Monday, May 05, 2008

Berkshire Hathaway's 2008 Annual Meeting Q&A Session

One of my favourite part of Berkshire Annual meeting is the Q&A part. And this year, Omaha World-Herald has published a transcript.


  • 9:49 The question and answer session began with one shareholder asking how to be a winning investor. Buffett said people should look at stocks as owning part of a business, use the stock market to serve you and not instruct you and to leave a margin of safety. Another questioner asked where Buffett could expand on where the stock market is headed. Buffett laughed and said "I could expand, but I couldn't answer." Buffett said he and Charlie have no idea where the stock market is headed. He said the question never comes up, because Berkshire invests in companies, not the stock market.

    9:53 One shareholder asked how to pick good managers. Buffett said he can't pick a good manager out of a group of MBA students, but he does evaluate the track record of a business and look for passion for the job in the managers. Buffett says his job is to retain those managers.

    10:04 One shareholder asked about using stock options. Buffett said does not think much about them. Buffett said if he and Charlie want to buy something, they will buy it. If they want to get out of something, they will sell it. Buffett says too often business schools spend time on things like auction pricing because teachers know the formulas and the students don't, so they can fill the time. Buffett says an investor needs to know only two things: how to value a business and how to think about stock market fluctuations. He says it is similar to teaching theology: It all comes down to the 10 commandments.

    10:08 A shareholder asked Buffett about the joys of giving. Buffett is known for dedciding to give the bulk of his fortune to charity. Buffett says he has never given up anything in his life that makes a difference to how he lives his life. Buffett says that is far different, and not even on a par with, someone in a church pew giving to the church in a way that impacts whether he will take his family out to dinner that night. Buffett says he has given away his excess money, and while that is useful, it is not making a difference in his everyday life.

    10:22 A shareholder asked Buffett if stock investments by Berkshire made over the last 12 months is likely to bring 7percent to 10 percent returns. And will that be below what Berkshire has made in the past? Buffett says yes to both questions. Buffett says Berkshire will be happy with dividend combined with capital gains before taxes of 10 percent -- and would settle for a bit less. Berkshire will not give its shareholders the returns they have had in the past, either, because it is dealing with far bigger companies, with market caps of $10 billion to $50 billion. Buffett says that is a less profitable universe proportionately than having the entire universe of companies in which to invest.

    10:32 A shareholder says he is a Native American who fasted for 10 days before coming to the annual meeting, and he is concerned about the environmental effects of Berkshire-owned Pacificorps dams on the Klamath River. He asked Buffett to sit down and negotiate a solution to the problem. He says the group came last year and felt it was treated disrespectfully. Buffett says he cannot make decisions on the dealings of Pacifcorps under agreements signed when Berkshire bought the utility company. Buffett says he understands there are disagreements about what to do, and he did not think Berkshire officials were in any way disrespectful last year. Buffett asked utility company and Berkshire-owned MidAmerican Chairman David Sokol to comment. Sokol said federal and state regulators, fishing interests, Native Americans and others making up about 28 groups have not agreed on what should be done. Sokol says relicensing of the dams is a long and complicated process, and Pacificorp will be happy to help find a resolution.

    10:39 A shareholder asked Buffett how he stays healthy. Buffett took a piece of See's candy and said "You start with a balanced diet." Buffett says he works out 45 minutes three times a week with a personal trainer, otherwise he does what he wants. He says he likes Mar's candy, Coca-Cola and See's. Buffett says very important factors for him have been a job he loves with people he loves to work with. He gets to work in an air-conditioned office with all kinds of help. He asks "How can you be sour about life when being blessed in so many ways?"

    10:43 A shareholder says she is a teacher trying to help introverted people become more comfortable in public settings. She asked for advice on how to do that. Buffett says when he was young he deliberately avoided classwork that included getting in front of people, but over time forced himself in front of crowds. Buffett says that seems to have helped him. Buffett says people should do that when they are young because it becomes more difficult with age. Charlie says it is nice to have someone in education come to the annual meeting who is doing something helpful and not foolish. Buffett says he hopes Charlie doesn't name any names.

    10:47 A shareholder says she is concerned about the Klamath River controversy and wonders if Buffett knows it would save hundreds of millions of dollars to tear down the dams and not relicense them. She asks if Buffett is concerned about ratepayers paying more than they should if the dams are kept. Buffett says public utility commissions will weigh rates payed by customers, and that is the commissions' jobs. Buffett says other factors need to be weighed, including replacing clean power like hydro dams with energy that brings more pollution such as coal. MidAmerican's David Sokol addressed questions about algae in the rivers, saying blue-green algae is not unique to the Klamath River. Sokol says many factors must be taken into account as the dam discussions continue.

    11:06 In the course of discussing small businesses and large business, Charlie says most small businesses will not become big businesses and most big businesses will fall into mediocrity or worse. Charlies says the only company he and Warren created is Berkshire's reinsurance division. Warren says Berkshire executive Ajit Jain actually created that division. "He did it, we just sat there cheering." Warren says the municipal bond company Berkshire created recently with Jain leading the charge has about $400 million in premiums, far more than any other municipal bond company and perhaps more than all others combined. Buffett says many cities came to Berkshire already insured but wanted the added insurance Berkshire had to offer.

    11:09 A young shareholder asked what people should learn outside of school. Buffett suggests reading a daily newspaper, reading encyclopedias, just sop it up and you will find what is most interesting to you. Buffett says the more you learn, the more you want to learn. Charlie says the young person asking the question appears already to have figured out how to succeed in life.

    11:19 A shareholder asked about hedging against the U.S. dollar. Buffett says he is happy investing in overseas companies because currencies in those countries are not likely to decrease in a big way to the U.S. dollar. Buffett says the U.S. government appears likely to follow policies that make the dollar weaker, so he does not feel a need to hedge on other currencies.

    11:33 A shareholder asked what Buffett and Munger would do as economic policy if elected president, and it appears the three current candidates appear to be pandering to voters. Buffett says all three candidates are strong this year, and each of them would do well in the White House. Buffett says U.S. political process seems to invite some degree of pandering as each candidate seeks votes. Buffett says he doesn't think he would do much better, if he were running for president.

    11:46 A shareholder asked what deals Buffett and Munger have seen in the past that they were willing to sink large amounts of money into. Buffett says he has had up to 75 percent of his net worth in some deals, and people who know what they are doing should be shy about sinking 50 percent of their net worth into some investments. Buffett says someone could have put 100 percent of their stock into Coca-Cola back when Berkshire invested heavily in that company and their returns would have been fine. Munger says diversification is NOT key, but rather safe and strong investments are key. Buffett says people who are not sophisticated investors could use diversification as an investment strategy.

    11:59 A shareholder asked about whether oil is running out. Buffett says oil production is high right now, about 87 billion barrels of day. Eventually, production will decline and it will happen over time and hopefully the world will adjust. Buffett says we will be producing oil far beyond this century. Munger says it is foolish to use as much oil as we do right now. Munger says eventually if the world's population continues to increase and the standard of living is good, oil and other natural resources will run out and people will turn to solar energy. Munger says he predicts oil production will be down 25 years from now. Buffett says "That's not an insignificant prediction, believe me. If oil production is down 25 years from now, it's going to be a different world."

    12:01 A shareholder asked about food shortages of today and Buffett turned to Munger. Munger said "Turning American corn into motor fuel is one of the dumbest ideas I've ever seen. This idea is so monstrously dumb that I think it's probably on its way out."

    12:01 The annual meeting is on a 30 to 40 minute break.

    12:03 [Be Right Back Countdown] 30 minutes

    12:42 The crowd has thinned a bit as people wait for Buffett and Munger to return from a lunch break. But thousands of people remain.

    12:57 Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger have taken their seats. Buffett says three questions have been asked and that is more than proportional to the interests of the crowd. So they will skip any questions about that.

    1:15 A shareholder asked if business practices and investment banks have become too complex and large for financial leaders to keep up day to day and week to week on the risks they might face. Buffett says yes, though a few banking leaders appear able to get their minds around risk. Buffett says it is hard to regulate. the government tried to keep an eye on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but those mortgage companies wound up with accounting problems. Buffett says leaders are needed whose DNA is very much tuned against risk and is not tempted to follow the financial crowd toward investments that appear to bring good returns. Munger says it is crazy to let firms get too big to fail. Munger says as an industry banking turned to greed and overreaching. Munger says it was crazy to let derivatives trading go the way it went. He says "it needs a huge reining in." Buffett says the Fed did the right thing to help Bear Stearns. He says an investment bank or two would have failed only days later, as well. Bear Stearns h ad $14.5 trillion in derivative contracts and if Bear Stearns had failed those contracts would have had to be undone in a very short time. Buffett says "It would have been a spectacle of unprecedented proportions." Buffett says at Congressional hearings later people at Bear Stearns said they knew they couldn't borrow money unsecured, but they had no idea they couldn't borrow money secured. Buffett says if people don't want to loan you money, they don't want to loan you money.

    1:19 A shareholder asked once Buffett and Munger are gone and Buffett's shares get given away, what will happen to this fine company and what is to prevent a private investment firm taking over? Buffett says you would be dealing a company with market cap bigger than Berkshire's is today, and big financial institutitons would still hold big blocks of shares. Buffett says it could not happen at all until after he dies, and even after he dies there will be lots of moats to protect Berkshire. Buffett says if we do anything close to decent rates of compounding, it will beone of the biggest companies in the United States. And nobody is talking about taking over General Electric or Exon.

    1:23 A shareholder asks about Berkshire investing in Kraft. Buffett says most big food companies are good investments. Strong brands are good assets. He says Coca-Cola, See's, Mars candy all are strong and it is difficult to challenge those brands. Buffett says what Berkshire buys might have something to do with the price and the management.

