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ASM 2010 Part 2
May 1, 2010
And I think, therefore, we go to 13, which is in a separate room. And is there anybody at the microphone? 13?
Yes, there is.
Okay.
Hello, Mr. Buckner and Mr. Munger. I'm Nikita Titsa, shareholder from New York. One could argue that a major contributor to the great bubble was that there wasn't a healthy and open debate, that all the opinion and all of the money was on one side of the trade.
And I was thinking about this recently as I read, Christine Richards' new book, Confidence Game, about Bill Ackman and, his battle with what was once the largest bond insurer, MBIA. And the story also reminded me of David Einhorn and the questions he raised about Allied Capital and Lehman Brothers. We now know that they were 100% correct, but at the time that they first spoke up, they were attacked by the companies, pilloried by the media, ignored by the accountants of those firms and the ratings agencies and perhaps most alarmingly were investigated by the SEC for daring to go public with their bearish analysis. That watching what happened to them, it's a real deterrent to anyone else speaking up and raising similar questions. So I'd be curious for your thoughts on this.
And is having short sellers speak out healthy for our markets? And in general, what should be done to encourage a greater diversity of opinions so that we can avoid future bubbles? Thank you.
Yeah. Well, I, I don't see anything wrong with people who are positive or negative speaking out as long as they're willing to be held responsible for the kind of statements they make. I mean, there are obviously, well, take the extreme example. If there were 2 banks in town and I own one of them and I was of kind of a devious type of mind, I might go out and hire 50 people to stand in line in front of the other bank. And I would probably not have a competitor before long.
So you can do things on either side, the long side or the short side that I would regard as certainly unethical and in many cases should be illegal. But anytime you attack the conventional wisdom, you're going to meet with a lot of opposition because you're threatening people's positions. When we would talk about the efficient market theory 30 years ago when it was absolutely derogator virtually every finance department in the country, major schools, you either had to swear allegiance to it or you were not going to be promoted. People don't like that. And any institution, when they get a threat from the outside, they will attack both the threat and the threatener.
But that exists on both sides. I have no problem with short selling and I have no problem with speaking out responsibly about your reasons for doing so any more than I have on the long side. There have been some very bad practices on the short side and there have been some very bad practices on the long side in terms of people trying to to, will re spread things that are untrue. But that there's probably been more on the long side over the years than on the short side by some margin. Charlie?
Yeah. I think to some extent you're criticizing the wrong people. In many cases, the accountants that allowed the lousy accounting are the ones that ought to be held in the dock And, they get very little criticism in America and that's a mistake.
Becky?
This question comes from Ben So who lives in the Metro Vancouver area in British Columbia, Canada. This is for either mister Buffet or mister Munger. He wants to know about synergies of Berkshire. Specifically, does it make sense that the Dairy Queen stores here sell PepsiCo products and would not expect accept American Express, only Mastercard or Visa?
There are around the world, there are pretty close to 6,000 Dairy Queen outlets of one sort or another. And some are called grill and chill now and different things, but roughly 6,000. And company operated are 70 of those. So the 90 almost 99% are franchise. And at Dairy Queen, we do not control what the franchisees do.
Most of the franchisees, last time I checked sometime back, but most of the franchisees serve Coke, the enlightened ones. But the but it is entirely their business. I mean, they can serve Coca Cola products or Pepsi. It seems some of the other franchise operations seem to have more control over that than Dairy Queen. But if you think about it, Dairy Queen goes back before McDonald's, before Wendy's, before Burger King, before Kentucky Fried, all of those.
It goes way back into the 30s. And a lot of the agreements with franchisees or territorial operators were done on the back of a napkin or something of the sort. So to some extent, we have less control over what franchisees do and particularly in certain few parts of the country than other people. But we'll keep asking for Coke and maybe you can cause them to see the light. The synergies any synergies at Berkshire come about at the operational level pretty much?
We do not tell our companies to do business with each other. We hope they do business with each other and we hope that each side of us, a subsidiary A offers good reasons for subsidiary B to do business with them. But the whole idea at Berkshire is that our managers are responsible for their businesses and if they're going to be responsible for their businesses, it means we shouldn't tell them what to do except in very limited ways. Charlie?
Well, you've accurately described the way it is. What's interesting about it is we really like it that way.
It's a lot less work. And I think actually that there's some merit. Sometimes people work better together if it's their decision to work together than if you tell them to work together.
It goes beyond that. Warren and I would like it that way if we were in the subsidiaries. There's no doubt about that.
Yes. We'd probably leave if it wasn't that way. Okay. Area 1. Dear Mr.
Buffet, dear Mr. Munger, my name is Stephen Roman. I'm a student of Engineering Machinbaum at the University of Vienna in Austria. If I one day want to apply as a manager with 1 of the Berkshire Companies, what qualities are you especially looking for? And what do I have to do to become your successor?
Probably should me. The managers of our subsidiaries hire their own people. The number of decisions I have to make about managers are really, really few. As I mentioned earlier, they do send me a letter that if something happens to them, gives me their ideas about who should succeed them. But I make no decisions about who gets hired at GEICO or Burlington or Mid America or anything of the sort.
I mean, if they need a CFO, they go out and hire a CFO. If they need somebody to run a plant, they go out and hire them themselves. They are responsible for their operations. And occasionally, we have a death. We have occasional, very occasional, I can't even hardly think of one resignation.
And at that point, I have to make a decision about who should be put in charge of the operation. But I don't I don't think I've had more than 10 or 12 of those in 45 years. So, it's I'm not a very good employment agency. We have 21 people, I think it is at headquarters and I made a terrific hire here a few months ago. But that will take care of me for 4 or 5 years.
Charlie?
Yeah. There's no indication we'd be particularly good at it either.
Wasn't going to mention that. But I would say this, if you want what is interesting to me is that when you find somebody outstanding, boy, do they jump out. I mean, somebody that is thinking about the place the right way, is working extra hard, whatever it may be, there aren't you don't have that much competition in this world. So in terms of generally advancing within organizations, I think you'd be surprised that how little competition you really have if you start thinking like you would if you were an owner of the place and working like you would if you were an owner of the place and pretty soon you may be running something. Andrew?
This question comes from Tomer Mallon from Tel Aviv, Israel. And he has clearly been a long time shareholder because he references your 1984 Chairman letter. He says, he writes, you have previously stated that a company should retain its earnings only if quote for every dollar retained, at least $1 of market value will be created for owners unquote. You also noted that if such conditions will no longer apply to Berkshire as measured on the basis of a 5 year rolling average, then, quote, we will distribute all unrestricted earnings that we believe cannot be effectively used. However, during the 5 year period between July 3rd, I'm sorry, January 3, 2005 and December 31, 2009, the average annual earnings per share for Class A as reported amounted to $5,930 while at the same period the average annual change in the shares market price was only $2,420 Consequently, are you considering a distribution of a dividend or buying back shares?
I imagine I know the answer, but I thought we had to ask.
Well, he does know the answer, but we'll elaborate. The I did write that not only in 1984 but continuously in the back of the Berkshire annual report where I've got our economic principles. And frankly, the way I wrote that the first time was not well thought out. And in the 2,009 annual report, partly because somebody asked that question last year, I actually rewrote that section. And I pointed out that even when I wrote it in 1984, we would have flunked the test in many previous years when generally speaking, the stock market had suffered a significant decline over a period of time.
As you can tell by looking at our report, right now, every dollar that we have left in the business has produced in present value terms, something over $1.30 of market value. I mean, we have met the test of retained earnings proving their worth. But the way I phrase that originally, any time the stock market went down a whole lot on a 5 year period because we were carrying our Coca Cola at certain price 5 years earlier or whatever it was that entered into our asset value. We could have done a great job of allocating capital in the 5 year period and we still would have looked bad. Similarly, if the stock market had gone up a whole lot, we could have done a dumb job and look good.
So if you will look in the back of the 2,009 annual report, I think it's number 11 or I'm not sure about that. But read the economic principles, you'll see that I had to confess my error and how I originally worded that. But I think I think it is still intellectually honest in terms of meeting what I intended to say. I voted against this before I voted for it or something like John Kerry said in 2004. I think it does meet the test of $1 retained earnings producing more than $1 of market value.
And we will continue to measure ourselves based on whether that's we meet that test. If we don't if keeping a buck doesn't produce more than a buck in present value, I don't mean every day or every week, but over time, we should figure out something else to do. Charlie?
Well, I like people that parse through a long series of documents and find an error and rub my nose in it, particularly when it's your
I should have added more than originally. Actually, I think those were his words. Just coming back to me. Okay. Number 2.
Glenn Molineux from Cleveland, Ohio. It's been on my bucket list to come meet you, Mr. Bucket, Mr. Munger. So it's a privilege to be here.
My question has to do with hope and jobs. In America, I think we need to figure out how we can go about creating jobs. I have been trying to help people get jobs. My question is, and a challenge maybe, how could we get Berkshire Hathaway and your board to maybe go out and just basically hire people to give them hope?
Well, we will hire people when we have something for them to do. But and we are actually net hiring people now. I mean, when when the Burlington is carrying 173,000 cars a week like last week as opposed to sometime back 155,000. We need more people. And we need more people at some of our other businesses.
But our carpet business, we are down 6,000 people plus from our peak. People aren't going to quit buying carpet forever. And I mean that we will be hiring a number of people, but there's no sense hiring them when they're not when there's nothing for them to do. I mean, that I went through a period, particularly, it was dramatic to me because we owned Berkshire Hathaway owned a couple of textile mills. One of them in New Bedford.
And eventually we had to close those mills out that we tried for 20 years to make them work. And if you get somebody that's worked in in their 55 years old and in many cases, so we're speaking Portuguese, retraining doesn't mean much to that. I mean, you need if you believe in creative destruction and you believe in capitalism, essentially figuring out ways to do the same things with less and less people, you better have a social safety net. And we've got a pretty good one in this country, a whole lot better than we had 30 or 40 years ago. But there right now, there is significant unemployment, not any higher than it was in 1982 or thereabouts.
But it's a lot and it's not going to go away fast, although it is going to go away. And we we should take in my view, society owes some minimum minimum living standard to people who are looking for work, trying to get work. And frankly, at a time like this, they're not going to be able to find it. So, but I don't think that Berkshire Hathaway should be the social safety net. Charlie?
Yes. I would say that if Berkshire started out to create a bunch of make work jobs in order to increase human hope, the net effect would over time would be to reduce human hope.
I think that's true, but I'd rather have Charlie saying it than me. Carol?
Our car insurance business, this comes from a New York man who asked that I use his initials, A. J. Our car insurance business has continued to return excellent profits and expand its business within the United States. Why hasn't Berkshire made any progress in the car insurance business in China or India or even Europe. As BYD has shown, these markets are exploding in automobile sales.
So aren't they ripe for the picking? No.
There's no we've known for a long time there's no shortage of drivers around the world that there may be a lot of business in the United States. There's a whole lot of business elsewhere. In terms of India and China specifically, we can only own a limited amount, I believe 24.9 percent of a company in either of those countries. And we're not eager to work hard on something where we own 24.9. Well, we're going to work hard on something where we can own 100%.
Obviously, we talk all the time. We've thought for decades about ways we can possibly expand GEICO because it's a wonderful, wonderful company. And we have gone from a market share of 2.5 percent when we bought control, the 8.5% or so now. But there's plenty to do here. And we do not have the same kind of advantages or we don't think we could build those in any reasonable period of time as we look at other markets.
