricing power — can raise prices without losing customers
□ Low capital requirements — generates more cash than it consumes
□ Network effects or switching costs — harder for competitors to displace
□ Growing addressable market — the "long hill"
FINANCIAL CHARACTERISTICS (财务特征):
□ ROE consistently > 15% over 5-10 years
□ Gross margins > 30% (and stable or expanding)
□ Revenue growth > 10% CAGR over 5 years
□ Free cash flow positive and growing
□ Debt-to-equity < 0.5 (or net cash)
□ Cash conversion ratio > 90% (earnings backed by real cash)
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE (竞争优势):
□ Clear market leader (#1 or #2 in its segment)
□ Brand advantage that takes years to replicate
□ Cost advantage through scale or proprietary process
□ Regulatory or license barrier protecting the business
□ Distribution network that is difficult to duplicate
MANAGEMENT QUALITY (管理层品质):
□ Track record of rational capital allocation
□ Significant personal ownership (skin in the game)
□ Transparent communication with investors
□ History of delivering on promises
□ Reasonable compensation relative to company performance
Lin Qi borrows from Buffett but adapts for the Chinese context:
THREE CIRCLES — ALL MUST OVERLAP:
Circle 1: COMPANIES YOU CAN UNDERSTAND
↓ Limits your universe to perhaps 50-100 companies
↓ This is your "circle of competence"
Circle 2: COMPANIES WITH DURABLE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES
↓ Further narrows to perhaps 15-30 companies
↓ These are the "quality" filter
Circle 3: COMPANIES AVAILABLE AT REASONABLE PRICES
↓ At any given time, perhaps 3-8 companies
↓ This is the "valuation" filter
INTERSECTION = YOUR PORTFOLIO CANDIDATES
Usually 3-8 companies at any given time
Sometimes zero — and that's okay (hold cash)
Lin Qi identifies the types of moats most common in China:
Brand Moats: Particularly strong in consumer categories — baijiu (Moutai, Wuliangye), condiments (Haitian), dairy (Yili), home appliances (Midea, Gree). Chinese consumers are increasingly brand-conscious as incomes rise.
Scale Moats: Manufacturing companies that have achieved cost advantages through massive scale — home appliance manufacturers, certain technology hardware companies.
License/Regulatory Moats: Companies with government-granted operating licenses — banks, insurance companies, certain pharmaceutical companies. Powerful but carry policy risk.
Network Effect Moats: Internet platforms — Tencent (WeChat ecosystem), Alibaba (e-commerce ecosystem). Extremely strong but face regulatory uncertainty.
Switching Cost Moats: Enterprise software, certain financial services, healthcare equipment with embedded consumables.
Lin Qi emphasizes that even the best company is a bad investment at the wrong price. The price you pay is the single factor entirely within your control — you cannot control the company's future earnings, the economy, or market sentiment. You can control whether or not you buy at a given price.
METHOD 1: DISCOUNTED CASH FLOW (现金流折现)
Intrinsic Value = Sum of [FCF_t / (1 + r)^t] for t = 1 to infinity
Practical simplification:
Estimate FCF for next 10 years
Apply terminal growth rate (3-5% for China)
Discount at 10-12% (required return)
Best for: Stable, predictable businesses with strong cash generation
METHOD 2: EARNINGS POWER VALUE (盈利能力价值)
EPV = Normalized Earnings / Required Return
Example: Company earns ¥5 per share normalized
Required return: 10%
EPV = ¥5 / 0.10 = ¥50
Best for: Mature companies with stable earnings
METHOD 3: PE-BASED VALUATION (市盈率法)
Fair Value = Normalized EPS × Fair P/E Multiple
Fair P/E guidelines for A-shares:
Consumer staples (strong brands): 20-25x
Healthcare (growing): 25-30x
Financial (banks): 6-8x
Financial (insurance): 10-15x
Technology (profitable): 20-35x (growth-dependent)
Utilities: 12-15x
Best for: Quick estimation and relative comparison
METHOD 4: PEG-BASED VALUATION
PEG = P/E / Earnings Growth Rate
PEG < 0.8: Significantly undervalued (strong buy zone)
PEG 0.8-1.2: Fairly valued
PEG > 1.5: Potentially overvalued
PEG > 2.0: Significantly overvalued (consider selling)
Lin Qi requires a minimum 25% margin of safety before purchasing:
MARGIN OF SAFETY APPLICATION:
Step 1: Estimate intrinsic value using multiple methods
DCF value: ¥80
EPV: ¥75
PE-based fair value: ¥85
Average: ¥80
Step 2: Apply margin of safety
Minimum 25%: Buy below ¥60
Ideal 30-40%: Buy below ¥48-56
Step 3: Set price alerts and WAIT
Most of the time, the stock will not be at your target price.