    1:31 A shareholder says Buffett has identified four investment managers who could run Berkshire's investments after he is gone. He asks what was the criteria and what will be their strategy? Buffett says good records are needed, but human qualities are enormously important. Buffett says the company made an affirmative decisions about four. Buffett says someone genetically able to identify serious risks, including those never before experienced. Buffett says that is somewhat prophetic of what happened last year. He says all banks have financial modesl to work with but several had no idea what serious risks they faced. Buffett says an inability to recognize risk that does not show up in your models can be fatal. Charlie says Berkshire is risk averse. He says we behave in a way that no one will question its credit, and even if no one likes their credit they wouldn't know it for months. That double layering against risk is like breathing in Berkshire. The alternative is the opposite. Charlie says he might be called the risk manager but in fact he makes you feel good while you do dumb things. Buffett says he and Munger want to run Berkshire so that if the world isn't working tomorrow the way it is working today, we really will not have a problem. Buffett says that gives up earning higher returns 99 percent of the time, and maybe 99.9 percnet of the time, but we wouldn't feel comfortable. Buffett says a lot of people have almost all their networth in Berkshire, including me, and the company would not feel comfortable putting that at risk. Buffett says we want to handle our own risk and not farm it out. He says we saw what happened with some companies who thought they farming it out.

    1:35 A shareholder asks how large is the universe of companies Buffett could act on in a day or two if market price was good. Buffett says the immediate decision is yes or no, and very early in a conversation Buffett and Munger can tell if the offer is actionable for Berkshire. Buffett says that rules out a lot of potential offers. Buffett says if a company makes it through one or two of the filters at Berkshire, the decision can be made very quickly. Charlie says Berkshire can make a lot of decisions very fast, and it is unusual in that way. And Charlie says one reason is that Berkshire will not allow itself to think about certain things. Charlie says that what remains is still a fairly large universe.

    1:37 A shareholder asks Buffett about Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim. Buffett says he had lunch with him a number of years ago and it was pleasant. Buffett says outside of that visit and what he reads in the newspaper he does not know much about Carlos Slim.

    1:38 A protestor interrupted one shareholder's questions with a shouted comment about the Klamath River. The interruption was brief.

    1:40 A shareholder asks if people should not participate in the Olympics to protest human rights in China. Buffett says that is not a good idea because over time the Olympics does good things for the world. Charlie says he agrees, and he says China is moving in the right direction. Buffett says the United States practiced racial bigotry but this country, too has moved in the right direction.

    1:43 A shareholder asks if people will need more coal and is there an environmental disadvantage to it. Buffett says yes and over time energy will be found that is cleaner and offers what coal does. Buffett says that will not happen in a short period of time. Buffett says it will require cooperation and leadership. Buffett says the United States is not in a good position of leadership because per capita it has done more harm than many other countries around the world. Buffett says the world will need a leader, however. Munger says the people who are against the use of coal should reflect on which they would rather use up fast, oil or coal? Munger says he would rather use up coal.

    1:47 A shareholder asks about investing in small banks or large banks. Buffett says it is good to know the culture of the bank. He says Wells Fargo is one bank Berkshire has invested in that it believes will avoid financial stupidity.

    1:52 A shareholder asks what ideas they have for nuclear nonproliferation. Buffett says it is the big problem of mankind. He says the genie is out of the bottle on nuclear power and more and more people will be able to do damage. He says a certain number of people will wish ill on their neighbors and the choke point will be deliverability. Buffett says many people associate nuclear damage with terrorists and not so much countries. Buffett says there can be threats on both fronts and all should be done that can be done to reduce access to nuclear materials. Buffett says chemical and biological weapons also are dangerous threats. Buffett says the U.S. needs to have nuclear safeguards as a top priority.
    1:58 A shareholder who teaches office administration and business says she teaches that slow and steady wins the race and she asks a great deal of her students. She asks what more can she do? Buffett says ask students to imagine if they were 16 and could have car of their choice, but the car would have to last the rest of their life. Buffett says how would you treat it? You would read the manual, keep it washed, keep it garaged. And Buffett says you get one body and one mind, so you better treat it right. Buffett says "Anything students can do for their body and their mind, particuarly their mind, we didn't work too hard on our bodies around here." Buffett says establishing good habits as students will help them the rest of their lives. Munger says specifically, teach them to avoid being manipulated to their disadvantage by vendors or lenders.

    2:01 A nine-year-old boy says he is a big baseball fan and his favorite teams is the Chicago Cubs. He asks if buying baseball teams is a good investment. Buffett says it has been a good investment and cable television has expanded that investment. Buffett says a lot of that went to the players, though some of it stuck with the owners. Buffett says there is a psychic income to buying sports teams. He says it is a way to instant celebrity.

    2:05 A shareholder asks why don't Americans save and what can we do about the problem. Buffett says the savings rate in this country has fallen significantly and may be negative. Buffett says the value of the country has expanded, so something good has happened. Buffett says the propensity to save almost seems innate. Buffett says if own Berkshire stock you automatically save because we retain earnings. Buffett says the savings rate is computed on consumption and imports. buffett says we are importing $7 billion in goods and serviceds more than we are exporting. Buffett says that will have consequences over time, but it it may not be really apparent. Buffett says the standard of living will improve in real terms, thoguh the super rich will benefit more than the middle class. Buffett says in net real terms the value on a per capita basis will increase decade to decade. Buffett says this country may not save very much because it does not need to save very much.

    2:08 A shareholder asks what are his reasons for coming to Germany? Buffett says we would like more family owners of German businesses, who when they feel some need to monetize their business think of Berkshire Hathaway. We want to be on their radar screen. Buffett says "If they care about their business, we are their best call." He says we are not as much on their radar screens in Europe as in the United States. He says that may be something I should have done something about earlier.

    2:11 A shareholder asks about the housing bubble. Buffett says he does not remember another such bubble spreading to other areas of the economy the way this one does. But Buffett says something similar is likely to happen again in the future, and this behavior can pop up once in a while. Buffett says he has not immediate solutions. Munger says it was a particularly foolish mess.

    2:19 A shareholder asks what can be done to improve the integrity of financial statements when there is a lot of leverage being used. Buffett says fair value might be one way. Buffett says the complicated mortgage packages banks developed was madness. Buffett says telling banks they have to value holdings at market value might help. Munger says the free market cannot do everything, and there are some innovations that should be banned. Munger says if the words diversified risk had been banned the world would have worked a lot better.

    2:21 A shareholder asks about mass transit and what that has to do with the railroads. Buffett says Americans don't like mass transit. Buffett says one person to a car seems to be an enormously popular way to get around. Buffett says a move to mass transit is not likely. Buffett says Americans don't like waiting for a bus or whatever it may be. Buffett says Americans don't like to double up in cars. Munger says Buffett has a more optimistic view of it than he does.

    2:34 A shareholder asks if the credit default swap market could be the next problem? Buffett says a credit default swap can be considered insurance against a company going bankrupt. Buffett says Berkshire has written insurance on companies and expects to make money from it. Buffett says there is no doubt that credit defaults will rise. Buffett says probably it will not be a big problem, though if Bear Stearns had failed it would have been a problem. Buffett says it should not be a problem, particularly if the Fed is willing to step in when something like an investment bank threatens failure.

    2:41 An eighth-grader asks if Berkshire would buy any businesses in China or India. Buffett says they would like to, and if lucky Berkshire could buy one or two companies over the next few years somewhere overseas. Buffett says he doesn't know if that will be Germany, Britain or some other company.

    2:50 A shareholder asks what can we do as common shareholders to lower executive compensation. Buffett says you can't do much, but there is only a handful of people who could do much. Buffett says big institutional shareholders withholding votes and registering why might be one way. Buffett says chief executives don't like to be embarrassed and it will make boards of directors sit up and take notice. Buffett says it would not take many of the big institutions, only a few of the biggest, the press would do the rest and boards would take notice. Buffett says it takes real, effective pressure to get people to give up self interest. Munger says the people taking the compensation have a moral duty not to take it. Munger says leaders should be underpaid. Munger says it is very difficult to implement those measures.

    2:53 A shareholder asks about tracking the innovation pipeline of pharmaceutical companies. Buffett says it is hard to do, and it changes every five years or so. Buffett says if you buy pharmaceutical stocks, a group of them, at reasonable prices, you probably will do well. Buffett says he doesn't know how to pick any one of them.

    2:58 A shareholder asks about Chinese companies learning from American companies, such as Berkshire. Buffett says U.S. companies may have a lot to learn from China. He says the country is just realizing its potential and it is very impressive. Buffett says people from China should take what they can that is good from American companies and leave the rest behind. He says he is not sure the Chinese want to take some American practices with them to China.

    3:01 A shareholder asks what is Buffett's hope for Berkshire. Buffett says he hopes the culture remains, and it is strong with good managers and a strong board of directors. Buffett says he would like family-owned companies look to Berkshire as a place to grow. Munger says he hopes more in the business world look to Berkshire and learn from it. Munger says a great deal has happened at Berkshire that others could learn from. The crowd game Buffett and Munger a standing ovation. ( source: here )

And of course, this annual meeting is hot news.

And of course, this is Jason Zweig take on the event. Buffett to investors: Think small

  • Note: What follows is based on a best-effort attempt to take accurate notes of a fast-moving discussion and does not purport to be an exact transcript of Buffett and Munger's remarks.

    "We would be very happy if we earned 10%, pre-tax" on the additions to Berkshire's equity portfolio, said Buffett. "Anyone that expects us to come close to replicating the past should sell their stock; it isn't going to happen. We'll get decent results over time, but not indecent results." Added Munger: "You can take what Warren said to the bank. We are very happy at making money at a rate in the future that's much less than the past... and I suggest that you adopt the same attitude."

    "We think Berkshire is an attractive investment [at today's price]," said Buffett. "We don't think it's the most attractive in the world."

    Both men made it clear that their preference now is to acquire 100% ownership of private businesses at a "fair" price and to increase BRK's interest in companies that get substantial portions of their earnings in non-U.S. currencies.