I mean, obviously, we look at Canada. I mean, Tony and I talk about this kind of thing frequently. I agree with his decision that now and probably for a long time to come, there is so much opportunity in the United States. And the other areas for one reason or another as we look at them do not give us the same kind of competitive advantage we have here that we pass on them. But we love the idea of taking a business that's working in one area and figuring out a way to have it work in other areas, whether it's geographical adjacencies or product extensions or all kinds of things.
We're well aware of possibilities out there. In the case of GEICO, we have not decided to go to other countries. But it isn't because we didn't know there were cars there. Charlie?
Yeah. I've got nothing to add.
Okay. Number 3.
Good afternoon. My name is. I am a Chinese student from Kansas State University. My question is, mister, what is the most important thing that you have learned from Charlie? Thank you.
Most important thing I've learned from China?
China, yes.
Yes. What's the most important thing you've learned from China, Charlie?
It has some very unusual people in BYD. I've learned No other lesson is as important as that one.
I've learned they like Sprite better than Coke. Sprite outsells Coke in China by 2 to 1. But they're both growing dramatically. I think China is an amazing economy. I mean, there is no question in my mind that the growth on a per capita basis is going to be dramatic going forward.
I mean, they're just starting to exercise their potential. When you think about it, in 17/90, there were 4,000,000 people in the United States, just under 4,000,000. There were 290,000,000 in China in 17/90, just as smart, just as hard working, resources of the land, the minerals, everything, climate, very, very similar. And for 170 years or so, relatively little progress was made, and the standard of living for those people like you say who had all the native abilities that America had. But, you know, in the recent decades, the potential of the Chinese is being unleashed and it's huge.
And I think it's very, very interesting to watch. Charlie and I and a group of the some of the directors are going over there at the end of September. And I was over there a couple of years ago. It's a sight to behold. But in terms of specific lessons, they haven't taught me how to eat Chinese food.
I will say that.
I think I always knew that the Chinese people had an enormous potential for huge and rapid progress because I could see that in all the Chinese Americans that I dealt with and indeed, people came in here as Chinese coolies and in effect, slaves and they rose so rapidly that it was a marble. So, I always knew that China had a potential to be a huge credit to human civilization, but I think I underrated how fast it could happen. China is setting a new record for advancement of civilization at a very rapid rate. It's fun to watch.
Becky?
This question comes from a shareholder in Aiken, South Carolina who asked not to be identified, but he asked that Mr. Buffet or Mr. Munger discuss changes that have been made in the Berkshire Annual Report in the last several years and the reasons for making some of these changes. 2 of the changes that he's noticed are, number 1, look through earnings no longer seem to be discussed and number 2, the unaudited combined financial statements of the business groups no longer seem to be included, although at least some of the business groups' material seem to be covered in other places in the report.
Yes. The second point I'm confused about because we have broken them down into 4 groups and tried to give the relevant financial information for what we thought was a logical grouping and we'll continue to do that. So I'm not sure I totally get that. We really do have 4 fairly logical breakdowns. I even break it down 70 ways and all that.
But there's a point at which adding 100 pages to an annual report obfuscates information rather than illuminates. And that's what we're trying. We're trying to, in a reasonable number of words, Carol might say too many, but in a reasonable number of words, convey as much as we can about the information we want to have if we were in your place and you were writing to us. And we think these 4 classifications, regulated industries, terribly capital intensive, insurance, capital really not a factor, but the amount of capital it gives us being a factor and so on. So I don't think we really changed on that.
Now when you get into look through earnings or sometimes when we talk about the earnings per share and the investments per share, Some of that I don't repeat every year because we try to get run at maybe 12,000 words or something like that in the annual report. And I really think if you extend it too much, I'll say this, nobody's told me it was too short yet, including my editor who is here today. And every other year, I may do that breakdown between operating earnings and that but that takes a 1,000 words or so to explain it to people. The whole report is guided as it has been ever since I really started taking it seriously in the mid seventies. Is guided by the idea that I'm actually, I'm writing it to my 2 sisters who are here and I have my audience in my mind is 2 very intelligent, interested people but who are not around the place, been gone for a year.
And they're very capable of understanding anything but they're not necessarily familiar with all the lingo. If I get too esoteric on it, so I should explain that. And I should I really want them to understand how I'm thinking about the business and by implication how I think they should think about it and to answer the questions that I think would be in their mind as, and they've got their most of their net worth in it. So they're going to read to the end. And I really haven't changed that framework in my mind for how I've written it.
I start mentally off writing Dear Doris and Bertie and then I just cross them off and put to the shareholders of Berkshire Hathaway. But that's the way it's done. Charlie?
Yes, but the details can change as the facts change. The undistributed earnings of Corporations in which we hold shares but do not control used to be way more important than they are now. It's perfectly natural that the emphasis would shift.
Yes, the undistributed earnings now without me looking at it very carefully, are probably they're not more than probably 15% of our reported earnings or something like that. They used to be a much higher percentage. And they're still important. But I don't think they're I think you can I think the people that understand that Coca Cola and American Express aren't paying out all their earnings? And it's not a big enough number that I would want to spend a lot of the report explaining it.
Number 4.
My name is Joe Hudson, a shareholder from Culver, Indiana. I doubt either of you have any money in Roth IRAs. What are your thoughts on the opportunity this year for anyone to convert IRAs to Roth IRAs, thus having all future growth on Berkshire or other investments 100% tax free. Is the government making a big mistake here? And should people be concerned about the deal changing down the road?
I'll take this one because I have an IRA that I am going to convert to a Roth IRA. So, there's your answer.
Well, I still don't understand it, but
You don't have to.
Okay. He's always telling me that. I assume Charlie said it, it must be true. Let's go to Andrew.
This question I'm actually very self interested It comes from Anton Ossip and Alexander Forbes from Johannesburg. And they write, last year you said you were down on the newspaper industry. Given your lifelong interest in newspaper companies and your stake in the Washington Post Company and others, has your view changed in the past year with the introduction of the iPad and other e reading technologies? Do you think we will see a contraction in the value retained by media houses versus what will be passed on to distributors of the media?
Well, you could probably answer it better than I can. My relatively uninformed opinion because I'm not that up on the technology. But I just have a feeling that when the money is basically the money to run good newspapers has come from advertising, 3 quarters of the money or thereabouts. The papers become less useful to advertisers. I mean, they were the only game in town for a long, long time.
They are not the only game in town. And what a difference that makes if you're selling something. So I when the fellow didn't inquire, Stan Lipsey is here. I called Stan up and said, Stan, this is probably like an old fire horse or something. But, let's think about it anyway a little bit.
And it was sold yesterday at a bankruptcy sale. Although I think that's pending confirmation. But it is very tempting if you've got you still got fairly substantial circulation, the Philadelphia Inquirer and they've got the daily news there, the news there too. But the math is really tough. I mean, the distribution costs, the printing costs, everything.
And maybe all this changes that in some way that you would understand better than I would. But since I don't understand it, I have to stay with plenty of things I don't understand. And I cannot make an affirmative decision, on newspaper ownership. I just got the the ABC puts out fast faxes, big yellow publication. I just got it a couple days ago.
And I can't resist looking through there. And I flipped the pages and looked at circulation of all kinds of papers. Actually, in Buffalo, we were down less than a great many papers even though our population demographics are very tough. We were down less than Rochester, I might mention, which is owned by Gannett. But, you look at San Francisco Chronicle, down 20 odd percent, Dallas.
I mean, these are these are communities that are thriving and it blows your mind how fast people are dropping it. It's not just older. It's not just the younger people aren't picking it up. I mean, the world has really changed in terms of the essential nature of newspapers. There's nothing that looked back when Charlie and I would talk about them in 1970 or 'sixty 5, there was probably nothing that looked more bulletproof than than a daily newspaper that where the competition had melted away.
But But, it's a form of distributing information and entertainment that has lost its immediacy in many cases. It's it's certainly it is not it is not the essential place to get think about how stock market quotations were there 30 or 35 years ago. You looked in the paper to see what stocks had done. You looked in the paper to see how the how sports and games had turned out. So, it its primacy has withered away and the advertisers weren't there because they loved the publisher of the newspaper.
They were there because it was a microphone to talk to everybody in town and they had to talk to everybody in town. And so you get this chicken and egg thing that the newspaper becomes less valuable as the advertisers float away and the advertisers float away as the subscribers, diminish. And I don't see a I don't see a good answer to it. But Charlie, what do you have to say?
Well, the independent newspapers, due to the accidents of history, as they became dominant in their individual towns. For decades had impregnable economic strength and by and large they behaved better because they were so strong. And they were called the 4th estate. They were really a branch of the government. They help keep government honest.
And if you take the state in which we are located, the World Herald has been a very constructive force net over a long period of time. And as those dominant franchises have weakened and weakened, it's not good for the country. I think we're losing something that we have no substitute for. And I think it's very sad and I don't know the faintest idea what to do about it.
Charlie and I love newspapers. I think the World Herald hit a 300,000 circulation peak on Sunday at one time. And I don't think they average that for the 6 month period. But I seem to remember that, I could be wrong. And the figures dollars 100,000 off that or something of the sort.
And the state has gained population. The city has gained population. You know, I think it's as vital to me as ever, but it clearly, it has changed for the populace as a whole. And, you know, when I look at the Philadelphia Inquirer and I forget what it was, 350 or something like that of circulation. And I, you know, I'm not worried about Philadelphia going away.
But when I look at the figures of being down, I don't know, I forgot what it was now, 30 or 40,000, you know, in a year. It doesn't work very well as that goes along because the advertiser just does not need you the same way as they needed you 10 or 15 years ago. So your ability to price evaporates, you know. It used to be, Charlie and I met Lord Thompson, in 1970 or so. And he owns the paper.
He owned the paper in Council Bluffs right across the river. And he was a Jovial fellow. He was very happy to see us. And we said to him, Lord Thompson, we said, we noticed you own the paper and council bus. Have you ever been there?
He said, I wouldn't dream of it. But, and then I said, well, Lord Thompson, I said, you seem to increase the price of your paper every year and your poor advertisers the advertising price. And is what can they do about it? He says nothing. And then I said, well, in that case, how do you decide how much to increase prices since it's totally at your discretion?
And he said, I think Charlie will remember these words. He said, I tell my U. S. Managers to price to make 40% pretax above that I feel I may be gouging. Well, Those days are gone.
Yes. And the politicians are not behaving better as the newspapers are weakening. We're going to miss the newspaper power.
I agree with that. Number 5.
My name is Robert MacArthur from Boston, Massachusetts. I'm starting a career in investing, and many, if not most investors my age, think they're value investors. Also, there's a record number of people here to see you this year. And the same value investors who were laughed at 3 years ago are now celebrated by the financial press. Will there be fewer metaphorical $100 bills left on the street going forward?
And if so, should I look for a career in managing a business instead of managing money?
There will probably be fewer. But I would say there will always be, except in the most bubbly of markets perhaps, but there will always be opportunities if you're not working with large amounts of money. The money manager, there's a basic conflict. There's conflicts in most businesses. Everybody's pointing out the Investment Banking business.
But the Investment Management business has a conflict that's equally as significant in the fact that asset gathering can become a way more important part of your income than asset managing. But if you manage moderate sums of money, I think there will always be opportunities to over perform. That doesn't mean lots of people are going to do it, but they will be out there. And it might have been easier many years ago when there were fewer people looking and not as much information was available on the internet and all that. But people still make the same mistakes and they still get well, I'll give you an illustration.