Patience is the cost of margin of safety.
"宁可错过,不可买贵" (Better to miss than to overpay)
Lin Qi makes one important exception: for truly exceptional businesses with decades of growth ahead, being approximately right on valuation is more important than being precisely cheap. Waiting for a perfect entry price on a company like Moutai or Tencent might mean never owning it. A 10% premium to fair value on a company that compounds at 20% for 15 years is irrelevant in the final accounting.
Lin Qi argues that finding good companies is relatively easy — dozens of books and courses teach fundamental analysis. Buying at reasonable prices is harder but achievable with patience. The truly difficult part — the part that separates successful investors from unsuccessful ones — is holding through years of volatility, doubt, and temptation.
ENEMY 1: FEAR (恐惧)
Trigger: Stock drops 20-30%
Instinct: "I need to sell before it goes lower"
Correct response: Check the thesis. If intact, hold or add.
ENEMY 2: GREED (贪婪)
Trigger: Stock doubles in price
Instinct: "I should take profits before it falls"
Correct response: Check the valuation. If still reasonable, hold.
ENEMY 3: BOREDOM (无聊)
Trigger: Stock goes sideways for 12+ months
Instinct: "Nothing is happening, I should find something more exciting"
Correct response: The business is still compounding. Be patient.
ENEMY 4: ENVY (嫉妒)
Trigger: Other investors are making quick money in hot stocks
Instinct: "I'm missing out, I should switch strategies"
Correct response: Remember that most of those gains will be temporary.
ENEMY 5: OVERCONFIDENCE (过度自信)
Trigger: Several successful investments in a row
Instinct: "I'm great at this, I should trade more actively"
Correct response: Your success came from patience, not trading skill.
Lin Qi recommends thinking of stock ownership as business ownership:
"If you owned 100% of a restaurant that was growing its profits at 15% per year, would you sell it because the real estate market went down? Would you sell it because a competitor opened across the street? Would you sell it because someone offered you 1.5x what you paid for it? Of course not. You would hold it and collect the growing profits. Owning stocks should feel the same way."
Despite the emphasis on holding, Lin Qi provides clear sell criteria:
PORTFOLIO ARCHITECTURE:
CORE HOLDINGS (核心持仓): 60-70% of portfolio
- 3-5 highest-conviction, highest-quality businesses
- Hold for 5-10+ years minimum
- These are your "forever" stocks (unless thesis breaks)
- Individual positions: 12-20% each
GROWTH HOLDINGS (成长持仓): 20-30% of portfolio
- 3-5 younger/smaller companies with high growth potential
- Higher expected return but also higher risk
- Willing to hold 3-5 years to see the thesis play out
- Individual positions: 5-10% each
CASH RESERVE (现金储备): 5-15% of portfolio
- Opportunity fund for market panics
- Also serves as psychological buffer
- Held in money market funds or short-term bonds
TOTAL POSITIONS: 6-10 stocks maximum
Lin Qi recommends sector diversification as a risk management tool, while maintaining concentration at the individual stock level:
SECTOR ALLOCATION GUIDELINES:
Maximum in any single sector: 40%
Minimum number of sectors: 3
Preferred sectors for core holdings:
- Consumer (baijiu, condiments, dairy, household goods)
- Healthcare (proprietary drugs, medical devices)
- Financial services (insurance, select banks)
- Technology (profitable platforms with network effects)
Avoid for core holdings:
- Heavy industry / commodity chemicals
- Real estate development
- Companies dependent on government subsidies
- Sectors facing structural headwinds
Lin Qi does NOT recommend mechanical rebalancing (selling winners to buy losers). Instead, he suggests:
Lin Qi argues that the A-share market offers unique advantages for value investors:
Advantages:
Challenges:
A-SHARE MARKET CYCLE FRAMEWORK:
DEPRESSION (底部区域): Market P/E < 12
- Maximum allocation to equities (90-95% invested)
- Buy aggressively across all quality holdings
- This is where 20x returns begin
- Historical examples: Late 2008, late 2018, parts of 2022
RECOVERY (恢复期): Market P/E 12-18
- Maintain full positions
- Selectively add to best ideas
- Begin building watchlist for future opportunities
GROWTH (成长期): Market P/E 18-25
- Hold existing positions
- Stop adding new money to equities
- Begin accumulating cash from dividends and new savings
EUPHORIA (泡沫期): Market P/E > 25
- Consider trimming overvalued positions (NOT selling everything)
- Increase cash to 20-30%
- Absolutely do NOT buy anything new
- Prepare shopping list for the inevitable correction
IMPORTANT: These are guidelines, not precise triggers.