    "We are happy to invest in businesses that earn their money in euros in France or Italy or sterling in the UK, because I don't have a feeling that those currencies are likely to depreciate against the dollar," said Buffett. "Overall I think that the U.S. continues to follow policies that will make the dollar weaken against other major currencies.... I feel no need to hedge purchases of companies that earn profits in other currencies." Buffett added that major U.S. multinationals, like Coca-Cola (KO, Fortune 500), are a natural hedge against the dollar, since they earn most of their profits offshore -- which, he said, "will be a net plus over time."

    Asked what's in store for the economy, Buffett said he doesn't have a clue and doesn't care.

    "I haven't the faintest idea," he said. "We never talk about it, it never comes up in our board meetings or other discussions. We're not in that business [of economic forecasting], we don't know how to be in that business. If we knew where the economy was going, we'd do nothing but play the S&P futures market."

    His simple point: As an investor, you don't need to predict the economic cycle (or even pay much attention to it). Instead, you should focus on evaluating individual businesses if you pick your own stocks -- or, simply buy the entire market in the form of an index fund. When a shareholder asked for the single best specific investment idea Buffett could recommend to an individual in his 30s, Buffett said: "I would just have it all in a very low-cost index fund from a reputable firm, maybe Vanguard. Unless I bought during a strong bull market, I would feel confident that I would outperform...and I could just go back and get on with my work."

    In response to a similar question from an investor asking how Berkshire (BRKA, Fortune 500) would invest differently if it had only a few million dollars to put to work, Buffett advised him to think small. "That would open up thousands of opportunities," said Buffett. Earlier this year there were "very mispriced bonds" that "we could buy nowhere near enough of to make a difference to Berkshire," but a smaller investor could have exploited. "Most of the opportunities would probably be in small stocks or in specialized bond situations."

    On succession
    Asked about succession, Buffett (who is 77) and Munger (who is 84) had this to say:

    "On the CEO front, we have three [internal candidates] who could step in," said Buffett. "The board is unanimous in knowing which one it would be, although the answer might change with time.... In terms of the [chief] investment officer, the board has four names, any one or all of whom would be good at my job. They all are happy where they are now [working outside of Berkshire], but any would be here tomorrow if I died tonight, they all are reasonably young, and compensation would not be a big factor.... There will be no gap after my death in terms of having someone manage the money. They'll be much more energetic [than I am] and may even have a better record."

    Added Munger: "We still have a rising young man here named Warren Buffett. And I think we want to encourage this rising young man to reach his full potential." At this point, Buffett interjected: "At the average age of 80, we're aging at the average rate of only 1 1/4% per year. That's a lot better than younger people."

    From the Cubs, to China

    Later, asked by a teen shareholder whether he is interested in buying the Chicago Cubs (currently on sale by the Tribune Co. for roughly $700 million), Buffett said he did not need the "psychic income" and would not swing at the offer.

    Asked whether Berkshire will seek to purchase entire private companies based in China or India, Buffett responded: "We would like to. If we get lucky, we'll buy one or two in the next three or four years. I don't know if it will be in China, India, Germany, the U.K. or Japan -- there's a lot of luck in that in terms of families thinking of us specifically.... But you will see the day that BRK owns businesses in both countries [India and China]."

    Despite its huge cash hoard, Berkshire won't be paying a dividend anytime soon. "The test," said Buffett, "is whether you can continue to create more than $1 for every $1 you're retaining." He and Munger feel they still can put surplus cash to work and earn a higher return with it than shareholders could on their own, after tax, if BRK paid it out. "If we can turn $1 in dividends into $1.10 or $1.20 on a present-value basis, they're better off if we don't pay out. When the day comes, it should be paid out. But because we still have this ability to redistribute money in a tax-efficient way within the company, we can reallocate it," he said, where it will earn a higher return than shareholders may be able to on their own."

Yes, one should note what Jason is saying here. The Q&A discussions are rather fast moving and sometimes things will be written out of context! It has happened many times before and will continue to happen!

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Here is another fantastic compilation: here

  • Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting, Omaha NE 2008
    May 3, 2008

    Typewritten notes courtesy of Peter Boodell

    (As is standard, no recording equipment was used to reproduce these notes. As a result, these notes are recollections only – not quotes, and should not be relied upon. –PB)

    A short introductory skit – Susan Lucci from All My Children walks on stage:

    CM: Where could he be?

    Susan Lucci: Detained at the TV studio. Hi Charlie, I’m Susan Lucci. He’s going to be a big star.
    CM: You have some important qualities that Warren lacks.

    SL: There are some changes we need to make. We need to change our dividend policy. We are so cheap to our shareholders.

    CM: Sounds good to me.

    SL: And I want guidance on earnings, weekly. And we need to pay our directors more than $900/yr. [directors stand up and applaud]

    [WB walks in]

    WB: What’s that talk about dividends? My show is Berkshire Hathaway – All My Children can’t do without you, and I can’t do without Berkshire.

    SL: The deal is off?

    WB: You’ve brought me back to my senses. Pick out anything you would like at Borsheim’s, and charge it to Charlie.

    WB: We are going to follow usual procedure. We are going to answer questions between now and then, based on who gets lined up at microphone first. Our best estimate is 31k people are here to today.

    We have Charlie Munger - he can hear and I can see - we work together for that reason. Hold your applause until the end. Howard Buffett, Bill Gates, Don Keogh, Tom Murphy, Walter Scott, Don Olson. The best directors in America.

    We’ll take a break at noon.
    Q1: Rajesh Vora, Bombay India. I salute your 100% honesty. What key states to correct crowd mindset?

    CM: He wants to know how to become less like a lemming.

    WB: Since you repeated the question, I’ll let you give first answer.

    CM: He wants to invest less like a lemming.

    WB: I started investing when I was 11. I believe in reading everything in sight. I wandered for 8 yrs with technical analysis. I read Intelligent Investor, chapters 8 and 20 I recommend, and if you absorb it you won’t be a lemming. I read it early in 1950, and I think as good a book now as then. You can’t get a bad result if you follow it. There is another book out there, Food You Will Enjoy about the Buffett family grocery store. Neither of us were any good at groceries. You don’t want to pay attention to my Grandfather’s advice on stocks. It has three big lessons, a) stock is a part of a business b) market serves you doesn’t instruct, and c) margin of safety. Berkshire holders are better than most at understanding that they own a part of a business.

    Q2: George from Cologne Germany. How is operational integration of Cologne Re?

    WB: 95% subsidiary of General Re, of which we own 100%. Oldest reinsurance company in world. It does a wonderful job. We have a process in place such that we will soon own 100% of Cologne. It runs fine as it is. They have run own portfolio, but I will take responsibility for Cologne’s investment portfolio. We will consolidate 100% rather than 95%.

    Q3: Sam from Fort Lee. Recession, stock market up in April. What next?

    WB: I could expand on that question, but I couldn’t answer it. Charlie and I haven’t the faintest idea where it goes next week, next month or next year. We are not in that business. It isn’t our game. We see 1,000s of companies priced every day. We ignore 99% of what we see. Every now and then, we find an attractive price for a business. When we buy it, we would be happy if market was closed for a few years. Wouldn’t get a price quote daily on a farm. We look at expected yield, cost of taxes. If you buy a farm, you would look at cost of fertilizers, what a farm produces relative to purchase price, price per acre, production per acre, etc.. We make judgments.

    CM: Nothing to add.

    WB: He’s been practicing for weeks.

    Q4: Chandra from Seattle. I am bad at hiring good managers. How do you assess capabilities.

    WB: You have to understand that we cheat. If you give me 100 mba’s (I am meeting over 30 schools this year), I no more could take the 100 and rank them - it would be impossible. We buy businesses with great management in place. We have seen their record. They come with business. Our job is not to select great managers, our job is to retain them. A majority are wealthy. They don’t have a monetary reason to work in many cases. We have nineteen people at headquarters, and 250k around world. Our job is to make sure they have same enthusiasm. We have to see passion in eyes and believe the passion will remain, but we can create an environment to keep them happy. At these annual meetings, we tell them what a great job they did and make them feel appreciated. We don’t have contracts – it doesn’t work. Our managers are appreciated. I can’t be of help if you are looking at group of MBAs. They know at this point in life how to fool you, what answers to give you. I would look for person with passion for job, doing more than their share, good communicators. At baseball you have to hang up cleats at 40, but our guys go on and on and on. Mrs B worked till 103, then died the next year. That’s a good lesson for our managers. [laughter]

    CM: Story of Howard Amundsen, a young man asked him how do you get ahead? He replied, ‘I always keep a few million dollars lying around just in case a good opportunity shows up’.

    Q5: Would you use stock options to enter a position in a public co?

    WB: If you want to buy or sell a stock, you should buy or sell a stock. We sold puts on Coca-cola once, but usually it is best to just buy stock. Using option technique is an idea where you get to buy a stock cheap. 4 out of 5 times you get it right and one time you may miss the opportunity to buy. We virtually have never used options to enter or exit a position. We have sold long term equity put options described in press report. We don’t get involved in fancy techniques.

    CM: If I remember right, a public authority was wondering if they should set up an option exchange market. Warren was alone in the opinion (against it). You wrote a letter saying it wouldn’t do any good to throw out margin rules in this fashion. It doesn’t serve the country. I always thought Warren was totally right. Turning financial markets into gambling markets to enrich the croupiers doesn’t make sense.
    WB: A University of Chicago Graduate student asked me once, what are we being taught that is wrong? In business school the amount of time spent teaching option pricing is total nonsense. You only need 2 courses, how to value a business and how to think about stock market fluctuations. The thing is that instructors know the formulas and you don’t, so they have something to fill the time. It has nothing to do with investment success – what matters is buying businesses at the right price. If you were teaching Biblical studies and you could read the Bible forward, backward and in four different languages, you would find it hard to tell everyone that it comes down to the Ten Commandments. The priests want to spend a lot of time preaching. You must have attitude where you aren’t influenced by market. You need a mindset, and you need to have the attitude to divorce yourself from letting the market influence you.

    Q6: Germany. You are both generous. Joys of giving, pitfalls of donating money?