Charlie has a company called the Daily Journal Company. And the Daily Journal Company has a bunch of cash. And it sat there with cash and it sat there with cash. And I own a 100 shares, which is all they let me own. And I got their annual report here a while back.
And in their fiscal year of 2,009 for they never bought stocks before that I'd seen. And all of a sudden they bought $15,000,000 worth of stocks and they were worth $45,000,000 So by sitting around for a while, but waiting until things got really ridiculous in certain cases, he put $15,000,000 out that became $45,000,000 within probably a 6 month period or so. So opportunities come around. You have to be prepared to grab them when they come. And you can't do it with the kind of money.
I mean, you can't get the extraordinary things with the kind of money that we're running. With moderate amounts of money, I think there will always be opportunities. Charlie is going to tell you something more pessimistic now probably.
Well, yes, one piece of advice that Warren frequently gives and it's particularly useful to those going into money management.
Yeah, Al? Alan Simpson used to say, he said, those who take the high road in Washington are seldom bothered by heavy traffic. But getting to the last part of your question, there's going to be opportunities for talent, whether it's in money management, operating management, whatever. I mean, it's going to work. Money management, you know, it's it's easier to scale up and easier to get into and all of that.
So, it was certainly my natural inclination in any event. I would not have wanted to work my way up to a plant superintendent and all that until I got a job at the top, you know, about the time they were going to give me a gold watch. But, there's opportunities in both places. Carol?
This question is about municipal bonds. Municipal bond defaults on the scale you described in the 2,008 letter have so far not materialized. To what extent will we see municipalities default outright in the next 5 to 10 years? Will the bond insurance companies be able to swallow the losses? Will there be federal bailouts of states?
And considering all of these risks, should investors be getting paid more than they already are for holding municipal bonds?
Well, if the bonds are insured by Berkshire, you don't need to worry at all. But we're not insuring a lot of bonds currently because we don't think the premiums are appropriate, which gets to the question. Just the other day, within the last few days, you probably read about in the papers, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, defaulted on a relatively small amount of bonds. And the bond insurer named Assured Guarantee starts paying the interest. And Harrisburg may get things worked out in a week, you know, and they may not.
There's certainly some incentive to do that. And if they do get it worked out, the bond insurers not too much on the hook. But what you worry about is correlation in this field that if you that if one entity defaults and particularly if nothing terrible happens and the police are on the street the next day and the fire trucks still go to fires and all that And people start thinking what's why should I have a great fiscal reputation when I can have lower taxes and still have all the services I need. It's very hard to tell how that will play out. I personally think it would be very hard in the end for the federal government to turn away a state that was having extreme financial difficulties when they, in effect gone into General Motors and various other entities and save them.
I mean, I don't know exactly how you would tell the governor of state x that you were going to stiff arm him and when you participated in so many other bailouts of corporations. But who knows what would happen and who knows how contagious it would be. The big thing you worry about if you're a bond insurer is contagion. Obviously, the bond insurers except for Berkshire, the bond insurers in my view have got extraordinary liabilities in relation to their capital. And virtually every one of them either failed or effectively failed, had to spin off a bad bank versus a good bank type thing or something like that.
With merely the troubles they encountered when they got into structured securities. And I think they've had a very optimistic attitude toward what could happen in the field. But I don't know the answer on what default rates are going to be over the next few years. I knew that I felt I was getting paid fairly for taking that risk on a year and a half ago and I don't feel that we're getting offered a premium that's fair now. So we're going to let somebody else do it.
Charlie? Well, yes, with the municipal bonds I would try and invest in places that were both prosperous and disciplined. You want to invest in the prosperous because Ben Franklin was right when he said it's hard for an empty sack to stand upright. And you want to invest in the disciplined places because integrity still matters. It's not very difficult.
It's not very complicated.
But you could argue that in a country, if the undisciplined are not being punished for being undisciplined that the taxpayers in disciplined areas would say, wait a second, you know, why should we keep up a record of financial prudence and all that and pay our bills when other guys aren't paying their bills?
Well, there's no question about the fact that bad behavior is contagious. That's the way human nature works. But I'd still rather be with the disciplined, prosperous people.
Number 6.
That's why I like the Berkshire meeting.
That and free fudge.
Good afternoon, Mr. Buffet and Mr. Manger. I'm Shrinivas Kanadewal from Fort Lauderdale, Florida. First of all, I want to thank you for sharing your wisdom with us so generously.
Back in October of 2,008, you highly recommended buying U. S. Stocks and that was a brilliant idea. It worked very well. And I just want to get your opinion how you think about the market going forward?
Are you still that optimistic? And what's the reasonable rate of return to expect from the equities in next decade or so?
Well, I write articles very infrequently or get interviewed very infrequently on on the subject of the general level of the market itself. Probably only 4 or 5 times in 40 years have I really declared myself about what I thought about the general level of the stock market. And it turned out I was pretty premature actually in October 2008 as was pointed out to me by a number of people. But I felt and what I said in that article really was that it would be way better to own stocks over the long term than to follow a policy of buying either long term bonds or holding cash. And I knew I could make that statement.
And I would be eventually, I thought odds were very high, I'd be proven right on that. But I don't like I don't know what the stock market is going to do next week or next month or next year. I don't have any idea. People always think I do. I know I don't have any idea.
I don't think about it. It doesn't make any difference. So Charlotte and I, I don't I can't recall a discussion we've ever had on it, basically. But I do think over the next 10 years or 20 years, I'd much rather own equities, including U. S.
Equities. I'd much rather own them than cash or I'd much rather own them than a 10 or 20 year bond. But that's partly because I'm very unenthusiastic about the alternatives. I think equities will are likely to give you some positive, modest positive real return over time. But beyond that, I really don't know anything.
Charlie?
Well, that's a cheerful thought that equities are the best of a bad lot of available opportunities.
Do you disagree with it?
No. I think you are right. I think people should get accustomed on average to doing less well on their investment portfolios in real terms.
Charlie and I I
think we're in for a long period of where the ordinary result is not going to be very exciting.
But we like owning businesses and we're in a position where we can own entire businesses. But we also like partial ownership of businesses and we want to own businesses where we really think they have some competitive advantage over time and where we feel good about the management and where we think the price is reasonably attractive. I think you can find things like that now, but they aren't dramatically attractive at all. They do beat, in my view, they do beat holding cash or 5, 10 or 20 year bonds. Becky?
This question comes from John Bailer who's asking about the ratings agencies. He points out that you started selling your stake in Moody's this year. Has the investment case for Moody's changed due to potential regulation? And if so, why not sell the position to 0?
Well, we won't discuss what we will or won't do with any position. But I would say this, the ratings agencies have had and still have under current conditions an incredibly wonderful business. I mean, it takes no capital at all. The pricing power is significant. And certain parts of the world feel they need rating agencies.
There are also a certain part of the world is very mad at rating agencies and many feel that the rating agencies let them down when the rating agencies essentially succumbed to the same mania and effect you can say that prevailed throughout the investment world and and really the political world and the media world and all etcetera. They made the same mistake that as again politicians made, I made, you made, mortgage brokers made whomever. They couldn't see a world where residential housing countrywide would collapse. And, I don't think that was done because they were, the incentive part of it. There may have been some small aspect that that played.
I just think that it's very hard to think contrary to the crowd. And on the other hand, there is a obviously a backlash against rating agencies. There may be legal remedies that you can get views on that either way. If they are not forced to change their the whole structure around them does not change in some dramatic way, it's a pretty darn good business. And that you you can't shop pricing in the rating agency business that, we have never paid any attention to ratings for bonds.
I mean at Berkshire, we don't think we should farm out, outsource investment judgment. If we can't do it ourselves, we don't we just don't do it. And we're not going to rely on somebody else's opinion, whether it's a rating agency or an investment advisory organization or a management consulting firm or anybody else. So it's not a business that we rely on, but we do recognize that if the business if the sort of the social model doesn't change, it still remains a phenomenal business. Charlie?
Well, I would argue that the rating agencies in their present forum and structured with their present incentives have been a wonderfully constructive influence in our country for a great many decades. And And what happened, of course, is that the cognition faltered. They drifted with the stupidity of their times in a way that was regrettable. Part of it came out of asininity in American Business Education. They over believed in these ridiculous models and so on and so on.
And I have yet to hear a single apology from business academia for its huge contribution to our present difficulties.
Area 7.
Mike McCoy from San Francisco. Chairman Buffett, you frequently speak favorably about the prosperity of future generations, that our children and our children's children will live better than us. How much of our current prosperity do you attribute to us being able to get oil out of the ground at a fraction of the cost of its value to us in the economy? And how will we be able to live better in the future when we can no longer get more and more of this free lunch and we become dependent on more dilute sources like solar and wind? Couldn't this turn out like trying to satisfy a drug addict with a Coca Cola?
The oil business, obviously, the discovery of oil, when was it, about 18/50 something, Colonel Drake at Titusville, Pennsylvania or something. That changed the world in a very major way. And it's only 150 years ago. And since then, we've been sticking straws into the earth at incredible pace. There's over 500,000 producing wells in the United States.
Would you believe that? I mean, 11 barrels or 10 barrels a day average or something of the sort. I mean, we have really exploited what may have taken, I don't know, what is 100 of 1000 of years or 1000000 of years to create. It's contributed in a huge way to the prosperity of the world. But the world, in my view, will not be dependent upon that particular, call it, windfall for the next 100 years.
And Charlie knows way more about this subject than I do. But there will be other free lunches available, you know, whether it's solar or, there's lots of possibilities. Don't don't ever don't ever give up on, on humans' ability to innovate in ways that, that create solutions to problems that seem insolvable. We've faced all kinds of predictions, All of the inventions having been invented. There's some famous statement I forget who made on that.
There the we haven't really started. I mean, if you could pick a time in history when you would want to be born, leaving out the nuclear, chemical and biological threat which is something to leave out. But you know, I would pick today. You know, the world has a bright future. Now Charlie will give you the other side of that.
No, I think you're failing to recognize something really important. In the technology of 150 years ago, they really needed the oil to get ahead. In our advanced civilization, which has benefited from this last 150 years of technological expertise, we don't we can get ahead without the oil if we have to. Freeman Dyson is a physicist who is not an economist, but a genius and he's been very good at pointing out that it isn't that horrible to contemplate a world which goes off oil, provided that world is as rich and knowledgeable as ours is now. So the fact that they couldn't have got to where we are now without the oil starting 150 years ago does not mean we can't do without the oil if we have to.
We need the oil and the gas and the coal eventually for chemical feedstocks more than we need it for keeping warm and propelling our vehicles.
And the adjustment fortunately is will be fairly gradual. I mean it is not like 85,000,000 barrels of day goes to 50,000,000 or something in 5 or 10 years. So it's a workable period of adjustment in my view.
It doesn't bother Freeman Dyson who knows more about it. I don't think it should bother you too much.
He is always pulling that on me.
Andrew. I received a number of questions regarding craft and this one comes from a shareholder who says they prefer to remain anonymous. The question is given your stake in craft and your public criticism earlier this year about the craft Cadbury deal, how would you grade the Kraft Board of Directors' capital allocation and management compensation abilities? What did you think of Kraft CEO Irene Rosenfeld's $26,300,000 compensation packages, package for services including her leadership in completing the Cadbury acquisition and selling Kraft's North American frozen pizza business.