Market P/E can go to 40+ or below 8 at extremes.
Never try to call exact tops or bottoms.
Lin Qi discusses the opportunity in companies dual-listed on both the A-share market (Shanghai/Shenzhen) and the Hong Kong market (H-shares). Historically, H-shares trade at significant discounts to their A-share counterparts due to different investor bases. Value investors can exploit this by buying the cheaper listing.
Lin Qi repeatedly returns to the concept of thinking like a business owner rather than a stock trader. A business owner:
Most people think linearly. Compounding is exponential. Lin Qi uses multiple analogies to help readers internalize exponential thinking:
Value investing is fundamentally an exercise in delayed gratification. You sacrifice the excitement of daily trading for the wealth of long-term compounding. You sacrifice the social proof of following popular stocks for the independent judgment of owning undervalued ones.
Chinese retail investors are particularly susceptible to narrative-driven investing — buying stocks based on exciting stories about new technology, government support, or industry transformation. Lin Qi warns that most story stocks eventually disappoint because the stories are priced in (or overly optimistic) before the fundamentals catch up.
Some Chinese investors speculate on ST (Special Treatment) stocks — companies facing delisting risk — hoping for a backdoor listing or restructuring that will send the stock price soaring. Lin Qi categorically warns against this.
A-share IPOs have historically been priced artificially low due to regulatory caps on offering prices, making them extremely popular. But the subsequent trading often pushes prices far above intrinsic value. Buying IPOs at inflated secondary market prices is a common source of losses.
While Lin Qi does not dismiss technical analysis entirely, he argues that relying solely on charts and patterns — without understanding the underlying business — is a reliable path to losses in the long run.
Many Chinese investors simply copy the portfolios of famous fund managers or investment gurus. Lin Qi warns that without understanding WHY these investors own a stock, you will not have the conviction to hold through drawdowns, and you will inevitably buy and sell at the wrong times.
Lin Qi describes the archetype of the ideal A-share investment: a consumer brand leader that compounds earnings at 15-25% annually for a decade or more.
CONSUMER COMPOUNDER PROFILE:
Industry: Branded consumer products
Market position: #1 or #2 with dominant market share
Gross margins: 60%+ (indicating pricing power)
ROE: 25%+ consistently over 10 years
Revenue growth: 15-20% CAGR
Earnings growth: 18-25% CAGR
Capital requirements: Low (minimal reinvestment needed)
Cash generation: Strong, growing free cash flow
Dividend policy: 30-50% payout, remainder reinvested
Investment result (hypothetical 10-year hold):
Buy at 25x earnings (¥25 per ¥1 of earnings)
Earnings grow at 20% for 10 years (¥1 → ¥6.19)
Sell at 25x earnings (¥155)
Total return: 520% (6.2x, ~20% CAGR)
If dividends are reinvested: ~25% CAGR → ~9.3x
The "snowball" at work: same valuation, compounding earnings.
Lin Qi contrasts the consumer compounder with a common mistake: buying a struggling company at a seemingly cheap price.
TURNAROUND MISTAKE PROFILE:
Industry: Cyclical manufacturing
Market position: #5 in a crowded industry
Gross margins: 15% and declining
ROE: 8% in good years, negative in bad years
Revenue growth: Flat
Debt: Rising steadily
Stock price: "Cheap" at 8x earnings
What happens:
Year 1: Earnings decline 20% → Stock drops 30%
Year 2: Earnings decline further → Stock drops another 25%
Year 3: Company raises capital (diluting shareholders) → Stock drops 15%
Year 5: Company still struggling, stock is 60% below purchase price
"Cheap" was actually expensive because the low price
reflected accurately the company's poor prospects.