    WB: I’ve never given up anything that made a difference to me. There are people that drop in the collection plate an amount that makes a difference in their lives. I’ve never given a penny that way. I’ve lived a long time which gives you a huge advantage in accumulating money. I’m giving away excess, not necessity. What I am doing is useful, but it isn’t on a par with people who give real money. Doris gives away money and time which is a real cost – gives help beyond the money. She is retail, I am wholesale. You should give to things that you personally have interest in. I won’t prioritize your giving.

    CM: Regarding pitfalls, I would predict that if you have an extreme political ideology, you are very likely to make a lot of dumb charitable gifts.

    WB: If you hang around Charlie enough, you get the sunnyside of life.

    Q7: Bombay. Ethical dilemma? Fruit of loom have competitors with sweatshops?

    WB: We let managers run businesses, and their standards over the years have been extraordinary. I am very happy turning over keys of financial and business performance. I write them a letter every two years, and I ask them to send a letter with successor. I also tell them we have all the money we need. We never want to trade reputation for money. Not only do they behave to conform with the law, but act as if there was going to be a story in local paper in morning written by intelligent investigative reporter. There are no budgets, we have no incentives to cause people to do anything or push people to play games.

    CM: We have no rule against foreign plants. We don’t favor foreign plants, we just do what makes sense. The US was doing one billion of shoes per year, 30yrs ago. We tried to compete, great brand and workmanship. We found out it wouldn’t work against shoes produced in china. There are one billion shoes now in USA but all produced outside of US. Some of those factories don’t have same norms. We won’t tell world how to run business. We have standards, but not all same as USA.

    Q8: Financial foghorn. Iscar and tungsten. Will it affect profitability of Iscar? Why locating plant in China?

    WB: Reason Iscar plant built in China was to serve China, growing. Nice to be near raw material, but geographic plant decision has nothing to do with changes in price of product. If you are creating higher value add like Iscar, there may be 3-6mnth adjustment to raw material prices. But there won’t be substitutes for tungsten as raw material for cutting tools in near term. Raw materials do get passed through. In carpet business, oil based raw materials are having more trouble passing costs. Over time it will pass through. But we’d be having trouble in that anyway. This candy will reflect sugar and cocoa over time. You can have squeezes here and there, not a big deal. Facility in Dalian – I have very high expectations for Iscar, exceeded in every way, both financial and human relations.

    CM: I would say that short answer is that while we don’t like inflation because it is bad for country and civilization, we will probably make more money over time because there is inflation.

    Q9: Melbourne Auz. Berkshire has bought a lot of shares in last twelve months in listed companies. Do you expect return to be between 7-10% pa over many years? Well below achievements in past.

    WB: Yes. We would be very happy if we could buy pretax returns of 10%, dividends included. We would probably settle for a little less than that. Berkshire returns will be less, no question, in future than in past. We operate now in universe of marketable stocks with caps of 10bil, but really 50bil and up in order to have an impact. This universe is not as profitable. If we find 10bil, a 5% position is 500mil. If it doubles, we make 325m, this is less than 2/10ths of 1%. We have found things to do time to time to make money. They are nice, but don’t move needle much at Berkshire. Anyone who expects us to replicate past should sell their stock. We’ll get decent returns, but not indecent returns.

    CM: You can take Warren’s promises to bank. We are happy making money at lower rate in future, and we suggest you adopt the same attitude. You may have better things to do with your money than buying Berkshire. You will find things that are more intelligent, if you spend the time. We don’t think it is the most attractive investment in world. We like buying good size to very large with good management. Nice formula, it should work well over time.

    Q10: Pacific Corp / Klamath River.

    WB: First dam built in 1907. We are prohibited from commenting on this. There are strong disagreements.

    David Sokol: It was inappropriate for Mr Buffett to respond. These four dams on Klamath river, there are whole series of issues in the federal regulatory relicensing process. It will be ongoing for eight years. It won’t culminate for another six years. There are twenty eight various parties that are party to a discussion about what should or not happen with these assets. Of these twenty eight parties, there are four different directions that this process should go. We will be pleased to find a resolution. It is up to regulatory commission, state legislators, then each regulator in each state. When public policy moves in direction of removal, fish ladders etc. We are working constructively with each of the parties. We have met with each of the parties, and hope we find an acceptable compromise.

    Q11: Dilesh, California. How do you maintain your good mental and physical health?

    WB: You start with a balanced diet. [laughter] If Charlie and I can’t have a decent attitude, who can? We get to do what we like every day, and we work with people who love to do what they do. We are not forced to do what we don’t want. I get to do what I like everyday. We are very blessed in so many ways. How could you be sour? Charlie is 84 and I am 77. We have slowed down but we pretend we haven’t. There is no reason to look at minuses in life. It would be crazy. We count our blessings. Not much more to it than that.

    CM: I wish we were poster boys for benefits of running marathons with slim bodies, but as much as you can tell we don’t pay attention to health advocates and dietary rules. I for one don’t plan to change.

    WB: From moment we get up, till we go to sleep, we are associating with wonderful people. We are biased, we live in best country in world. We could have stayed in grandfather’s store and would have been terrible.

    CM: You are in a job you would pay to have, and you are supposed to be an exemplar – there is a lot to be said for not paying yourself very well.

    WB: On corporate compensations, the idea that you have to pay someone $10 million dollars in pensions just to keep him around… there’s something wrong in that.

    CM: Executives should volunteer to get paid less.

    Q12: Germany, high school. What should I do with my life?

    WB: We prefer questions that are harder. [laughter]

    Q12 cont: what would you do if you started over?

    WB: You have to find your passion in life. I would choose same job. I enjoy it. It is a terrible mistake to sleep walk through your life. Unless Shirley Maclain is right you won’t have another one. Dad had a business, with books on his shelves and they turned me on. This was before Playboy. If he was a minister I’m not sure I would have been as enthused. If you have obligations, you have to deal with realities. Go to work for organization you admire or an individual you admire. Which also means most MBAs I meet would be self employed. [laughter] I went to work for Ben Graham. I never asked my salary. Get the right spouse. Charlie talks about the man who spent twenty years looking for a perfect woman and found her. Unfortunately she was looking for perfect man. If you are lucky, you will be happy and as a result you will behave better. It makes it easier.

    CM: You’ll do better if you have passion for something in which you have aptitude. If Warren had gone into ballet, no one would have heard of him.

    WB: Or would have heard of me very differently.

    Q13: What advice would you give to the quieter population to raise their visibility and gain recognition they deserve?

    WB: I avoided all classes that had public speaking, I got physically ill if I had to speak. I signed up for Dale Carnegie course. Gave them check for $100, then I went home and stopped payment on check. I was in Omaha, took $100 cash to Wally Kean, I took that Carnegie course, and then I went to University of Omaha to start teaching – knowing I had to get in front of people. Ability to communicate in writing and speaking – it is under taught – and enormously important. If you can communicate well, you have an enormous advantage. Force yourself into situations where you have to develop those abilities. At Dale Carnegie – they made us stand on tables. I may have gone too far. You are doing something very worthwhile if you are helping introverted people get outside of themselves.

    CM: It is a pleasure to have an educator come who is doing something simple and important rather than foolish and unimportant.

    WB: I hope he won’t name names [laughter].

    Q14: Klamath River.

    WB: Regulator will deal with issues, when government gets involved in eminent domain there are always tradeoffs. Overall you have people with widely different interests. A big interest is cost of electricity. Every commission who makes decision on coal vs gas makes a tradeoff, and tradeoffs are partly economic cost and partly other issues. FERC will listen to everyone. They have to listen to everyone. We will do exactly what they say. We follow the dictates of regulatory bodies. They give us a fair return. From the standpoint of profitability, it is neutral. Society will make the decision.

    Sokol: We distributed a study that found an accumulation of bio-algae and microsystin. There are 27 other lakes in Oregon with that type of blue green algae. It is created from lakes that have high abundance of nutrients. Klamath lake is hyper-eutropic – great abundance of algae and nutrients. 4 reservoirs. FERC does take it into account. Some do not call for removal of dam. All the parties will need to come to agreement.

    Q15: Henry Patner, from Singapore. From the partnership letters in 1964, strategy called generals relatively undervalued. We have recently begun to implement a technique, we buy something at 12x, when comps sell at 20x. Comps go to 10x. Is this pair trading?

    WB: Yes, didn’t know we started so early. Ben Graham did it in 1920. He did pairs trading. He was right 4 out of 5, but the last one would kill him. We shorted market to some degree, and we would borrow stocks from universities. We were early in this. We wouldn’t short a stock because it was unattractive but as a general market short. ) I would borrow from Treasurer of Columbia, “which ones do you want”, “just give me any of them”. It provoked some odd looks. It was not a big deal, we might have made a little money on it in 1960s, but it is not something we do these days.. If you have good ideas on businesses that are undervalued, it is not necessary to short. 130/30 is being marketed today. Many will sell you the idea of day. No great statistical merit.

    CM: We made our money by being long wonderful businesses, not in long short.

    Q16: Germany, fixed income markets at discounts. Will you take advantage?

    WB: We have seen some important dislocations. I’ve brought some figures. Tax exempt money market funds [auction facilities]. $330b of them. Repricing of first grade muni’s every 7 days. LA County Museum of Art. Jan 24th: 3.1%. Jan 31st: 4.1%. Feb 7th: 8%. Feb 14th: 10%. Fell back down to 3% on Feb 21st. Now 4.2%. Somehow rates were much higher on Valentine’s day. Look at bid sheet of Citigroup. Repricing every 7 days. You would find same issue on several different pages. Same broker at same time on different pages quoting different prices. On one page we bid 11%, and someone else bid 6%. You found this in 1974, after LTCM. These are great times to make extra money. Auctions in esoteric securities. We have $4bil in it. We will have made some insignificant money in this for a few months. There may be opportunities that we can’t spot. If you have enough time you can figure out something that are really mispriced. We don’t play with that, just don’t have enough time. If you spend enough time you may find those that Charlie and I can’t find because we just can’t look at that many things.