Well, I didn't like either the Cadbury decision or the pizza decision, but we've made our share of dumb deals at Berkshire. And so I've gotten more tolerant of other people. And incidentally, the fact I think it's a dumb deal doesn't for certain make it a dumb deal, but I think the odds are it was a dumb deal. In fact, I think the odds are that both deals were dumb. The pizza deal was particularly dumb.
But in my view, but just think of all the dumb things we've done, right? Starting with that department store in Baltimore.
A few Irish banks.
Yeah, right.
We never see anything. We never get over it.
Yes. We expect to do some dumb things. It's just we get mad when other people do dumb things with our money. The pizza business, somewhere I probably have some figures on that. But they when they sold the pizza business for $3,700,000,000 they announced that they're selling it for $3,700,000,000 They didn't sell it for $3,700,000,000 dollars That's what the other guy paid.
What they got was about $2,500,000,000 And that was a terribly tax inefficient deal when they'd already shown their ability to understand that you could do a tax efficient deal when they sold the post cereals business earlier. And when they referenced, well, they didn't reference at all what pizza was earning beforehand. But I think that Nestle said it was earning something like $280,000,000 pretax. But that was referring to the previous year. When they talked about the Cadbury earnings they were buying, they were talking about next year.
And when they talked about the pizza earnings they were selling, they talked about last year. Pizza in 2,009, believe it or not earned 300 and I think $40,000,000 pretax. So they got $2,500,000,000 for $340,000,000 of pizza earnings that were growing as fast or faster than the Cadbury earnings and where the sales were growing as fast or fast. It really didn't make sense in my view. Now you know, Irene is a perfectly capable manager and she may know a lot of things about that business I don't know.
And like I say, we've made plenty of mistakes ourselves. And but if it had been me, I would have voted to keep pizza and not buy Cadbury. And I expressed myself and I don't do that too often. But we owned a lot of craft. And craft still is selling for considerably less than the value of its constituent parts, particularly if you value them the way you value they value Cadbury.
But, if, if they don't sell them all like they sold pizza, the present price is below the value of Kool Aid and A1 sauce and Jell O and Oscar Mayer wieners and a few things. Those are very good businesses. I just hated to see them give up a significant portion of those businesses to buy Cadbury at what I felt was a very fancy price. Charlie? And in terms of her compensation, you know, we've got a compensation system at Berkshire that I regard as quite rational and there's a lot of companies in the United States that have different compensation systems.
Yeah. I think generally at the top of American businesses, people think they know too much about strategy and they tend to hate the tough competitive conditions in the business they are in and they yearn for some business where it's less difficult. You remember when Xerox bought Crum and Foster, an American Insurance Company, one of the dumbest acquisitions in all time. The reason Xerox did that is they didn't have any tough Japanese competing in the insurance business. They were really tired of facing the tough competition they had in the business they were in.
I think it's quite typical to dream if you're in business that something that's a little different no matter how much you pay for it will make your troubles less.
And you will have an absolute army of lawyers, investment advisors, public relations people, all of whom will have a strong economic interest in having you push ahead on deal after deal after deal regardless of how the shareholders come out. I mean, you know, it's just it's the way it works. Okay.
That's why Berkshire is a better deal. We are very stupid in many ways, but we have avoided a slight subset of stupidities and they're important.
Okay. Number 8.
Dear Mr. Wafford, dear Mr. Munger, my name is Richard Rantrop. I'm a shareholder from Germany. Mr.
Manger, you just mentioned again the importance of integrity. My question is about changes in integrity of management. One of your 3 key questions is, does management love what they do or does management love the money? So how do you see the crisis having changed integrity of management?
Well, I think what led to the crisis involved to some extent a lack of integrity in many a management. Fortunately, some of them are now gone. So, integrity is very important. It is the safest way to make money also. There is an occasional perfect name who succeeds pretty well with money, but that kind of success reminds me of what Pope Urban said about Cardinal Richel.
He said, if there is a God, Cardinal Richelieu has much to answer for. But if there is no God, he has done rather well and too many people want to be like Cardinal, Pope Urban's view of Cardinal Richelieu. And the integrity is important. It's terribly important. And of course everybody mouths the integrity even when it's lacking.
So it's difficult to be sure that that professing integrity is the same as having it.
Everyone else is doing it is the toughest thing. I think Yes. Yes, there's the Accounting Standards Board came out and says what was obvious to everybody all along was that stock options were actually expensed. And that expenses, for some reason or another, belonged on the income statement. And America, corporate America fought back like you cannot believe.
I mean, it was like World War III had broken out in terms of armies of CEOs marching on Washington. So the Accounting Standards Board backed off. Congress Senate voted 88 to 9 to tell them that, you know, what the hell did the Accounting Standards Board know about accounting and that the Senate would tell them what accounting was all about. When the Accounting Standards Board backed off, they said there we'll now say that you can do it 1 of 2 ways. Number 1 is preferred, which was the expense.
Number 2 was acceptable, but not preferred. Of the Standard and Poor's 500 companies, 498 chose number 2. The non preferred way. 2 took the preferred method. And I talked to a number of people in that 498 that I would trust to be a trustee of my will.
I'd love to have him as a next door neighbor. They could marry my daughter. But in the end, they said, I can't do it if the other guy isn't doing it. It was a variation on doing it because the other guy is doing it. They basically said, I'll be penalizing my shareholders if I report less in the way of earnings than I can report.
And all the other guys are doing it that way. And I understand your point. And the situational ethics problem is huge. It I gave you earlier that illustration of how rare it is to find if you carry it out to tenths of a cent, a 4 in reported earnings quarterly. That's not accidental.
And it's but if you talk to the people that play games to get that 4 up to 5, they would say, well, everybody else is doing it. Your own statistics prove that. And that is a you know, it is a tough problem to deal with. We try to create as few situations in Berkshire as we can that would induce such behavior. I don't have the managers submit budgets to me.
There is no Berkshire budget. They can use them in their own operations, some do and some don't. Many do, great many do. But if they submit them to me and the temptation becomes if they're not quite making it and they think I'm looking at all the time, the temptation becomes to fudge in some way. And very few would do it.
But the more that thought the other ones were doing it, the more that would do it. It's just human behavior and you want to kind of create a structure that minimizes the weaknesses in human behavior. And I think Berkshire is about as good a place at that as any, although I'm sure we're not perfect at it. Charlie?
Yeah. What's really interesting on this issue is that so much of the bad behavior does not come from malevolence or overweening greed or anything like that. It comes from subconscious poor cognition that justifies a lot of behavior that's really not justifiable if it's better understood. And that happens to practically everybody. And the cure is very difficult.
The best cure is to have a system where the people who are making the decisions bear the consequences and that's why the system that Wall Street created where nobody really owned the mortgages, they just passed them rapidly to somebody else at a profit And so nobody felt any responsibility that the mortgages be any good. Systems like that at a basic level are irresponsible systems. And it's deeply immoral to create irresponsible systems like that. But the people who create them don't realize they're being immoral. They think those systems are wonderful.
Who do
you see apologizing for the behavior you now find so regrettable in our recent mess? There are very few apologies you'll note. People think they did fine.
This question is from James A. Starr. I have read an enormous amount about past market declines and the opportunities they presented to investors. The last 2 years have seemed to me a 43 year old investor a real opportunity. Yet in the thick of the action, I was too scared because I felt the market decline, while severe, was not necessarily sufficient to match the risks of global financial meltdown.
So my question is, given that we are possibly not totally out of the woods, how did the 2 of you assess this latest buying opportunity against the previous opportunities of your life?
It's not the greatest one. We've seen a few that scream at us and we've seen a few periods of overvaluation that scream at us. And 90% of the time, we're somewhere in between and we don't know exactly where we are in between. The business of being scared, I don't know what you do about that. If you're of that, if you have a temperament that when others are fearful, you're going to get scared yourself, you are not going to make a lot of money in securities over time in all probably.
People really, if they didn't look at quotations, but of course the whole world is urging them to look at quotations and more than that do something based on small changes in quotations. But if you didn't think how much more rational, we've talked about it before, but think how much more rational investing in a farm is than the way many people buy stocks. And if you buy a farm, do you get a quote next week? Do you get a quote next month? If you buy an apartment house, do you get a quote next week or month?
No, you look at the apartment house or the farm and you say, I expected it to produce so many bushels of soybeans and corn. And if it does that, it meets my expectations. But they buy a stock and they think if it goes up, it's wonderful. If it goes down, it's bad. We think just the opposite.
When it goes down we love it because we'll buy more and if it goes up it kills us to buy more. And I all Ben Graham wrote about it. It's been explained. But if you can't get yourself in that mental attitude, you're going to be scared whenever everybody else is scared. And expect somebody else to tell you when to buy and therefore get your courage back up or something.
You know, I could get this fellow's courage up substantially by saying it's a wonderful time to buy. And then a week from now he'd run into somebody else that tells him the world is coming to an end and he'd sell. I mean he's a broker's friend, but he's not going to make a lot of money. Charlie? Yes.
I think I developed more courage after I learned I could handle hardship. So, maybe you should get your feet wet with a little more failure.
I've certainly followed that advice. Some people really do not have the apparently they don't have the temperament, emotional stability or whatever it may be to invest in securities. They'd be much better off if there were no quotations at all. And Keynes talked about that some in the past too. To take something that should be an asset, a quotation every day, terrific liquidity.
Nobody says how liquid is my farm or something of the sort. So they're not expecting that prices to tell them something about how they're doing. The market is saying this or that. Whenever anybody says the market is saying this or that, it's sort of unbelievable that but there's a lot of there's a lot of interest in in in investing and people are going to yak about it all the time. And And in the end, what counts is buying a good business at a decent price and then forgetting about it for a long, long, long time.
And people can do it and some people can't. Number 9.
Hi. My name is Joe McCabe. I'm from Littleton, Colorado. I want to thank you for the opportunity to ask a question and for your annual discussions in your report. Just wonderful reading.
Charlie Munger, you are on a YouTube video that discusses BYD and solar energy, and I really appreciate that interview and it being available to everyone. I want to talk about that in relationship to your other company. So the BYD was mentioned as electric car and battery, but I understand their second goal is solar energy. And you also own roofing companies and buildings companies, Clarum and Clayton, as well as utilities, Mid America, Pacific Corp and Pacific Power. This seems to be a perfect golden opportunity for solar to be on these buildings in those kinds of utility companies.
You've mentioned you don't interfere with individual companies, but is there a way you can direct, suggest, motivate a synergy between all these companies to bring solar solutions? Thank you.
Well, the solar solutions are coming because they're so obviously needed. And regarding solar panels on roofs, I never pass an opportunity to decline to put them in because I think they're going to get a lot cheaper and I'd rather wait. So What
an 86 you're going to afford to, Charlie?
Yes, I have to think about the long term. I'm going to miss you terribly.
Touche.
It reminded me of the wife and the husband said, will you still love me if I lost all my money? And she says, yes, I would always love you but I would miss you terribly. Well, the solar is coming because we have no other practical alternative. And it should be regarded as a very good thing because what in hell would modern civilization do if we had no alternative to fossil fuels, that would be a really serious problem. And so of course the cities that are choking to death in their own poisonous air are going to go to electric cars and we're going to get a lot more renewable energy from the sun.