Lin Qi describes the risk of policy-dependent investments:
A company in a policy-supported industry looks excellent: strong growth, government subsidies boosting margins, favorable regulatory environment. Then policy changes. Subsidies are cut, regulations tighten, and the entire industry faces restructuring. The lesson: policy can be a tailwind, but if the business cannot survive without it, the investment is fragile.
STEP 1: BUILD YOUR CIRCLE OF COMPETENCE
Study 3-5 industries deeply
Understand how companies in these industries make money
Read annual reports, industry analyses, company histories
Timeline: 6-12 months of preparation before investing
STEP 2: IDENTIFY QUALITY COMPANIES
Apply the quality checklist (Section 3)
Narrow to 15-20 companies worthy of deep analysis
Build a "virtual portfolio" and track for 6+ months
Timeline: Ongoing
STEP 3: WAIT FOR VALUATION OPPORTUNITIES
Calculate intrinsic value for each watchlist company
Set price alerts for margin-of-safety entry points
Be prepared to wait months or years for the right price
Timeline: Patience-dependent
STEP 4: BUILD POSITIONS GRADUALLY
Start with a 5% position
Add as conviction grows and price allows
Build to full 15-20% position over weeks to months
Timeline: 1-6 months per position
STEP 5: HOLD AND COMPOUND
Monitor business fundamentals (not stock prices)
Reinvest dividends
Add from new savings when valuation is attractive
Timeline: Years to decades
STEP 6: SELL RARELY
Only for the five valid reasons (Section 5.4)
Never sell based on price movements alone
Never sell because of macro fears
Timeline: Average holding period 5-10+ years
"投资就像滚雪球——你需要的是湿的雪和足够长的坡。在中国市场,优质公司就是湿雪,耐心就是长坡。" (Investing is like rolling a snowball — you need wet snow and a long hill. In the Chinese market, quality companies are the wet snow, and patience is the long hill.)
"复利是世界第八大奇迹。理解它的人赚取它,不理解的人为它付出代价。" (Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. Those who understand it earn it; those who don't pay for it.)
"选股如选伴侣——宁缺毋滥。一个好的选择胜过一百个凑合的选择。" (Choosing stocks is like choosing a partner — better to be alone than to settle. One good choice is worth more than a hundred mediocre ones.)
"在A股市场,最稀缺的不是好公司,而是拿着好公司不动的能力。" (In the A-share market, the scarcest thing is not good companies, but the ability to hold good companies without acting.)
"市盈率是你为一元利润支付的价格。价格太高,任何好东西都是坏投资。" (The P/E ratio is the price you pay for one yuan of profit. When the price is too high, even the best thing becomes a bad investment.)
"不要因为一只股票涨了就觉得自己英明,也不要因为它跌了就觉得自己愚蠢。重要的是企业价值是否在增长。" (Don't think you're smart because a stock went up, or stupid because it went down. What matters is whether the business value is growing.)
"我的投资收益中,80%来自于20%的决策——那些我下了重注并长期持有的决策。" (80% of my investment returns came from 20% of my decisions — the ones where I bet big and held for the long term.)
"现金不是废物,现金是期权——在市场恐慌时以低价买入优质资产的权利。" (Cash is not waste; cash is an option — the right to buy quality assets at low prices during market panics.)
"永远不要借钱投资。杠杆是复利的敌人——它可以在你需要时间的时候迫使你卖出。" (Never borrow money to invest. Leverage is the enemy of compounding — it can force you to sell precisely when you need time.)
"最好的投资是那些你买了之后可以忘记十年的投资。如果你买了之后需要天天看,那不是投资,是焦虑。" (The best investments are those you can forget about for ten years after buying. If you need to check every day, that is not investing — it is anxiety.)
Snowball Investing provides Chinese investors with a practical, adapted framework for long-term wealth building. Lin Qi's contribution is translating the Buffett-Munger compounding philosophy into specific strategies for the A-share market — identifying Chinese quality companies, navigating the market's extreme volatility cycles, and developing the emotional discipline to let the snowball grow. The message is ultimately simple: find wet snow, find a long hill, and start rolling.