    CM: What is interesting is how brief these opportunities are. Some idiot bought muni’s, bought 20x what he could afford at incredible margin, those things were dumped on margin calls and suddenly got really mispriced. The dislocation was very brief, but very extreme. The moves are fast and short. You must think fast, resolutely. You have to be like man who stands by a stream and fish comes by once a year.

    WB: 2002 junk bond market happened.

    CM: Very big dislocations happen about twice a century.

    WB: That means we only have 4, 5 times we can do it

    Q17: India, how to grow small business into big business?

    WB: Berkshire was a small business at one time. It just takes time, it is nature of compound interest. You can’t build it in one day, or one week. Charlie and I never tried to do a master stroke to convert Berkshire into something four times bigger. We have felt and kept doing what we have understood consistently and have fun doing it then it’ll be something quite large at some point. Nothing magical. It would be nice to multiply money in a few weeks. In a general way we have done same things for years. We will have more businesses in a few years, some will do worse, most will do better. It is an automatic formula for getting ahead, but not galloping. We are happy not doing anything at all. As Gypsy Rose Lee said, I have everything I had before, just two inches lower. We want everything in 2 yrs to be higher.

    CM: It’s nature of things that most small businesses will never be big businesses. It is the nature of things that most big businesses fall into mediocrity or worse. Most players have to die. We have only made one new business, and that is the reinsurance business – run by Ajit. We only created from scratch one small business into a big one. We’ve only done it once. We are a one trick pony.

    WB: Without Ajit we wouldn’t have done it all.

    CM: Best investment we ever made was the fee we paid to executive recruiter to find Ajit Jain.

    WB: We went into muni-bond business. He got companies up licensed and running. In Q1’08, our premium was $400m. Our volume was bigger than anyone else, and I wouldn’t be surprised if bigger than rest combined. They did 278 transactions. All done in office with 29 or 30 people. One of interesting things about it, almost all the business was from people who needed the insurance. In every case they had insurance already from others, and they are rated AAA, so we paid if muni AND bond insurer didn’t pay. We wrote for 2.25%, original guy charged 1%. This tells you something about AAA in bond insurance in 2008. Ajit has done a remarkable job. We wrote a couple primaries for Detroit sewers, and people have found these bonds trading at better price than other bond insurers. I congratulate Ajit for it.

    Q18: If you can’t talk with management, and can’t read annual report, and didn’t know price. But only looked at financial statements, what metric would you look at?

    WB: Investing is laying out money now to get more money later on. Let’s leave market price out. Thinking about bushels per acre – you are looking to asset itself. Do I understand enough about business so that financials will be able to tell me meaningful things that will help me to foresee the statements in the future? I have bought stocks on the way you describe. They were in businesses I understood, and if I could buy at 40% of X, I’d be okay with margin of safety. If you don’t tell me nature of business, financial statements won’t tell me much. We’ve bought securities – and most we’ve never met management. We use our general understanding of business and look to specifics from financial statements.

    CM: One metric catches people. We prefer businesses that drown in cash. An example of a different business is construction equipment. You work hard all year and there is your profit sitting in the yard. We avoid businesses like that.

    WB: Apartments. We could value it if you know where apartment is, and know the monthly checks. I have bought a lot of things off the financials. There is a lot I wouldn’t buy even if best management in world, as it doesn’t make much difference in a bad business.

    Q19: Klamath River [again].

    WB: Net benefits vs. losses must be weighed. There are lots of competing ideas and desires in a large society. It is up to government to sort it out. People are coming to different conclusions about trade offs, and generally those are at state level. The Oregon Public Utility Commission I am sure is aware of issue. They have to consider best way to generate electricity for citizens of Oregon.

    Sokol: We want to clarify that we are not polluting water. We recognize various issues. We have a 50 year FERC license. A societal answer hopefully will be reached.

    CM: I note how refreshing it is to find people addressing a pollution problem that has nothing to do with burning carbon.

    Q20: Philadelphia, I’m 12 yrs. There are a lot of things they don’t teach you in school, what things should I be looking into?

    WB: I’d read a daily newspaper. You want to learn about world around you. Bill Gates quit at letter P in World Book Encyclopedia. Just sop it up, and find what is most interesting to you. More you learn, the more you want to learn. It is fun.

    CM: My suggestion is that the young person has already figured out how to succeed in life.

    Q21: Germany. Wertheimer. Chocolate industry. I can not buy See’s Candies in Bonn Germany. See’s candies vs. Lindt. Sees’ 20% profit. Growth okay. Lindt does 14%, but now global. Which is better, high profits with low growth, or high growth with lower profits?

    WB: It doesn’t make difference. We want a company with durable advantage, which we understand, can trust management, at a good price. We’ve looked at every confectionary business. We can sometimes take action. If you have a good private business, the best thing to do is to keep it. No reason to sell it. You don’t need the billion – it’s just a farm. We never urge people to sell good businesses, and we don’t urge them to sell. They can keep more of the attributes they love by selling to Berkshire. We are a larger buyer. Most people shouldn’t sell us their business. We want them to think of us. We want to be on radar screen. We are going to get more on radar screen in Europe. There is a price we would buy stock in Lindt, but it is unlikely to sell there. Many CEOs want to sell to me, but there are thousands of businesses in the world. We should buy most attractive amongst ones we understand and like. Stocks give you bargains, but individual owners won’t. But we will do it at a fair price. We aren’t going to look for a given confectionary company.

    CM: We don’t do anything when phrase regardless of price enters the equation. I watched a man who sold a business to known crook just for a higher price, but who you knew would ruin the business. It’s better to sell companies you created to someone who would be a good steward at a lower price.

    Q22: How do you hedge euro?

    WB: We are happy to invest in businesses overseas as I don’t think currencies will depreciate in a big way. We could offset, but overall the US will follow policies that will make USD weaker. I’d bet weaker over next 10 years, so feel no need to hedge earnings generated overseas. If I landed from Mars today, with a billion Mars dollars, and was thinking about where to put money… What would I like to exchange? I wouldn’t put 1bil Mars dollars into USD. I don’t mind earnings overseas. We own 200mil shrs of Coca-cola. That is $600m of earnings to us, and $500m from rest of world. I think a net plus over time. We are not in business of hedging currencies.

    CM: Nothing to add.

    Q23: With small sums of money, what strategies would you pursue?

    WB: If I were working with small sums of money, it would open up thousands of possibilities. We found very mispriced bonds. We found them in Korea a few years ago. You made big returns but had to be small size. I wouldn’t be in currencies with small amount of money. I had a friend who used to buy tax liens. I’d look in small stocks or specialized bonds. Wouldn’t you say that Charlie?

    CM: Sure.

    Q24: St Louis. Huge confusion now, what advice do you have? Three candidates are pandering to voters – some not demonstrating profound understanding of economics. Decrease interest rates? Won’t we have gigantic inflation?

    WB: Politics are difficult. Famous line about what would you do if elected? ‘I would demand a recount’. Truth is you get lots of pandering in policies proposed. Candidates are pretty smart about economics. Political process is something that doesn’t lend itself to Douglas Lincoln debates on fine points. I think current candidates will be better in office than on stump. We have a country that works well regardless of who is in office. You want to buy stock in a business that is so good because sooner or later an idiot will run it. I think we have three very good candidates. Motivations of people running it are better than their proclamations. You may win badge for courage but won’t win presidency in Iowa if against ethanol.

    CM: When Enron shocked nation, our politicians passed Sarbanes-Oxley. We are currently shooting at an elephant with a peashooter. I confidently predict we will have changes in regulation, and they won’t work for everybody. Human nature always has incentives to rationalize and misbehave. We will have this turmoil as far ahead as you can see.

    WB: I would gladly pay to have this job. Let’s assume I was campaigning for this job, and if so, my answers might be different. It is a corrupting process, naturally. There is a boom in oil and also in soybeans. Because of increases in food prices, would anyone expect to propose an excess profits tax on farmers? But what about an excess profits tax on Exxon? Situational ethics and policy making depends a lot on voters. Not sure I’d be able to do better, but if I wanted to be President, not sure my behavior wouldn’t be bad too. Any one of the three candidates will do well in White House. But I think they will do what is best for country.

    Q25: Succession. Plan for CFO. Update?

    WB: We have three CEOs who could step in. Board will pick someone for CEO. For investment officer, Board has four names. As we’ve discussed, any one or all of four would be good or better than me at this job. Any one of four would be here tomorrow if I died tonight. They are all reasonably young, and all well to do. Compensation is not a major factor. Any of four would come. No reason to come now. I worked for Ben Graham. But in end I wanted to make decisions, I prefer to make my own decisions. It is better in this case. When I’m not around to make decisions – Board will decide how many to use. They will be heavily influenced by incoming CEO by how he wants to work with them. There will be no gap. They could easily have better record than my recent record.

    CM: We have a rising young man here named Warren Buffett. I think we want to encourage this rising young man to reach his full potential.

    WB: On corporate America aging issue, I think we are doing fine. Our average age is eighty, so we are only aging at 1.25% per year – lowest rate of aging in corporate America. If you have 50 year old management team, they age 2% every year, I think you run bigger risk there.

    Q26: New York City. American Express and Washington Post – big positions. How do you get confident enough?

    WB: If we were running only our own money, 75% of net worth outside Berkshire has never been a significant amount. Several times I have had 75% of my non-Berkshire net worth in a situation. You will see things where it would be a mistake not to act. You won’t see them often, and the press and your friends won’t be talking about them.

    CM: Sometimes I have had more than 100% in individual investments.

    WB: You just had a good banker.

    WB: Look at LTCM – they put 25x their money in things that had to converge – but couldn’t play out the hand. There are people in this room with more than 90% of their worth in Berkshire. I saw things in 2002 in junk bonds. You could have bought Cap Cities in 1974 – selling for 1/3 the property value, with best manager and in a good business. You could have put 100% in Coca-cola when we bought it and that wouldn’t have been a dangerous position.

    CM: Students learn corporate finance at business schools. They are taught that the whole secret is diversification. But the exact rule is the opposite. The ‘know-nothing’ investor should practice diversification. Diversify– but it is crazy if you are an expert. If you only put 20% in the opportunity of a lifetime – you are a not being rational. Very seldom do we get to buy as much of any good idea as we would like to.