I'm also quite negative about growing corn in America using fossil water and fossil fuels in order to burn up automobiles. That is a stunningly stupid idea and another example of how our politicians have failed us. And, but, but, but, I am enormously optimistic about what is going to happen. Our politicians will eventually create a big electric grid that's way better than what we have now. We'll eventually have the energy we need and we will be way better for it.
And it's wonderful that these technical problems are proving solvable. It is not all that important over the long term if solar power costs twice as much as what we're used to. That's a blip in the economic future of our country. It's just a blip. And I think it's probably a good thing that we have all these big capital needs coming that will create a better system in the end and solve our problems in the end.
So I'm quite optimistic. But in terms of immediate business decisions, I think frequently the right answer is counterintuitive. Like mine and say, if you want to put in solar panels, wait. They're going to get cheaper. Warren, do you want to criticize that?
I have nothing to add. Becky?
This question comes from Jennifer Mancuso, who's a shareholder here in Omaha. And she's hoping that you can settle a debate between her husband and her.
That's a promising assignment.
She says that he believes that Berkshire Hathaway stock will rise significantly in the next 1 to 2 years because of all the smart buys Warren made last year in Fortune 500s when stock prices were bottomed out. She says she knows this type of purchasing has driven much of your financial success, but she doesn't know how impactful these buys are given the size of Berkshire Hathaway and that Warren himself indicates that we shouldn't expect to see large increases in his stock price in the next few years. So the question is, what percentage of the portfolio is represented by those stock purchases? And what kind of an impact might they have on the fund's value as the valuation of that stock increases?
Well, I would say this that our portfolio now I've always regarded our portfolio as something that we thought would be worth more money later on. But the degree of undervaluation in our portfolio now compared to what I would expect it to produce over time is not dramatic and that undervaluation has been exceeded many times in the past. So it isn't like we're sitting here on some exploding bananas or anything like that. That couldn't be further from the truth. We think we'll do reasonably well over time.
We've got a lot of good businesses. We try to allocate capital rationally. We don't waste a lot of money at the top. But we do not have a whole bunch of things that are likely to increase dramatically in value from here. It just isn't the case.
So I hope she and her husband get along fine. Charlie?
I don't think I can solve any of those domestic troubles either in my own day I simply accepted the other point of view.
Number 10.
Hello, gentlemen. My name is Randy Bellows, And I'm from Rock Hall, Maryland. I've been coming here for many, many years. Yet today, I sense from each of you a guarded sense, a sense of reserve, not quite overt pessimism, but real reserve. You have spoken of impending inflation, government debt, both here and abroad that's higher than we're accustomed to, increased regulation and red tape that may slow innovation and growth.
And just a few minutes ago, Charlie, you spoke of that we have to reduce our expectation of investment returns. And yet in the same day, you'll say children in India will live better than we do. Chinese will live better than we do. And our own children here in this country will live better than we do today. Can you give me 4 or 5 facts that explain your optimism?
And thank you.
Well, having the main technical problems of civilization, which, of course, are all energy related, Having a solution that's on the horizon and nearly here, that is not a small benefit to humanity. That is the biggest single problem we have. So, of course, I'm optimistic about that. And I'm optimistic about the culture that generally pervades in Berkshire because I think it will continue to work. And, and, of course, it gives me some pleasure to see people that have had it tough for a long time through their own extreme efforts and talents rising rapidly as in many parts of China and India.
All of that gives me pleasure and why shouldn't it? Of course, there are terrible problems and of course reduced expectations are the rational way. There is no better way to be happy than getting your expectations down. It's much easier than getting your results up. Yes.
It's just we never know anything here except the most elementary common sense. It's amazing that it's sufficed for us. So no, I'm optimistic about life. If I can be optimistic when I'm nearly dead, surely the rest of you can handle a little inflation.
I really have nothing to add to that.
Andrew? This question comes from Meyer Shields and I want to say in advance that I don't, I'm not thrilled asking this question and you'll see why. The question is the American public almost certainly benefits from Mr. Buffett's increasing media exposure. But is it the best use of your time for Berkshire's shareholders?
Probably not. I do a lot of things that aren't the best use of my time for Berkshire shareholders. I play bridge on the Internet 12 hours a week. I'm not sitting there thinking my improving my bridge skills is going to do wonders for Berkshire. No, I do I have seen over the years the development of broadcast television as opposed to print.
And I would say that if you want to have a record of exactly what you said as opposed to interpreted through not only reporters but editors who bounce back things and say take 6 paragraphs down to 4 paragraphs. And why don't you ask this question? I would much rather have a record on Charlie Rose, which is permanent where people can go back and look at exactly what I said and my body language and whether I was kidding. I'm sure Lloyd Blankfein would have preferred to have a television interview. He'd like to take back that remark about doing God's work under any circumstances.
But I would bet that that was delivered as a throwaway line in terms of something that was said earlier. Clearly, he did not mean that in a literal sense, but he's gotten killed in the media because somebody elected to treat it halfway seriously and then other people to fit other stories play it that way. I like the idea whether it's in terms of CNBC keeping a record of it or Charlie Rose keeping a record of it, of having of being judged by my own words rather than somebody writing a few paragraphs trying to summarize some views. So and that requires being on television instead of instead of having people essentially take a 1 hour interview, often just shopping for a single quote that fits their storyline and having that somehow become representative of what I think. So the clearer I can be about what I think, whether writing my own annual report or whether being at broadcast, the better I feel about the accuracy of the reporting.
And I figured that out a few years ago. So that's the direction I go now. And whether it's the best use of the time, it works fine. I'll tell you one story on that. You even have to be a little careful about broadcast.
After we made the Burlington deal, Charlie Rose, who may be here, did an interview with me and we taped it on a Friday morning. And we did the tape. We had a good time doing it. And during the tape, there was a little section on it showing great railroad scenes. And one had Cary Grant and Grace Kelly.
And another one had Marilyn Monroe and some like it hot. And then they showed a bunch of the kind of things we had about railroads in our movie this morning. And when we got all through that, he asked me some question. And just to give a flip answer, but it did tie in with what I just seen. I said, well, I would have paid more for the Burlington if they'd thrown in Grace Kelly and Marilyn Monroe.
Well, this taped interview ran an hour and 6 minutes. So when they ran the tape that night, they had to take out 6 minutes and they took out these railroad scenes that show Grace Kelly and Marilyn Monroe. So to anybody that viewed this thing, it looked like I was spending my time there fantasizing about these while Charlie was talking to me. So, even television isn't safe.
Number 11. Hi. My name is Kip Johann Burkel from Boston, Massachusetts. First, thank you both for your writings, annual shareholder meetings and even the Charlie Rose interviews as they have helped me grow both as an investor and as a person. Berkshire has, in my opinion, the best and most loyal shareholders of any publicly traded company or mutual fund.
How do you attract and retain a shareholder base, particularly when many of the same behavioral tendencies that produce mispriced securities also produced fleet footed shareholders? Thank you.
Yeah. The interesting thing about marketable securities is that basically anybody can buy them. I mean you might elect to join somebody in buying a McDonald's franchise or a farm or an apartment house or something. But if you're running a public company, you can have anybody from, from, Osama Bin Laden, you know, to to, the Pope as your shareholder. I mean, they elected you don't elect them, they elect you.
Now if you want a shareholder body that is going to be in sync with you, it's important that in my view, it's important that you let them know exactly what sort of sort of institution you plan to run. And we've got the annual reports. We've got television interviews. We got various ways of conveying to people what kind of a place Berkshire is. And to some that says come in and to others it says stay out.
Phil Fisher wrote a great book on investing back in the very early 1960s. And he described the situation this way. He said, look, if you can have a restaurant and it can say French food. And if you have French food inside, you know, people are going to you're going to get a satisfied and returning clientele and you can have another one says hamburgers. But what you can't do is have hamburgers on the outside on the marquee and deliver French food inside.
And so many companies sort of try and promise everything to everybody. Their investor relations department tells them that any shareholder they can get interested. They want. We want people who think the way we do. And we don't we think on balance, we won't disappoint them too much.
But if we get a bunch of people who think that the earnings next quarter are going to be up 10% for some reason, and that's the reason they own the stock, we're going to have a lot of disappointed people. And our goal in life is not to spend our time associating with people who are going to be disappointed with us. And if it's our fault if we give out the right wrong advertisement. So we try to advertise what we are and then we try to deliver on that. And I do think we have the best group of shareholders in the world among large publicly traded companies.
And I think it's because we've got people that basically look into buying a business, becoming our partners over the years. And they know we'll treat them like partners. And they in turn give us a lot of comfort in having a stable shareholder base and a good feeling about just running the whole place. Charlie?
Well, what happened here is to some extent an accident. Warren and I started out investing money for our families and friends and the people who trusted us when we were young and unknown, of course, we developed a strong affection for. And we morphed into controlling public companies from that base. And so we tend to regard our shareholders, including the new ones, as family. And that's not put on.
That's the way we regard you. Other people can't do that because they morphed into their situation in a different way. And if you were a CEO and dealt with the average institutional investor who is interested in having his portfolio management look good the next 6 months, you'd find it hard to love your shareholders. There's sort of a hostile force that are putting unreasonable expectations on you. And so I don't think Warren and I deserve such wonderful credit for the fact that we have better relations with our shareholders.
We came up in a totally different way. Now we did have enough sense when we saw that it was such a good thing and so satisfying that we stayed with it. But weren't we we got into this by accident, didn't we?
Yes, we got in by accident And we also were blessed with the fact that we did not have an Investor Relations department that wanted us to go out and pump up.
But that was on purpose.
Yes. Yes. I mean it is I've seen them in operation at dozens of companies I've been involved in one way or another. I mean it is really ridiculous. The idea that you go out and try and cater to the expectations of people that are expecting you to do things you can't do by operations but maybe you can do by accounting for a short period of time.
It leads to worse behavior. And in the end, somebody's going to own all your shares. There's no way that shares remain empty in the shareholder list. So why not get a bunch of people who are going to stick with you who are in sync. And the way they're going to be in sync is if you told them rather accurately what you expect, how you expect to do it and tell them when you make mistakes, all of that.
But we probably shouldn't be as critical of people who came up a different way dealing with a different shareholder face. It's not at all clear that we wouldn't have ended up somewhat the same way if we'd had the same manner of rising. Sure. Yes.
So we'll be giving give up being critical for the next 5 or 10 minutes and then we'll go back. Carol?
Very short question. Please comment on the implications of our existing and perhaps continuing 0% interest rate?
Well, it's very tough for anybody who's got their investment in short term money. And if you're getting a 10th of a percent on some money market fund currently that if you'd started doing that when Columbus landed and didn't pay any taxes, you'd have almost doubled your money by now. It's really I mean, people talk about easy money policies, but it isn't so easy on the people who've got the money. It won't go on forever, but it may seem like forever to people that are on fixed income. I'm very sympathetic with them that, you know, basically they got many of them became fearful when the world was looks like it was collapsing in late 2008 and and the price they pay is really I know some people like that, but it's terrible in terms of returns and their purchasing power will get be eaten away.
But this will end at some point. I don't know how it will end but I would not like to be chairman of the Fed or secretary of the treasury. Nobody's ever asked me, but maybe that's why I say I wouldn't want to do it. But the we will it won't work forever to run huge budget deficits and try and have very easy monetary policy. And and when if we do run into trouble, the blame should not go to the Fed, the blame should go to Congress.
