TIP 042: WARREN BUFFETT’S BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY SHAREHOLDER LETTERS

W/ PRESTON & STIG

21 June 2015

In this episode, Preston and Stig review the last 50 years of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway shareholder letters. Get ready to hear an array of topics like intrinsic value, look-through earnings, and even derivatives. If you have never taken a deep review of Berkshire Hathaway, get ready to hear some interesting topics rarely discussed.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • What is Berkshire Hathaway’s business model?
  • What is the secret to Berkshire Hathaway’s success?
  • Ask the Investors: How would Benjamin Graham invest in an index fund?

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Preston Pysh  01:03

Hey, everybody, how you doing out there? This is Preston Pysh. I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast. And as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host Stig Brodersen out in Denmark.

So Stig really wanted to have a fun episode today. So he decided to read every single shareholder letter that Warren Buffett has written. And that’s what we’re going to be talking about today. But you know what, a lot of people might hear that and think that they’re going to be bored to death, as we talk about shareholder letters that were published since 1965. But what we’re going to do is we’re really going to try to make this fun for you. So we’re going to be talking about some very interesting concepts. And what we’re going to try to do is we’re going to try to extract the really key points out of the shareholder letter so that you kind of can have this ability to know kind of what everyone else doesn’t know about Berkshire Hathaway and how the company operates and why it’s different than any other company out there. So that’s what we’re going to really try to focus on are those key points.

01:59

So the first thing that we’re going to talk about is the four different types of businesses that Berkshire Hathaway has. So you can kind of understand the composition. So before we get into that, I just want to briefly describe kind of the history with Berkshire Hathaway in the event that you don’t know anything about it.

So Warren Buffett actually started off with a partnership where people could invest money with him, and then he would take that mone and then he would invest it. And if he had a great year, he would actually get paid. And if it was a bad year, he wasn’t making money. He actually didn’t make any money at all. Later, as he kind of honed his investing skills, he kind of realized that he was handicapped by the people that were giving him the money to invest.

Now, he had his partnership kind of structured in a manner that mitigated that a lot. But he still had the people that when the market was booming, were giving him more cash. And then he was trying to invest this money as everything was overvalued. And then when the market would crash, he still had people pulling money away from him whenever he needed it most because that’s whenever he could buy an undervalued company.

So what he had he decided to do is he decided to adjust his approach where he wanted to own a public company. And by owning a public company, he could actually take advantage of that behavior. So when the market was really high, he could actually sell more shares to people if he wanted to raise capital. And then when the market would crash, if people were trying to take their money away or sell his company short, he could actually buy those shares back under the company veil, and he would actually do very well for himself. So he basically took that structure and he flipped it on its head.

03:32

Now, his biggest mistake, he says, was actually buying Berkshire Hathaway. And I think a lot of people might hear that quote and say, “That makes no sense. I don’t understand that.” But here’s the history of why he has made that quote. Whenever he bought Berkshire Hathaway, he had this investing approach that a lot of people refer to as this cigar butt approach. And what that means is he would take the last puff out of the cigar like if it was a cigar that he found on the side of the street, he could take one free puff out of it before it was done. And so what he’s referring to there is he was going around, and what he would do is he’d find companies that were trading below on the market, they were trading below the actual value of the assets, if you would liquidate the company, meaning you would sell off all the assets on the balance sheet of the company. Those assets would actually be worth more than what it was trading for on the open market.

So whenever he had this early on approach, he learned this from Benjamin Graham, he was reading all these Benjamin Graham books. And so he was implementing that approach where he’d go around and he tried to find companies that were trading below the net tangible asset value of the company. So he got in this position where he was buying up shares of Berkshire Hathaway. He was trying to buy a controlling share of Berkshire Hathaway because it was one of these kinds of companies. It was this dying business that was a textile business. And what he’s trying to do is he’s trying to get a controlling share. And he was going to liquidate the company. He was in a kill, make, you know, basically send everybody home after he bought a controlling share, he would sell all the assets and he’d make money on the deal.

So this was kind of hard for him. And because it was hard for him because he was getting ready to liquidate this company and he was showing up. Everyone viewed Warren Buffett as being the Grim Reaper. He was the guy that was coming to kill all of their jobs. And people obviously did not like that. And something that Warren Buffett did not like this. He did not like the fact that people didn’t like him. He found this to be a very awkward position and something that he never wanted to experience again. And so he kind of got himself in a position where he is in a little over his head with Berkshire Hathaway and the fact that he didn’t want to be disliked. But at the same time, he was how am I going to make money on this deal? Because he was heavily invested. I don’t really remember how much of his portfolio consisted of owning this Berkshire stock, which was it making money at the time? Do you remember, Stig?

Stig Brodersen  05:58

No, not really.

Preston Pysh  05:59

Yeah, I don’t know, I don’t even think it was turning a profit at the time that he was buying it. But remember his intention of buying it at that time was to liquidate the company and make money that way, which is completely different than the way that we invest now and the way Buffett invests now.

So, he was basically buying up the shares of Berkshire Hathaway for a very long period of time, and then he was having to adjust his approach because he made a promise to all the employees that I will not liquidate the company, I will not kill the company. Basically, make them rest assured, as he was trying to acquire this controlling chair. He stuck to his word that he was not going to liquidate the company.

So what he found himself in this unique position was that he started off with one intention, which was to kill the company, and it ended with I’m going to save this company and I’m going to figure out ways to, you know, make them profitable and in turn everything around. And he did that he actually did that, but it took him he lost a decade or more of time because what he could have done is he could have just started his own company and then started investing his picks inside of that, and he would have saved himself a whole lot of friction in the process.

But, you know, we could argue that the learning experience and his adjustment to his investing approach changed so dramatically from this experience that he might not be the person he is today if he didn’t go through all that. So that’s a little bit of the background on Berkshire Hathaway.

Berkshire Hathaway is a publicly-traded company. It’s just like Coca Cola or Bank of America or whatever. It’s a company just like that. And that’s another thing that people don’t realize that. A lot of people think that Warren Buffett has like a hedge fund, but Berkshire Hathaway is not a hedge fund. It is a real company with real businesses underneath of it.

So I wanted to give that background because if you didn’t know that, I think it’s very important for you to know that as we go through and we discuss the inner workings of this company that Buffett has been running since 1965. So as we pored through these shareholder letters, we literally started with the year 1965 is very first shareholders letter which hasn’t really changed all that much through the decades. I mean, I found it really amazing that he was already writing to his shareholders in a manner that he’s very conversational. He’s instructing and he’s teaching since the very beginning. And if you have not read the shareholder letters, these are like the book of Genesis for investing. I think that anybody who has not read these and you’re a hardcore investor, you’re really missing out because there’s some amazing business advice in these letters.

So let’s go ahead and talk about the four different businesses within Berkshire Hathaway. And Stig is going to go ahead and take that away.

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