    Q27: Boys town. I represent Parent’s TV Council. Want to keep toxic violence off television. Berkshire is a bad advertiser?

    WB: Geico – we spend $700m on advertising. I don’t regard them as offensive. Please contact Tony Nicely, he is here. I can’t think of another company that advertises as much.

    Q28: NJ. 45 yrs old, able to manage money of spouse and myself full time. Goes to marrying well. I wanted to ask diversification question. Each of us has a traditional and Roth IRA. Should assets in those accounts be separated, or managed as a single entity?

    WB: Sounds like your marriage will last. Think of it as one unit. Don’t worry about location of assets. Just look at whole picture. Don’t treat in separate pots. I don’t think about what entities things are in. With that I’ll turn it to our marital expert Charlie Munger.

    CM: Taxable income may be more suitable for tax deferral. Apart from that, all one pot.

    Q29: Doug Hicks, Akron Ohio. Oil will run out this century. Considering US policy is to do nothing until last second, will we face World War III? Will oil companies go to zero?

    WB: Oil won’t run out - it doesn’t work this way. At some point the daily productive capacity will level off and then start declining gradually. There is the depletion aspect and the decline curves. We are producing 86m barrels per day or so, more than ever produced. We are closer, by my calculations, to almost our productive capacity, than we have ever been. I think our surplus capacity is less, and quite a bit less, than in past. Whatever that peak is, whether 5 or 10 yrs, the world will adjust, and we will think about it. Adjustments will cause demand to taper off. I don’t know how much oil is there, but there are lots of barrels of oil in place. We never recover total potential. We may have better engineering recovery in future. It is nothing like an on and off switch. You may still have enormous political considerations to get access to avail oil since it so important. There is nothing you can do over short period of time to wean world off oil.

    CM: If we get another 200 yrs of growth dispersed over the world while population goes up, all oil coal and uranium will run out so you will have to use the sun. I think there will be some pain in this process. I think it is stupid to use up hydrocarbons of world so quickly. Stupid when there are few and limited alternatives. What should we have done? We should have brought all the oil over from Middle East and put it in our ground. Are we doing it now? No. Government policy is behind in rationality. If we have prosperous civilization, we must use the sun.

    WB: Charlie, what is your over/under for oil production in 25 yrs?

    CM: Oil in twenty five years, down.

    WB: If this is true, that is big number. China is doing 10m cars this year, so down in 25ys is significant.

    Q30: Please name three policy decisions to better the country.

    WB: Charlie will serve first term, so he’ll answer first.

    CM: That takes us so far afield. Three perfect solutions to problems of mankind, we are not up to it.

    WB: I would do something about tax system. Super rich pay more, middle class pay a little less.

    Q31: Arizona. Food shortages, trends in next decade?

    CM: I said last year that policy of turning American corn into motor fuel was one of dumbest ideas in future of the world. I fly here with a head of academics – he agreed, it was stunningly stupid. It is probably on its way out.

    Q32: Timothy Ferris, Princeton guest lecturer. Imagine you are investing with small sums of money at 30yrs old, with your first $1mil. Your savings can cover expenses for 18 months. You are not a full time investor, no dependents. What advice do you have, please be as specific as possible.

    WB: Put it all in a low cost index fund. Vanguard. Reliable, low cost. Not professional, thus an amateur. Unless bought during strong bull market, that investment would outperform bonds over long period of time and I would forget it and go back to work.

    CM: The great horde of professionals taking croupier profits out of system, and most of them pretending to be experts. If you don’t have prospects as a professional investor, do an index fund.

    WB: No one will give you that advice since it doesn’t make anyone money. You will get a good return. Why should you expect more than that when you don’t bring anything to the party?

    Q33: Austin Texas. For children, can you give them advice about keeping up with the Joneses?

    WB: Just keep up with the Buffett’s. [laughter] We’ve always been fans of living within your means and income. You’ll have a lot more income later on. They will follow example of their parents. Parents don’t covet other people’s belongings, don’t increase cost of living which is not necessarily increasing quality of living. If you go too tough on children they go crazy later on. There are plenty of people I don’t advise to save. If you already have money in 401k and Social Security with a little left, who is to say you should give up taking your children to Disney world and the associated happiness now for a 30foot boat later vs. 20foot boat later. There are benefits to spending now. It is not always better to save 10% than 5%, but definitely better than spending 105%. You need to live a life that is true to yourself. We don’t encourage extreme frugality. You are not a better or worse person if you live differently from your neighbor.

    CM: Best method is to train your child.

    Q34: Idaho. Are investment banks too complicated? Risks unknown.

    WB: Exceptionally good question. Answer probably yes in most places, though there are a few CEOs I respect a lot. Gen Re had 23k derivative contracts. I could have spent full time on that, and I probably still couldn’t have gotten my head around it all. And we had exposures that I thought were possible and heads of business units didn’t – I don’t want slim, I want none. I am Chief Risk Officer. If something goes wrong, I can not assign to committee. I think big investment banks and big commercial banks are almost too big to manage effectively in way they have elected to run their business. It will work most of time. You may not see the risk. A 1 in 50 year risk - it won’t be in interest of 62 year old executive who is retiring at 65 to worry about it. I worry about everything. Many CEOs say they didn’t know about what was going on. It’s easier to admit he doesn’t know what’s going on than to admit that he knew what was going on and let it go on. I’ve been asked for advice on regulation. Somehow press hasn’t picked up on this too much. OFHEO supervised Fannie and Freddie – activities had public element, and were semi-regulated. For 200 people it was their sole job to examine the books. They were 2 for 2 with 2 of biggest accounting scams in history of world. Person at top must have it in their DNA to see risks. In many ways, there are firms that in terms of risk are too big to manage. If too big to fail, there are interesting policy implications.

    CM: It is crazy to allow things to get too big to fail, run with knavery. As an industry, there is a crazy culture of greed and overreaching and overconfidence trading algorithms. It is demented to allow derivative trading such that clearance risks are embedded in system. Assets are all “good until reached for” on balance sheets. We had $400m of that at general re, “good until reached for”. In drug business you must prove it is good. It is a crazy culture, and to some extent an evil culture. Accounting people really failed us. Accounting standards ought to be dealt with like engineering standards.

    WB: Salomon was trading with Marc Rich who had fled country. They said they wanted to keep trading with him. Only by total directive could we stop it. I think Fed did right thing with Bear. They would have failed on Sunday night, and walked to a bankruptcy judge. They had 14.5tril of derivative contracts – not as bad as it sounds, but the parties that had those contracts would have been required to undo the contracts to establish the liability from the estate. The $400m at Gen Re we had took 4-5 yrs, at Bear it would have been 4-5hours. It would have been a spectacle. Two of witnesses said at testimony, ‘we understood we couldn’t borrow unsecured, but we didn’t understand we couldn’t borrow secured’. The world does not have to lend you money. If they don’t want to lend you money, an extra 10bps won’t make a difference. It depends on people’s willingness to lend you money which comes down to how other people feel about you. If you are dependent on borrowed money, you have to wake up every day worried about what world thinks of you.

    Q35: San Francisco. Petrochina in 2002, you just read annual report. Most professional investors have more resources at hand, wouldn’t you want to do more research? What do you look for in an annual like that? How could you make investment only on report?

    WB: I read it in Spring 2002, and I never asked anyone else their opinion. I thought worth 100bil. It was selling for 35bil. What is sense of talking to management? It doesn’t make any difference. At value of 40bil, you would need to refine analysis. We don’t like things you have to carry out to 3 decimal places. If someone weighed somewhere between 300-350 pounds, I wouldn’t need precision -- I would know they were fat. If you can’t make a decision on Petrochina off the figures, you go on to next one. You weren’t going to learn more if you thought their big field was going to decline out slightly faster, etc.

    CM: We have lower due diligence expenses than anyone in America. I know of a place that pays over 200mil to its accountants every year, and I know we are safer because we think like engineers – we want margins of reliability. It is a very dicey process.
    WB: If you think auditors know more about an acquisition then they should run the business and you should take up auditing. When we get call on Mars-Wrigley – I’m not going to look at labor or leases. Value of Wrigley does not depend on value of lease or environmental problem. There is a whole lot of trivia that doesn’t mean anything. I never made one that would have been avoided due to conventional due diligence. We would have lost deals. On big deals, people rely more and more on process. When people want a deal, they will come to us. They only wanted to deal with Berkshire - no lawyers involved and no directors involved. Got a call, it made sense, and I said yes. No material adverse change clause. Our $6.5bil will be available regardless, even if Ben Bernanke runs off to South America with Paris Hilton. That assurance is worth something. I’ll do it, but I need x,y,z – that is costly.

    Q36: Norman Oklahoma (“we’ll forgive that as Nebraskans”) – Do you believe in Jesus Christ?

    WB: I am an agnostic.

    CM: I don’t want to talk about my relationships.

    WB: Being an agnostic I don’t have to have an opinion.

    Q37: What safeguards are in place from breaking up Berkshire?

    WB: My stock will be sold over 12 yr period after my death. That takes a lot of time. You wouldn’t be dealing with a company that is much larger than we presently have, and large blocks – if someone wanted to try a 600bil takeover (and might be larger if you go out far enough), it will be hard. It can’t happen at all until I die (a lot of votes concentrated until then). I told my lawyer I wanted a ten year distribution period – to make sure estate lasts quite a while, to which my lawyer said that was like telling his teenage son to have a normal sex life. If we do decent compounding we’ll be largest in USA. Will be difficult to break us up.

    CM: Warren doesn’t plan to leave early. “That is the oldest looking corpse I ever saw”.

    WB: I am unlikely to change my views on that subject.

    Q38: Chicago: economic characteristics of Kraft.