In some sense, the reality of our situation is almost amusingly depressing. Stocks are up because the return from running your money out at interest in a safe way is so lousy. And of course, one answer is that can't last, in which case stocks won't be as pronounced a value relatively speaking. And of course, if it does last as it has in Japan, we won't like that either because it will mean we are mired in some horrible stagnation. This is a very cheery message.
The pressure the pressure that is exerted by extremely low interest rates, short term rates on the value of everything else is it's hard to overestimate that. I mean, the reason people have their money out at 1 10th of 1% is that they're afraid of everything else. But as they're being afraid of everything else abates as it has over the last couple of years, the pressure to push stock prices up, push real estate prices back up. It's enormous. And of course, that's understood by people who have something to do with those matters.
But I don't think you should underestimate the degree to which the last year of stock prices has been a result of the agony that people are being put through that keep their money in short term money instruments. Unless they're terrified of the world, they get pushed into other investments. And I think we've seen a lot of that and we'll see what happens when money rates do go up if they do. 12.
Hello. My name is Jeff Colvet, and I'm from Olathe, Kansas. I got started in investing in 1999, right before the big tech bubble. And unfortunately, I learned buy and hold and don't fret about market price fluctuations before I learned the importance of valuing a business and applying a margin of safety. So as Charlie said, I got my feet wet with huge failure right away.
Wet in the globe.
Thank you.
I don't feel so bad now. So that leads to my question. It seems like I've read all the Berkshire reports and all the reading I can do about you 2, and I thank you for these wonderful meetings. But it seems like it boils down to some simple things, valuing a business and applying a margin of safety. So my question is, what do you recommend for an approach to getting better and better at valuing companies?
That was a very, very good question. And in my own case, you know, I started out without doing anything about valuing companies. And then Graham taught me a way to value a certain type of company that would prove successful except the universe of those companies dried up. But nevertheless, it it was almost a guarantee against failure. But it was not a guarantee that these things would continue to be available.
Charlie taught me a lot about the value of a durable competitive advantage and a really first class business. But over time, I've learned more about various types of businesses. But you'd be amazed how many businesses I don't feel that I understand well. The biggest thing is not how big your circle of competence is, but knowing where the perimeter is. If you you don't have to be an expert on 90% of the businesses or 80% or 70% or 50%.
But you do have to know something about the ones that you actually put your money into. And if that's a very small part of the universe, that still is not a killer. And I think if you think about what you would pay for a McDonald's stand, what you think you would pay for you know, think about the businesses in your own hometown. I'm a laughing. Which would you like to buy into?
Which do you think you could understand their economics? Which do you think will be around 10 or 20 years from now? Which do you think it would be very tough to compete with? Just keep asking yourself questions about businesses. Talk about with other people about them.
You will extend your knowledge over time. And always remember that margin of safety. And I think you basically have the right attitude because you do you recognize your limitations and that's enormously important in this business. You will find things to do. 6 or 7 years ago, maybe not that long.
Yes, 6 or 7 years ago when I was looking at Korean stocks for example, I never had any idea that Korean stocks would be something that I would be buying. But I looked over there and I could see that there were a number of businesses that met the margin of safety test. And there I diversified because I didn't know that much about any specific one. But I knew that a package of 20 was going to work out very well even if a crook might run one of them and a couple of might run into competition I didn't anticipate because they were so cheap. And that was sort of the old Graham approach.
You will find opportunities from time to time. And the beauty of it is you don't have to find very many of them. Charlie?
Well, obviously, if you want to get good at something which is competitive, you have to think about it a lot and learn a lot and practice doing it a lot. And the way the world is constructed in this field, you have to keep learning because the world keeps changing and your competitors keep learning. So you used to have to get up each morning and and and try and go to bed that night a little wiser than you were when you got up. And if you keep doing that for a long time and accumulate some experience, good and bad, as you try and master what you're trying to do. People who do that almost never fail utterly.
They may have a bad period when luck goes against them or something. But very few people have ever failed with that with that, if you have the right temperament, you may rise slowly but you are sure to rise.
Did you take any business courses in school?
None. I took accounting. And
when did you start valuing businesses and how did you go about it?
When I was a little boy. I can remember I would come down to the Omaha Club and there was an old gentleman who hit the Omaha Club about 10:30 every morning. He obviously did almost no work and yet was quite prosperous.
He became your ideal. Well,
but he made me very curious as a little boy. I said to my father, how in the hell does he do that? And he said, Charlie, he's in a business where he enjoys practically no competition. He gathers up and renders dead horses. Well, that was an example of avoiding competition by one stratagem.
And if you keep asking questions like that of reality, starting at a young age, you gradually learn. And, Roy, you were doing the same thing.
Well, yes. Thankfully, he extrapolate. He went beyond his original insight there.
But I noticed it's rather interesting. If you take the rulers of the businesses when I was a little boy,
an awful
lot of those business in Omaha. A lot of those businesses went broke. A lot of them sold out at modest prices under distress. And some of the people who rose, like Kiewit from small beginnings, what nobody thought of as the great glories of that early time. And I think that's kind of the way life is.
It's hard to get anywhere near the top, and it's hard to hold any position once you've attained it. And, but I think you could predict that Kiewit was likely to win. They cared more about doing it right. They cared more about avoiding trouble. They put more discipline on themselves.
Look, if you knew the individual well, you would have bet, right? What? If you knew the individual, Pete himself.
I would not have bet on any of the people I knew who were already wealthy, but I would have bet on Pete Kiewit. His sister taught me math. And and no, half Dutch, half German. This is a tough culture.
You've just heard it, folks. Half Dutch, half German. Well Go out looking for them.
Well, the man that's recommending this is named Munger. Anyway, the, no, I don't think it's that I was just automatically doing that. What was working? What was failing? Why was it working?
Why was it failing? If you have that temperament, you are gradually going to learn. And if you don't have that temperament, I can't help you.
If you'd followed Pete Hewitt around for 10 years, you never would have seen him do anything dumb, right?
Oh, yes. And so
it's avoiding the dumb thing. You don't you really don't have to be brilliant. But you have to avoid just sort of what almost seem the obvious mistakes. But I would say that you're on the right track back there in terms of having the basic fundamentals, knowing your limitations but still seeking to learn more about various kinds of businesses. Charlie, I think, when he practiced law, any client that came in, Charlie was thinking about that business as if he owned the place.
And he probably generally thought he knew more about the place than the guy that actually owned it, who was the client. But I remember talking to him, you know, 50 years ago and he would start talking about Caterpillar dealerships in Bakersfield or something of the sort. It was it was incapable of looking at a business without thinking about the fundamental economics of it. How did that guy do with the caterpillar?
Well, he sold it for a perfectly ridiculous price to a dumb oil company. It wasn't worth half what he got for it.
But they had a concept.
They had a concept and a strategy and no doubt they had consultants.
Becky?
This question comes from Carson Mitchell in Aberdeen, South Dakota who asked both of you what business has had the best return on capital for Berkshire and what business of any on earth has had the best return on capital? And he adds, P. S, I would have come by rail, but there are no seats in the grain railcars.
There's 2 ways of looking at it. If you talk about the capital necessary to run the business as opposed to what we might have paid for the business. I mean, if we buy a wonderful business, you could run the Coca Cola Company assuming you had the bottling systems ever. You could run it with no capital. Now if you buy it for $100,000,000,000 I mean, you can look at that as your capital or you can look at the basic capital.
We when we look at what's a good business, we're defining it in terms of the capital actually needed in the business. Whether it's a good investment for us depends on how much we pay for that in the end. There are a number of businesses that operate on negative capital. Carols with Fortune Magazine. Any of the great magazines and operate with negative capital.
I mean, the subscribers pay in advance. There are no fixed assets to speak of and the receivables are not that much. The inventory is nothing. So a magazine business, my guess is that People Magazine operates or Sports Illustrated operate with negative capital and particularly people make a lot of money. So there are certain businesses.
Well, we had a company called Blue Chip Stamps that where we got the float ahead of time and operated with really substantial negative capital. But there are a lot of great businesses that need very, very little capital. Apple doesn't need that much capital. The best ones, of course, are the ones that get very large while needing no capital. Sees is a wonderful business, needs very little capital.
But we can't get people eating £10 of box chocolates every day. Except here. We want to. Generally, the great consumer businesses need relatively little capital. The businesses where people pay you in advance, magazines of Christians being a case, insurance being a case, you're using your customers' capital.
And we like those kind of businesses, but of course so does the rest of the world so they can become very competitive in buying them. We have a business for example that's run wonderfully like Kathy Baron Tamara has called Business Wire. Business Wire does not require a lot of capital. It has receivables and everything, but it is a service type business. And many of the service type businesses and consumer type businesses require a little capital.
And when they get to be successful, you know, they can really be something. Charlie?
I've got nothing to add but at any rate, the formula never changes.
If you could own 1 business in the world, what would it be, Charlie? I hope I already own it myself. You know
you and I got in trouble by addressing such a subject many decades.
That's right.
I don't think I'll come back to it.
Okay. Number 13. So,
if you name some business that has incredible pricing power, you're talking about a business that's a monopoly or a near monopoly? Sure. And I don't think it's very smart for us to sit up here. Naming us our most admired business is something that other people regard as a monopoly. Okay.
We'll move right along. Let's see. Have we done number 13? No. No, I don't think so.
That's in the other room again. Anybody
there? Yes. Mr. Buffet, Mr. Munger, greetings from the breakout room.
My name is Glenn Tung from New York. Would like to thank you both for your exemplary stewardship through the economic crisis. We are all wealthier in several ways as a result of your efforts. I'd like to ask about Berkshire's growth, specifically your acquisition outlook and appetite. Has the phone been ringing?
The phone doesn't ring very often, Berkshire. That's partly because, well, we set out our criteria in the annual report for what we're looking for and we're now looking for larger and larger things. So when we start saying that we want to buy businesses that earn $75,000,000 or $100,000,000 at a minimum before tax, that weeds out a lot of phone calls. And I would say that that, you know, if we get a couple of 3 or 4 serious phone calls a year that sort of meet our criteria that look like they might be a possibility, that's that's a good year. I like that.
I don't think there's been any major change in the frequency that something comes along that might interest us. The answer is in terms of being interested, we're as interested as ever. I mean, we wrote a big check and issued shares in connection with the NSF. But, I would love it if Monday morning my phone rings with some big deal. We'll figure out a way to do it.
Charlie?
Yes. It's amazing to me that we have been as successful as we have been in buying desirable places. And it's human revulsion that has helped us because many of the people who sell to us are so smart that they're rebolded by almost everything else. They don't want to sell into some fee driven buying system that doesn't care about their employees or their business. And they finally decided they want to join this one.
They don't want to join the alternatives. And of course, that's marvelous for us. We've got a screening device out there that is protecting us to some extent from the wrong sort of people. And very few people have this particular look. We get offered things by people who would not sell to anybody else.
That is really peculiar. And it's happened what, how many times?
Well, it's happened, yes. And on an important one. I mean, there's one I mentioned before so I'll mention I can mention the name. I mean, when I heard from ISCAR, I had never heard of ISCAR before. I never heard of Eitan Wertheimer who wrote me.
But he basically told me, they've been quite specific. They either want to sell the Berkshire Hathaway or they didn't want to sell with anybody. And we met and we made a deal. And there was another person I won't even define exactly the time period, but he came in and he'd been thinking about it for about a year on his business and he built it over many decades. And he said there were 3 possibilities.
