Tap to Trade in Gate Square, Win up to 50 GT & Merch!
Click the trading widget in Gate Square content, complete a transaction, and take home 50 GT, Position Experience Vouchers, or exclusive Spring Festival merchandise.
Click the registration link to join
https://www.gate.com/questionnaire/7401
Enter Gate Square daily and click any trading pair or trading card within the content to complete a transaction. The top 10 users by trading volume will win GT, Gate merchandise boxes, position experience vouchers, and more.
The top prize: 50 GT.
, Prologis owns over 1 billion square feet of logistics infrastructure: distribution centers, warehouses, and fulfillment facilities that have become indispensable to the global economy.
The critical insight here is straightforward: e-commerce expansion is not a temporary phenomenon that evaporates during market downturns. Companies like Amazon and FedEx must continue moving merchandise globally regardless of stock market volatility. While demand for new properties might contract during economic pressure, the long-term trajectory decisively favors expanded logistics volume. This secular trend means Prologis properties retain their value proposition even when investor sentiment darkens.
The Difference Between Business Decline and Stock Price Decline
I want to be explicit about an important distinction: holding these specific stocks through a crash reflects confidence in their underlying businesses, not a prediction that their stock prices will be immune to downward pressure. Both Berkshire Hathaway and Prologis would likely experience price declines during broad market stress. They might underperform less dramatically than the overall market, but they would not be untouched.
However, this distinction creates opportunity. If either of these stocks were to experience significant pullbacks during a market crash, I would view such weakness as an attractive buying opportunity rather than a warning sign to exit. This is the essence of contrarian investing: maintaining conviction in quality assets precisely when doubt becomes widespread.
Building a Sell Discipline Without Panic
Understanding when to sell stocks—and more importantly, when not to sell—requires separating rational analysis from emotional impulse. Sell when a business fundamentally deteriorates. Sell when valuation becomes absurdly detached from reality. But don’t sell simply because the market is declining and discomfort sets in.
The stocks discussed here represent companies with durable competitive advantages, consistent cash generation, and proven ability to navigate economic uncertainty. These characteristics don’t change because equity indices experience downward volatility. In fact, market corrections can create the rare moments when patient investors gain the most advantageous entry points for quality businesses.
The investment discipline worth developing is neither blind holding nor reactive selling—it’s the ability to maintain conviction in quality while remaining alert to genuine deterioration in business fundamentals.