    WB: Most of food businesses earn good returns on tangible assets. If you own important branded assets in this country, you have good assets, and it is not easy to take on those products. Just imagine Coca-cola. They sell 1.5bil servings every day. It has been in everyone’s mind since 1886 – associated with good value, happiness and refreshment. It is virtually impossible to take it on in huge way. It may not be same Kraft Koolaid. But I’m not sure I want to take on Koolaid. To implant RC Cola in people’s mind globally is very very difficult. A brand is a promise. Coca-cola delivers something to you. Virgin Cola – an unusual promise in a product. I couldn’t figure it out, and whatever it is it didn’t work. Don Keogh would know. Who would buy a can at 2cents a can less than Coca-cola? We feel pretty good about branded products as leaders in the field. There is nothing unusual about Kraft that’s different from Kellogg, some good factors are price. If you don’t pay too much, you will do okay. But you won’t get superrich, as attributes are well recognized.

    Q39: Kevin True – Chicago IL. 4 CIOs. Criteria?

    WB: Criteria in 2006 annual report. Records are important. Human qualities are important. We think we can make those judgments. We didn’t know if many would be good, so we made an affirmative judgment on four. We need someone who can see risks, especially ones that haven’t happened before. All the banks have models, but they didn’t have faintest idea. Need someone you trust with analytics, but also ability to contemplate new possibilities and risks. That is a rare quality. That inability to envision something not in models can be fatal. Charlie and I spend a lot of time thinking about things that could hit us out of the blue that other people don’t include in their thinking. We miss a lot of opportunities. But we think essential when managing other people’s money. You should read 2006 annual report again.

    CM: You can see how risk averse Berkshire is. We try to behave in a way so that no rational person will worry about our credit. We also try to behave in a way that if people don’t like our credit we wouldn’t notice for months. That double layering of protection against risk is like breathing. The alternative culture is you call a man a Chief Risk Officer, but often he is man who makes you feel good while you do dumb things. Like the Delphic oracle, a dumb soothsayer, and how can he do dumb things if he has a PHD and can do all the advanced math! You crave a system such that you torture reality to fit a structure that doesn’t match with extreme situations in reality, you feel confident because you compute the risks, but you haven’t -- you have just clobbered up your own head.

    WB: We run Berkshire so that if world working in different way tomorrow we don’t have a problem. We are not dependent on others. It gives up earning higher returns 99% or 99.5% of the time, but in one year – we wouldn’t feel comfortable running business that way – why be exposed to ruin and disgrace and embarrassment? If we can return a decent return on capital what is an extra point? This can not be farmed out. Management thought they were farming it out at some institutions.

    Q40: German. How large is universe of companies whose intrinsic value you know? Why did you invest in Southern Korea or China?

    WB: Our immediate decision is whether we can figure it out. We are thought to be rude, when really we are just being polite in not wasting someone’s time. We know very early in conversation whether what someone is talking about it actionable. We don’t worry about stuff we miss. We know there are many things we won’t know enough when we finish thinking about it, so we throw it out. We make a decision in five minutes. We know about a lot of industries, and there are some things we don’t understand. We like to expand universe of knowledge. If we can’t make a decision in five minutes, we can’t learn enough in five months. If we get a call, with business for sale – or I am reading a paper or 10k, we will move right then if big difference between price and value.

    CM: We can make a lot of decisions about a lot of things very fast and very easily, and we are unusual in that. Reason is that there are such an enormous amount of things we don’t look at. If you don’t do startups, you blot out a lot of complexity out of your life. What we found out is that there are still a lot of things to look at and available even if we filter out all those things.

    WB: There are a lot of giveaways in first sentence or two. We waste a lot of time, but we waste it on things we want to waste it on.

    Q41: Carlos Slim?

    WB: We had lunch 15yrs ago, with a couple of his boys.

    CM: You speak to the total knowledge of both of us about Carlos Slim.

    Q42: New York City. Coca cola Beijing Olympics, humanitarian values.

    WB: I think Olympics should be allowed to continue forever with everyone participating. It is hard to grade a couple hundred couple countries. It is a terrible mistake to try to start grading, more that participate the better, I would not start getting punitive. I think it’s a terrible mistake to ban countries from Olympics. The United States only started allowing women to vote in 1920s and I consider that a huge violation of human rights, but we wouldn’t (want to) be banned from the Olympics the years prior. I think that overtime they are contributing and getting better.

    CM: Warren understates my position. Many are distressed by imperfections in China, so I ask - is china more or less imperfect as decades have gone by ? it is moving in right direction. That is a good thing, and it is not good to pick worst thing about a person you don’t like and obsess about it.

    WB: You do better with people you are working with if you nudge him/her a bit.

    Q43: Scottsdale AZ. Coal industry? Does cost advantage outweigh environmental?

    WB: In short term world will use more coal. There is an environmental disadvantage to it. We will slowly figure out ways to do things coal does now that are environmentally more friendly. But it won’t happen fast. If you shut down coal plants, we wouldn’t be able to hold this meeting. At Mid-American we have put in a lot of wind capacity, probably more than anybody. But we are dependent a LOT on coal, and now it is cleaner than it was. It is worldwide problem, with the Chinese building a lot of coal plants. Per capita Americans have done a lot of negative things to this planet so it is hard for us to preach. It will take a leader who can lead on this.

    CM: People who are very against coal, so I ask, which would they rather use up first, coal or hydrocarbons? Coal is less desirable as chemical feedstock to feed the world [into fertilizers]. There is an environmental reason for being pro-coal use. Most people don’t think this way, but I do.

    WB: Charlie doesn’t take comfort in numbers.

    Q44: Stockton CA. Small regional banks - what would you look at before you buy?

    WB: It is hard to make a categorical decision about regional banks. So much depends on character the institution. It will be reflection of CEO you have. A bank can mean anything. It can be an institution that is doing all sorts of crazy things. Bank of commonwealth was an example. We owned a bank in Rockford IL run by Dean Aback – he would always run a super-sound bank. You should know culture of management and institution before making decision to buy a bank. We own Wells Fargo and M&T, but it doesn’t mean they are immune. But likely they are immune from institutional stupidity. There was wise man that said there are more banks than bankers. If you think about that a while you will get my point.

    CM: The questioner on to something. So many large banks have cast pall over industry. You are prospecting in a likely territory.

    WB: If you took 20 largest and 20 smallest banks in Florida, don’t know you could tell difference.

    CM: It is a territory that has some promise.

    WB: That is a wildly bullish statement from Charlie.

    Q45: Chicago: Iran, Syria?

    WB: The great problem of mankind is that the genie is out of bottle on nuclear weapons. More and more will know how to do damage. Psychotics will wish ill will. Materials and deliverability is the choke point. People generally associate this risk with terrorists and rogue states. But I regard as big threat to future of mankind. We haven’t made much progress and we should be doing everything to reduce access to materials. We have a proposal to reduce rationale to have big weapons. World has 6.5bil people, and it is very likely that twice the number of people wish ill than when world had 3bil. We used to just pick up a stone and throw it at our neighbor, so massive damage was limited. Since 1945, it has changed everything in world except how men think. Exponential growth, and we haven’t gotten rid of the nuts. We live in a dangerous world. Getting more dangerous as we go along. In Cuba Missile Crisis it was probably 50/50 odds, we were lucky. It won’t go away. You would hope we have an administration which will try to figure out how to minimize the risk. It should be paramount to eliminate deaths on a large scale.

    CM: Well, you can talk about death on a large scale. Population of Mexico probably had a population decline of 95% as result of European pathogens. It won’t wipe out the species. I hope that cheers you up.

    WB: The cockroaches will survive.

    Q46: Florida. Teach at community college in Florida, teaching students to invest in themselves. Financial independence and freedom. Slow and steady wins the race. Law of reciprocity. What else should I be doing?

    WB: I’m ready to hire your entire class right now. Most important investment is in themselves. Potential horsepower is rarely achieved. Just imagine you are 16 – going to give you car of your choice. But only car you would get for rest of your life. How would you choose? Of course you will read manual 5 times. How would you treat it? Keep it garaged. Change oil twice as frequently, keep rust to minimum because you know it’ll last a life time. I tell students that you get only one body and one mind. Better treat it same way. Hard to change habits at age 50 or 60. Anything students do to invest in bodies and mind is good, particularly in the mind. We didn’t work too hard on bodies around here. It pays off in an extraordinary way. Best asset is your own self. You can become the person you want to be. When I get classes in university I ask them to buy one classmate to own for rest of life. They pick the person who not with highest IQ, but who are most effective, the ones you want to be around. These people are easy to work with, generous, on time, not claiming credit, helping others. There are things that turn other people on, and turning other people off. Those are good habits to develop.

    CM: I have a specific suggestion that I would add to your extensive repertoire. I would teach them to avoid being manipulated by vendors and lenders. Cialdini has new book – it is called Yes, and I recommend it.

    Q47: Chicago. Nine years old. I know you like baseball. My favorite team is Chicago Cubs. Would you like to buy Chicago Cubs from Sam Zell, is it a good investment?

    WB: It’s been a good investment. Earnings haven’t gone up so much, though cable expanded the stadium. 40k seats in 1939, cable multiplied seats in a huge way and a lot of it went to players but some stuck to owners. When I was your age, I thought I would buy a team. If Cubs sell for $700m, I don’t think I would buy at that price – there is a psychic income to some owners. It is a way to instant celebrity. A certain percentage of people want the route to that life. Many people have loads of money. I’ve had calls from others on Cubs. I think I will leave that to you.

    WB: Charlie is a harder sell. I might do something like that.

    CM: You have already done it once.

    WB: Touche.

    Q48: Americans don’t save. Why, what can we do? Municipalities and Fed don’t save, Asians save 40% of income. Why is it that Americans do not save, what can we do to correct our long term problem?