One was to sell it to a competitor. And he said they would have ideas immediately about all the people they could take out of his place and move the headquarters everything and they would dismantle something that he'd spent 30 years or so building. And he decided that he didn't want to do that even though it was probably worth more to a competitor because that's often the case than anybody else. And then he looked at selling to a leveraged buyout firm and I would call itself a private equity firm. And he decided he did not want his place being basically a piece of meat that would be resold in not that many years.
He really wanted to find a permanent home. So he said, when I come to you, I don't come to you because you're a damn detractive. He said, you're the only guy left. And we bought the business. So we that happens from time to time and it's accidental.
It's when something happens in someone's life that they decide to want they really want to assure a permanent home. It may be because a family isn't getting along. It may be, you know, half a dozen or maybe somebody wants to monetize it because they want to give away a lot of money. But periodically that will come up and we are a logical place to get the call and we will get the calls, but there's not much we can do to accelerate the process or do anything of the sort. We are ready to act when it happens.
I mean if I get a call and it's a $10,000,000,000 deal on Monday and I like it, I will say yes. I mean, I'll figure out how we do it.
Yes, I don't think it's over. It may be, in fact, it will be slower than it was in the early days. But that's not so bad considering how much richer we all are than we were then.
Andrew? Well, since I imagine this may be one of the last questions, Peter Brochi, a shareholder from Wenham, Massachusetts, writes to say, thank you, Warren and Charlie, for improving the Q and A session last year. Along those lines, are there important questions that you were surprised that you don't get asked about Berkshire's Financials or Businesses? And if so, what is the question you would ask yourself if the roles were reversed?
Well, Andrew, first of all, I will say we got a lot of comments on changing the format. I mean, it worked and that's why we're continuing it. So it's worked very well. And and that applause is for you, not for me. And and and you deserve it.
It It really has improved the quality of the questions in terms of having a Berkshire related and having a system of weeding them out without us being the ones that do the weeding out. Now, I've given Charlie time to think about the answer to that question is going to be. So I'm going to turn it over to him.
Well, I don't have a lot of comment about things that should be done differently at Berkshire. I think it is quite interesting that we got into BYD because BYD is surfing along on the developing edge of new technology And that has not we have always bragged about avoiding that. Isn't that a fair statement?
That's fair.
And yet here we are. I think it's because we've shown some capability for learning. And I think the BYD investment is going to work out very well. And I think it will work out very well in a way that gives great pleasure to all of us shareholders because I think they're going to help solve some significant problems of the world. And that place is, you know, I spoke with pride of a key wit.
They tried harder. They were more self disciplined. That's the way I feel about BYD. And it's a pleasure to associate with such people. And in my life, those are the people with whom I have achieved the most.
So as far as I'm concerned, we found our own kind except they're better. And we may do more of that. And we wouldn't have felt confident enough to go into venture capital typically with just a bright young man with an idea, no matter how brilliant.
Not me.
No. I wouldn't either. But BYD had won its spurs in life by the time we found it. They had accomplished things that struck me as almost impossible to do and yet they've done them. And so I don't think that's the last unusual thing that Berkshire will do and I and the last one that will work.
And I think the Burlington Northern acquisition, when we did it, we knew it would be better for their shareholders than it was for ours because after all they were getting into Berkshire. But we also thought it was good for our shareholders. And why should we care that it was better for theirs if it was satisfactory for us? And I think that will happen again too. That's our kind of a culture, you know, middle western and constantly improving the improving the place.
And with Mid America and Burlington, we're getting a fair amount of engineering into Berkshire, which of course I like. And so yes, I hope you people are comfortable with the way things are going because I don't think they're they'll keep going in the same direction.
I think they will keep going in the same direction. But to answer your question on that, Andrew, I would probably ask the question, can you keep using all of the capital you generate effectively for a very long time. And the answer, I think, to that is that even we will see more things and we will do some more of this. There comes a point where the numbers get big enough that it gets extraordinarily hard to do things that add value. I mean, if you just play out the numbers, you could see where in 10 or 15 years, not only the capital that's already accumulated, but the generation of capital and everything would make it very hard to do things that are essentially creating more than $1 of value per dollar invested.
A portion of the money may be able to be used that way and likely would be used in the kind of businesses we're in. There comes a point where the numbers get too big. And actually, our history is a curve that approaches that point all the time. It's turned out to be that now I think we can go a lot further than I would have thought 30 years ago. I mean, it's just it's developed that way.
And partly that's because we see things that I never would have thought we would have seen 30 years ago. But there is a limit. And there will come a time when we cannot intelligent in my view, there'll come a time when we cannot intelligently use 100% of the capital that we develop internally. And then we'll do something that's whatever is in the most interest the best interest of the shareholders will be done at that point.
I think we will get into Berkshire on the investment side probably starting sooner than many of you expect. People who have some promise of being, well, if not as good as Warren, decent approximation and in some cases with abilities that Warren lacks. In other words, it won't be all negative. And so I'm really quite optimistic. I can see the reason I think we will succeed at that is war never looks twice at anybody who isn't a little eccentric, which of course is what you're looking at when you look up here.
Nothing proof. Yes. Well, I think we better move on to Section 1.
Hello. My name is Joseph Mazzella from Jim Thorpe, PA. I wanted to, first thank Mr. Munger and Mr. Buffet as well as the Board of Directors for this meeting as well as the, the whole shareholder weekend.
I've had a great time so far.
Terrific. Thank you.
With that, I wanted to share. Aristotle, when asked how to define wealth, answered simply this. It is he who spends less than he earns. What advice could you give a young entrepreneur as myself on how to go about defining and both building wealth within their own business, as I hope to build a business that one day you'd be interested in acquiring?
I predict you're going to build 1. It may not quite get to the size that we're a moving target as well. But if you start off with that principle you just enunciated, there are probably some other similar principles that you'll have that we would also agree with. There's nothing like following your passion. I mean, I love what I do, obviously.
And I've loved it the whole time I've done it. Charlie, it's the same way. We have managers. They come some of them went to business school. Some of them didn't.
They're all types. But the common factor in them and they're successful. The common factor is they love what they do. And you've got to find that in life. And some people are very lucky in finding it very early.
I was it was dumb luck that my father happened to be in the securities business. So when I would go to his office, there were a lot of books to read. And I got entranced with that. But if he'd been in some other occupation, would I think I would have read those books eventually, but it would have been a lot later. So if you if you find something that turns you on, my guess is you're going to do very well.
And the beauty of it is, in a sense, there's not that much competition. I mean, it it there are not a lot of people out there that are going to be running faster than you in the race that you elect to get into. And, if you haven't found it yet, you may well have found it. But if you haven't found it yet, you've got to keep looking. And, it we've got 70 plus managers.
You know, some of them some of them didn't. We had one guy that didn't go to high school
even, didn't they? Charlie and Rosner.
Oh, yeah. He quit
in 4th grade, I think. Yeah. But, well, Mrs. Bean never went to school a day in her life, you know. And when you go out to the furniture mart, I hope you go out this evening.
We expect to set a record today in sales. The what you are looking at on those 78 acres is the largest home furnishing store, about $400,000,000 of sales, largest store in the United States. And it comes from $500 of capital paid in by a woman that never went to school a day in her life and couldn't read or write. I mean, she loved what she was doing. And, you know, I tell the story.
This is a true story. When she was in well into her 90s, she invited me over to her house for dinner. That was very unusual. At a very nice house, 6 or 7 blocks away from the store. And I went into the house and the sofa, the chairs, the lamp, the dining room table, they all had little green price tags hanging down.
It made her feel at home. And I said to her, Mrs. B, you are my kind of woman. Forget Sophia Loren and all that. I mean, this is my kind of woman.
She loved it. And she loved it all her life. And just think of what that produced. I mean, it just it's incredible. I mean, one time, my dad used to quote Emerson that the power that lies within you is new in nature.
You know, and basically, the power that was within Mrs. B was new in nature. And and over a lifetime, it produced amazing things. So find find your passion, and then don't let anything stop you. Okay, Carol?
Well, this is a deeply philosophical question. Many things that you the man did not want his name announced. Many things that you and Charlie do and preach are opposite to those of what people practice and expect. For example, you do not change the management of the acquired company. You applaud long standing employees, while others always look for fresh blood and try to fire people as they grow old.
You probably do not encourage retirement, while many companies do. You do not give large compensation to directors or compensate them using stock options. You do not seem to hire many MBAs. You don't invest in high-tech, but your company has grown very fast. You did not provide earnings guidelines.
You do not live near New York. You do not like sushi.
That's the key.
I wonder what is the fundamental reason for all of these things. In other words, there appears to be a central philosophy here that I am missing. I can understand these as isolated principles, but where is the beef? Scientists and philosophers look for a unifying theory when possible. What is yours?
Is it Buddhism or paganism or something else? Yes, I am looking for your fundamental or unified theory of management in life or fundamental guiding principles?
In 10 words or less. Let me try that one more. Good.
It's It's pragmatism. Partly, we do things in our different way because it suits us and partly we do it it suits our temperament and our natures. And partly we do it because we found through experience that it works better, at least with us sitting where we sit. It's just that simple. And we've had enough good sense when something is working very well to keep doing it.
So I'd say we were demonstrating what might be called the fundamental algorithm of life, repeat what works. Is that terse enough for you?
We'll go on to number 3. I like it. Number 2, I'm sorry. Number 2.
Good afternoon. I'm Carolyn Boyle from Barrington, Illinois. Thanks for the meeting. And thanks, everybody, from behind the scenes who put this together. It's quite well orchestrated.
If I may If I may interrupt you for just one second, that's very well deserved. And I would like to point out that at Berkshire, everybody in our home office, we have 21 of us, they all participated in working at this meeting. I mean, our CFO works on it. You name anybody in the office because they enjoy it. We don't think we should have a department for this or that or the other thing.
And I think that's probably fairly unusual with companies with market caps of close to $200,000,000 But you've seen Mark Hamburg walking around here and doing things. It it's, it's a group effort. And and they have I hope they have fun doing it because they sure don't get a bonus for and, but I think it exemplifies the organization. Thank you. I'm sorry to interrupt you.
Go ahead.
No, it's okay. Let me share a bit. I had some trouble getting the annual statement information. So I finally got on the Internet, sent in the postcard request a week ago, Friday, yesterday, and I got my tickets before the meeting. So it was very well orchestrated.
Thank you.
Now that you own some of real business, I'd like to have your perspective on whether our country needs a high speed passenger rail service. And if you think it does, should that be a private or a public endeavor?
Yeah. I think I think by its nature, it would be non economic when it competes with auto and competes with with air, we don't have the point to point density and demand that would produce a return on capital. That's just that is my guess. I made no big study of it. But all of the times I've seen projections and economic of the economics of it, it just doesn't work that well.
So, it will be if it gets done, unless it's heavily subsidized in some way, which means it's public anyway, I don't I don't think it'll happen under under private. It won't meet the test of private economics. Charlie, you know, they've got a big proposal in California on this. What do you know about the economics of that?
Well, I know very little but I'm at least as dubious as you are. The cost of putting in a high speed rail system in a place that's already densely populated is awesomely large and of course you're competing with a system that people prefer.
You're talking about an automotive.
I'm very skeptical about sticking high speed rails. I think it's great. In Japan and China
It's working.
They may have a different calculus.
