Here is a snippet from it - the 10 secret!
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Banking may not be the world's oldest profession, but it's one of the oldest, so a bank is clearly an "old economy" company. The Illinois National Bank [INB] was established in 1931 — right in the middle of the Depression — by Eugene Abegg, with a beginning net worth of $250,000 and $400,000 in deposits. By the time Abegg's bank became part of Berkshire, it wasn't only the largest in Rockford, it was also one of the most profitable in the country. And since banking is a business that Warren understands, it was a perfect match for his emerging conglomerate.
SECRET NUMBER 2:
Invest in companies with consistent earnings.
SECRET NUMBER 3:
Pay only a reasonable price even for an outstanding business.
SECRET NUMBER 4:
Buy a lot of the company, and keep it.
Contrary to popular opinion, Warren believes in concentration over diversification. Whenever he can, and if he has the money, he will buy all of a company rather than buy pieces of it through the stock market. Another one of the important lessons he learned from Ben Graham is that, whether in whole or in part, his valuation of a business and its stock are one in the same.
Warren typically purchases at least 80 percent of a wholly owned company and encourages the founder to keep a small interest in it. By retaining some ownership, the founder will be compensated based entirely on how well his particular company is doing, which will encourage him or her to focus on earnings and net worth rather than on stock prices or stock options or other businesses within the enterprise.True to this principle, in the case of the Illinois National Bank, Buffett purchased almost all of the company. And he probably would have kept it if it hadn't been for the Federal Bank Holding Act of 1969, which was passed soon after the acquisition. As a result, in 1980, after 11 years of ownership, and as required by law, he spun off the wholly owned bank to his shareholders. Interestingly, given Buffett's philosophy, had the act not forced the liquidation of this investment, Berkshire Hathaway might have evolved quite differently and become an insurance and a banking empire.
SECRET NUMBER 5:Invest in businesses with experienced managers in place.
When Warren Buffett bought Illinois National Bank, Eugene Abegg had been running the business for almost 40 year and was already 71 years old. Even so, Abegg had every intention of staying on to manage it, and Buffett wouldn't have had it any other way.
In fact, this is one of the most important elements in the development and success of Buffett's empire. Buffett buys companies with successful managers in place, and keeps them in place so they can continue running the businesses as they always have. Also, unlike other conglomerates, at Berkshire no attempt is ever made to "synergize" the acquired company into other subsidiaries and drive the founding entrepreneur out of the business.
SECRET NUMBER 6:Leave talented managers alone to do their jobs and compliment them from a distance.
He does, however, compliment them on the job they're doing, and he does it through an annual letter to Berkshire's 300,000 shareholders. In fact, it was in his first letter to shareholders, in 1970, that he praised Eugene Abegg for the job he was doing. "Eugene Abegg," Buffett wrote, "had the problem in 1970 of topping a banner year in 1969 — and in the face of an unchanged level of deposits, managed to do it. While maintaining a position of above average liquidity, net-operating earnings before security gains came to well over two percent of average deposits. This record reflects an exceptionally well-managed banking business."
Buffett's annual letters, which are also available at his website www.berkshirehathaway.com, have become one of his primary methods of recognizing, motivating, managing, leading, and retaining talented and independently wealthy managers. And it works. Having completed over 100 acquisitions over the past 37 years, Buffett has never lost a CEO to a competing enterprise.
SECRET NUMBER 7:Buy companies from owners who care more about who's buying the business than how much they'll get for it.
Berkshire doesn't have managers in place to run acquired businesses, so it's imperative that the founders and managers of the companies it buys stay on after the acquisition. Buffett knows that if the manager cares more about a high sale price and less about the management philosophy of the organization that's acquiring his or her creation, chances are the merger won't work. And that's because the more a manager is concerned about the purchase price, the less he or she is likely to be concerned about the company's employees. This is one of the reasons that Warren will rarely, if ever, engage in an auction for a business.
SECRET NUMBER 8:Invest in companies whose managers are frugal and care about costs.
Warren knows that the best way to make more money is to spend less. "Our experience," he wrote in his 1978 letter to shareholders, "has been that the manager of an already high cost operation frequently is uncommonly resourceful in finding new ways to add to overhead, while the manager of a tightly-run operation usually continues to find additional methods to curtail costs, even when his costs are already well below those of his competitors. No one," he added, "has demonstrated this latter ability better than Gene Abegg."<>
Because he knows the value of experience, Buffett has never established a mandatory retirement age at Berkshire. In fact, the opposite policy is in effect — founders and managers are encouraged to continue painting their business masterpiece for as long as they have a passion for it. While corporate America retires its leaders at 65, Berkshire often buys companies whose managers are already over that age. Even so, while the average CEO is on the job for six years before retiring, the typical Buffett CEO has an average tenure of 23 years. Eugene Abegg was six years past typical retirement age when Illinois National Bank became part of Berkshire, and he continued to build his business for another 11 years before he passed away at the age of 82.
SECRET NUMBER 10:
Above all else, know the character of the manager.
Like an astute banker, Buffett's genius lies in his ability to read a business owner and manager, often from the comfort of his small office in Omaha, Nebraska and determine his or her character and motivation. And the Oracle of Omaha has rarely, if ever, misjudged any of those managers. In fact, Buffett's decision to purchase the Illinois National Bank, and to bring Eugene Abegg into his company, set the standard by which to judge all of his wholly owned businesses and their CEOs. And even though it is a high standard, Warren has clearly never regretted setting it. In 1980, when Abegg died, he memorialized him in his annual letter saying, "As a friend, banker and citizen, he was unsurpassed." And that's exactly the kind of thing he would no doubt say about all the managers he's welcomed into the Berkshire Hathaway family.
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