Yeah. Japan. But they worked.
Yeah. But putting high speed rail into Los Angeles just looks to me like a bottomless pit of cost and trouble. And and think of how difficult that would be.
If it's going to be high speed, it can't stop very often, you know, by definition. And it can't go off into spurs and all of these kind of things. So it really gets to point to point operation and the cost gets staggering. There's a talk in Omaha about a trolley system. And I think and they're talking about a couple of $100,000,000 or something like that from the federal government.
And the projections of actual revenue are, are, as I remember, are something like $400,000 and that's before operating costs. I mean, so the math, you put $200,000,000 into something to move people a few miles in Omaha and most of the people are going to want to ride their cars And to have it be efficient, it has to be point to point pretty much for them. I mean, if you start living 6 blocks one way or 8 blocks another way, you say, nuts, I'll take the car. It the math really gets to be staggering on these things. And now, you know, everybody figures if you can get the money from the federal government, it doesn't cost anybody anything.
But it costs be a lot of money. And it's been done in Buffalo and people like it. But I've also I've requested the figures on today. And it blows your mind in terms I mean, you could you could, you'd give everybody a cab ride or something and it would be cheaper for society as a whole. So, I have a feeling that it it works marvelously maybe between Tokyo and Yokohama or something and it it really does.
And it even works well enough so I think it justifies private investment. But it's tough in a in a country of, you know, 3,000,000 plus square miles and and, within the continent, we have lower 48. I mean, it it's very tough to make the math work. Now, if people get it becomes a huge project or something of the government. So it isn't anybody's math.
You know, maybe it'll happen. I don't think it'll ever happen with with money that wants a return. Becky?
This is a question on the insurance portfolio from Jerry Haller. What would be the impact on insurance companies and the U. S. Economy in general if an earthquake of the same magnitude that struck Chile were to be focused on were to be focused on Los Angeles or San Francisco?
Well, I don't know the answer to that. And the Richter scale is not a perfect far from a perfect index of the damage caused even if you tell me where the epicenter will be. But, and then you get into the big damage in the famous San Francisco quake was the fire following. They call that when they distinguish between the what coverages are involved, they call that the shake and bake. I mean, how much is shake and how much is bake afterwards.
But the I think it gets hard to get up. I mean, really extreme quake. I think it's hard to get up much more than 100,000,000,000 but, a very big quake. It's going to the frequency is way less. But if you get up in the Pacific Northwest, there is a possibility of a very high Richter scale quake there.
And of course, the big ones that we know about, I mean, our history doesn't go back that far. But you know, New Madrid, Missouri had 3 quakes in a short relatively short period of time that were all well over 8. And that will happen again someday, maybe 500 years, maybe 1000 years and maybe tomorrow. That's what the insurance business is all about. I tend to think and when I think about quake exposure, sort of worst case in California, I think $100,000,000,000 is getting up there in Northridge.
Northridge caused far more damage than the one that was up near San Francisco a few years earlier. But we'll have them. And Berkshire is totally prepared to handle anything that comes along, even if it's considerably worse than what I let the worst insured loss, I don't know whether Katrina came in finally at $70,000,000,000 or something like that. I think in terms of the $250,000,000,000 sort of worst case. And my guess is if that came along and we had a normal year and everything else, Berkshire would still have positive earnings of some substantial amount.
So we are prepared. Charlie? Yeah.
And you know, the big San Francisco quake or whatever it was, 'six caused a terrible fire.
That was fire.
But the recent California quakes, the big ones, have not caused much fire. And a lot of earthquake damage is totally uninsured. So you might have a hell of a lot of damage without massive, Warren would know more about that than I. But so far, the challenge the insurance is not universal like fire insurance.
Not at all. Not at all.
So, it it an earthquake, a really terrible fire or terrible wind conditions, it seems to me, catch people worse. It seems to me catch people worse than the earthquakes.
And and so far in Chile, as I understand that, and I could be wrong on this and may not be the way the final numbers come in, but but as the numbers have been coming in, Something like 40% of it has been the tsunami and 60% has been the quake, in terms of damage. But that may well not hold to be in terms of final figures. There will be huge catastrophes from time to time. We are in a different class in terms of even being able to handle them. And we've got so much earning power outside of the insurance business that if you take a $250,000,000,000 quake or hurricane or whatever, and we have probably now not much more than 3% of that, but call it 4%.
That'd be $10,000,000,000 and our pretax earnings in any given year, I would expect would be substantially greater than that. So we would have other we would have net earnings in a year that every other insurance company would be gasping. So we're in pretty good shape on that. Area 3. This is probably the last question and then we'll go to the business meeting.
Okay. My name is Frank Teed and I'm from Arkadelphia, Arkansas. This is also an insurance type question. But I did want to thank Mr. Buffet, Mr.
Munger, the board. In Arkansas, we call them the associates, the managers for your integrity in running Berkshire Hathaway and dealing fairly with the shareholders. So thank you very much.
Thank you.
We saw in the credit crisis the gross overuse of credit, which led to the big financial meltdown with the government ultimately stepping in. Now we see a huge increase in debt in our cities, our states, our countries. For Berkshire Hathaway, what could be our exposure on a global financial meltdown? Could there be correlated risk that could get us in trouble? You said we have $40,000,000,000 in municipal bond insurance.
There's $8,000,000,000 to the states, which I'm not sure exactly if that was municipal bond. Could a large event cause a large number of losses that was coupled with a decrease in our investments to make an AIG type situation? Thank you.
Well, if you postulate something where there was a total meltdown and we essentially made the bet in 2,008 there would not be. It would be unnecessary. And but we came close in in in 2,008. And I decided that a, the government could solve the panic that existed and finally that they would. There wasn't any question in my my mind they could.
The question is, would they get so muddled up? Would decision making get paralyzed? Would rivalries break out? Would Congress grandstand? All of those sort of things.
And I thought there'd be some of that. But I thought in the end, we would do the right thing, which was go all in, which we did. And that would happen again. So I if you talk about some massive nuclear, chemical or biological attack that really does in a very significant proportion of the population or something, you know, who knows what would happen. But I would say this that I think Berkshire can withstand anything that any corporation get.
And it won't be it won't be our insurance business that causes a problem. If something extraordinary happens, and I don't anticipate that, but at all. But there could be a situation where the world becomes paralyzed. But I think that having gone through 2,008, I think that our government probably better understands the necessity of taking massive action at a time like that, doing whatever is necessary. When they guaranteed money market funds, when they guaranteed commercial paper, I mean, when they would things like that, they were sort of unprecedented and they did them very quickly.
They'd do it again in my view. There is no reason the plants of the country don't disappear. The land doesn't become less fertile. You know, people don't become less innovative. Things will work unless somehow the gears get all entirely messed up.
And I don't I don't see that happening. And I Berkshire, from any insurance catastrophe and you're right that things correlate on the down side. When things are bad in one area, they really do spread to another. But we are built, I think, to withstand anything that other than a total sort of wipe out of the world, John. That isn't going to happen.
Charlie?
I'm not worried about it.
Yes. Huge amounts of debt are not going to do us in. That's one thing I can guarantee you. I can't tell you about comments hitting us or something of that sort. But I don't care how silly governments get in terms of finance or corporations get or anything or anything of that sort.
That will not harm harm Berkshire. I want to thank you all for coming. Charlie and I really appreciate it. And Thank you. I appreciate it.
We appreciate that. I'm sure the panel does. Now, we'll we'll break for about 5 minutes. Some of you can go shop and some of you will want to stay around for the business meeting and we'll start the business meeting in 5 minutes and we'll see how long it takes. Okay.
I've already introduced the Berkshire Hathaway directors. Also with us today are partners in the firm of Deloitte and Touche, our auditors. They are available to respond to appropriate questions you might have concerning their firm's audit of the accounts of Berkshire. Mr. Forrest Creditor is secretary of Berkshire.
He will make a written record of proceedings. Miss Becky Amick has been appointed inspector of elections at this meeting and she will certify to the count of votes cast in the election of outstanding entitled to vote and represented at the meeting?
Yes, I do. As indicated in the proxy statement that accompany the notice of this meeting that was sent to all shareholders of record on March 3, 2010 being the record date for this meeting, there were 1,029,730 shares of Class A Berkshire Hathaway common stock outstanding with each share entitled to one vote on motions considered at the meeting 926,013,086 shares of Class B Berkshire Hathaway common stock outstanding with each share entitled to 110,000 the one vote on motions considered at the meeting. Of that number, 705,611 Class A shares and 566,627,821 Class B shares are represented at this meeting by proxies returned through Thursday evening, April 29.
Thank you. That number represents a quorum and we will therefore directly proceed with the meeting. First order of business will be a reading of the minutes of the last meeting of shareholders. I recognize Mr. Walter Scott, who will place a motion before the meeting.
I move that the meeting of the reading of the minutes of the last annual meeting, the shareholders and the special meeting shareholders be dispensed with and the minutes be approved.
Do I hear a second? I second the motion. The motion has been moved and seconded. Are there any comments or questions? We will vote on this motion by voice vote.
All of those in favor say aye. Opposed? The motion is carried. 2nd item of business is to elect directors. The shareholders present who wishes to withdraw a proxy previously sent in and vote in person on the election of directors, he or she may do so.
Also, if any shareholder that is present is not turned into proxy and desires a ballot in order to vote in person, you may do so. If you wish to do this, please identify yourself to meeting officials in the aisles who will furnish a ballot to you. With those persons desiring ballots, please identify themselves so that we may distribute them. I now recognize Mr. Walter Scott to place a motion before the meeting with respect to the election of
directors. I move that Warren Buffet, Charles Munger, Howard Buffet, Stephen Burke, Susan Decker, William Gates, David Gottesman, Charlotte Guyman, Donald Keogh, Thomas Murphy, Ron Olson, and Walter Scott be elected as directors. Is there a second?
I I second the motion. It's been moved and seconded that Warren Buffet, Charles Munger, Howard Buffet, Steven Burke, Susan Decker, William Gates, David Gottesman, Charlotte Guyman, Donald Keogh, Thomas Murphy, Ronald Olson and Walter Scott be elected as directors. Are there any other nominations? Is there any discussion? Nominations are ready to be voted upon.
If there are any shareholders voting in person, they should now mark their ballots on the election directors and allow the ballot to be delivered to the inspector of elections. Ms. Amick, when you're ready, you may give your report.
Report is ready. The ballot of the proxy holders in response to proxies that were received through last Thursday evening cast not less than 756,041 votes for each nominee. That number far exceeds a majority of the number of the total votes related to all Class A and Class B shares outstanding. The certification required by Delaware law of the precise count of the votes, including the additional votes to be cast by the proxy holders in response to proxies delivered at this meeting as well as any cast in person at this meeting will be given to the secretary to be placed with the minutes of this meeting.
Thank you, Ms. Amick. Warren Buffett, Charles Munger, Howard Buffett, Stephen Birx, Susan Decker, William Gage, David Gottesman, Charlotte Guyman, Donald Keogh, Thomas Murphy, Ronald Olson and Walter Scott have been elected as directors. Does anyone have any further business to come before this meeting before we adjourn? If not, I recognize Mr.
Scott to place a motion before the meeting.
I move this meeting be adjourned. Second?
I second the motion. Motion to adjourn has been made and seconded. We will vote by voice. Is there any discussion? If not, all in favor say aye.
All opposed say no. The meeting is adjourned. Thank you all for
coming.