    WB: Savings rate has fallen, may be negative. But value of country in real terms increases decade to decade. It seems worth more than 20 yrs ago – something good has happened. Propensity to save seems innate in some places. I should have thanked Andy Hayward for cartoons in the movie. If you own Berkshire you are saving because we retain earnings and therefore you are net saving – and I have been doing it in Berkshire for 43 yrs. I don’t know that the saving rate – based on calculations on consumption and imports – is accurate. We are importing 700bil more of services than we are exporting. We are exporting claims against America. But we are so rich it may not be really apparent. Average standards are likely to improve, but may be disproportionate. Net real terms the value on per capita will very likely increase decade to decade. But it is nothing compared to China or Korea where savings rate is very high. We may not save very much because we don’t need to. We are a very rich country, and we may not need to save as much as other countries trying to reach their potential.

    Q49: Germany. May I ask you your reasons for coming to Germany?

    WB: We want more family owners of German businesses. We want more owners who when they think of need to monetize, have Berkshire on their radar screen. We aren’t as prominent in Germany as in US. We are looking for good companies and we want them to know us. We should be better known in a month.

    CM: Germany is particularly impressive, an advanced civilization especially in engineering and industrials, with German advancement and inventiveness. It is amazing the impact Germans have had on field after field in America. Look at all the machines in factories with German names.

    WB: Sounds like Charlie should go to Germany.

    Q50: California. What can we learn from past blow-ups?

    WB: All a little different, all have similarities. This one had origins in mortgage field and residential real estate. Trouble in one area has a way to spread to another area. In my lifetime, I can’t remember one where this particular residential real estate bubble sent out the shock wave and exposure of so many other bad practices and weaknesses elsewhere like this one. There isn’t any magic to analysis. There are stupid things that won’t be done soon again, and not the same way again. But variations of it will occur again. Humans are what lead to stupidity and behavior. Primal urges, wanting to believe in tooth fairy that pop up from time to time, sometimes in very big scale. I have no great insights on solutions.

    CM: It was a particularly foolish mess. We talked about an idiot in the credit delivery grocery business, Webvan. Internet based delivery service for groceries -- that was smarter than what happened in mortgage business. I wish we had those Webvan people back. I have a rule: The politicians are never so bad you don’t live to want them back.

    Q51: How do we better measure leverage and accounting of assets, integrity?

    WB: It is a very tough thing. I still lean strongly towards fair value accounting – it is hard to use, but should we use cost? I think there are more troubles when you start openly valuing things at prices that don’t matter instead of best estimates even if inaccurate. I would stick with financials reporting assets at fair value. When you get into CDOsquared, the documentation is enormous. If you read a standard residential security – it consists of thousands of mortgages, then different tranches. Then take CDO and take junior tranches on a whole bunch of juniors – put them together and diversified in theory – a big error to start with. That was nuttiness squared. You had to read 15,000 pages to get a CDO, then 750k pages to evaluate one security in a CDOsquared. To let people use 100cents they paid vs. the 10cents it trades at in market is an abomination. Fair value discipline, mild as it may be, may keep managements from doing some stupid things. I lean toward the market value approach. When you get towards complex instruments, I don’t know how you value it. Charlie, back at Salomon I think you found one mismarked by $20m, right?

    CM: A lot goes on in bowels of American industry which is not pretty. A lot of people got overdosed on Ayn Rand. They would hold that even if an axe murderer in a free market is a wise development. I think Alan Greenspan did a good job on average, but he overdosed on Ayn Rand that whatever happens in free market is going to be alright. We should prohibit some things. If we had banned the phrase, “this is a financial innovation which will diversify risk”, we would have been far better off.

    Q52: Finance and economics – our constitution.

    WB: Do you have a question?

    Q52 cont: No.

    WB: I sort of suspected that.

    Q53: Future of mass transit?

    WB: Passenger traffic? [Yes.] The American public generally doesn’t like mass transit. Americans’ love affair with car, which translates into an aversion to mass transit, one person to a car seems to be popular method for moving around. We are unlikely to see expansion in mass transit. American public is genetically averse to mass transit. Seems to be human nature that people want to drive even if they have to pay $4 a gallon on gas and double on parking. I wouldn’t be optimistic about something that has long trend in human nature and that it would reverse all of a sudden.

    CM: You have a more optimistic view of it than I have.

    Q54: Tom Nelson, North Oaks MN. If you were in charge of country, how would you handle climate crisis.

    CM: I’m in awkward position of agreeing with Al Gore, we shouldn’t be burning so many hydrocarbons. But his brain doesn’t work the way mine does, and you’ll have to judge for yourself.

    WB: We’ll have a vote later.

    Q55: To win, first you must not lose. If corporate default rates escalate, will the credit default swap problem materialize as a threat to financial system? You are great pricer of risk. You must consider selling insurance without pricing appropriately. Is there a chance CDS market may eclipse subprime?

    WB: CDS notional is about 60trillion, there are lots of double counting, etc, but no doubt it is a lot of money. They are swaps, or insurance against companies going bankrupt. We have written two types of derivatives, and we have insured a swap that pays to someone else in event of default on high yield indices. I think we will make significant money. I think there is no question that corporate default rate will rise. That has been included in price in writing this insurance. Will CDS market lead to chaos? Probably not, but if bear had failed you would have had chaotic conditions. A CDS is a payment by one party to another. When someone loses money on a loan, they’ve lost real money, but there is not a swap of dollars immediately when loan goes bad. In CDS, there is an exchange of cash. Whether counterparties fail -- I don’t think it will happen. We’ve had enormous collateral payments from one firm to another in this recent crisis. Fairfax Financial made $1bil in CDS. This means another guy lost $1bil. They have been most volatile of instruments – and it really hasn’t created a problem in system. If Fed must step in, I don’t think it will be due to CDS. It may cause big losses, but will be matched by big gains by others. There is a problem of an overnight disruption in the system (bear, nuke bomb) – where discontinuity and collateral postings inadequate. At that time, large CDS exposure could exacerbate chaos to considerable degree.

    CM: Could we have mess in CDS? Yes, but stupidity not as bad as sweeping bums off skid row to give them houses. There is an issue of insuring against outcome of losing money on $100mil bond issue, when you have $3bil of contracts on $100m bond issue – there are incentives to manipulate the smaller loss to make big collection on the larger position. It used to be illegal to buy life insurance on people you didn’t know, with big payoffs in event of their death. Why did we want enormous bets to be made in unregulated markets? We have a major nutcase bunch of regulators and proprietors in this field.

    WB: Charlie 1 point, Invisible Hand 0 points.

    Q56: Why do you not believe in dividends when Benjamin Graham believes in it?

    WB: I had to show a little individuality. [laughter] I do believe in dividends, including dividends at companies where we own stock. The test on dividends is can you create more than one dollar of value than the one you retain. It would be mistake for See’s to retain money because they have no ability to use the cash they make to generate high return internally. We hope to move the capital to a place worth $1.20. If we do that, taxable or not, they are better off if we retain money. But when the time comes that we don’t think we can use money effectively, we will pay it out. But because we have ability to redistribute money in tax efficient way within company, we have more reason to retain earnings in company. We like companies where we have investments to pay to us money they can’t use effectively.

    CM: Costco paid no dividend when they were growing rapidly. As St Augustine said: “God give me chastity, but not yet.”

    Q57: Books to read?

    WB: We try to have good selection in bookstore downstairs. I am partial to Larry Cunningham’s book.

    CM: California did cause coal plants to be built near Grand Canyon. It caused an uproar. I think those things are about to be decommissioned. I’m glad to put climate back to you.

    Q58: Texas. Do you forsee Berkshire buying any businesses in india or china in near future?

    WB: We would like to. The odds are somewhat against buying anything outside of USA. Mitek has possibilities outside USA. If we get lucky, we’ll buy one or two in next 3 or 4 yrs. Where it is, who knows. We wouldn’t rule it out. We looked at insurance in India and China, but they restrict ownership in any domestic insurance company. Limit is 25% in China, I think 25% in India. We probably don’t want to go in to own 25%, we want to have more ownership to make it worthwhile. You will see day that Berkshire owns businesses in my view in both countries.

    CM: Nothing to add.

    Q59: Jim James, MN. Will you share your influences on you, your educators?

    WB: Biggest educator was father. It is important who you marry. Those are great teachers. Ben Graham. Dave Dodd. I devour books. Charlie likes Ben Franklin. My grandfather at the family grocery store. Most important job you have is to be the teacher to your children. You are the big great thing to them, you don’t get rewind button, you don’t get to do it twice, teach by what you do not what you say. By the time they get formal school they would have learned more from you than school. Provide warmth and food and everything else. It won’t change when they get to graduate school – and you get no rewind button. You teach with what you do, not what you say.

    CM: Differing people learn in differing ways. I was put together to learn by reading. If someone is talking to me – it doesn’t work as well. With a book, I can learn what I want at speed that works. It works for my nature. For those people who are like me, welcome, it is a nice fraternity.

    WB: Did you learn more from your father? Your father probably had more impact on you before your readings?

    CM: Father did have an impact. He always took more than his share of work and risk – that was helpful. Conceptual stuff – I learned from books. Those authors are fathers in a different sense.

    WB: If you keep reading books, you’ll learn a lot. If you read 20 books, you can learn a hell of lot. Having right parents is very lucky. If you get the right spouse, that’s just doubled down.

    Q60: Chicago. Thanks for respect for common shareholders. Executive pay - what can we do to get country and issue going right way?

    WB: Compensation - you can’t do much. There are relatively few people that could do a lot, by withholding votes. Big shots don’t like being embarrassed. You want a good press. Press needs material. I don’t know how you create incentives for big institutions to do that. A lot of checklists institutions use are asinine. Issue du jour, people recommending how they vote – why can’t they make up their minds. Ben Graham bemoaned investors as a bunch of sheep. Press would do rest. But they won’t respond to you. Small shareholder can write persuasive notes. It takes real effective pressure to change behavior when self interest is in favor.

    CM: In England, they got taxes up to 90%, so no possibility of earning large income. That was counterproductive. You can get politics of envy that ruins economics. I think people taking compensation have moral duty not to take it. Moral duty to be underpaid. If generals and archibishops can do it, why can’t leaders of large enterprise take less than the last dollar? That said, it is very difficult to implement.

    WB: Envy is the silliest, because you feel worse and they feel fine but maybe they feel better. Rule out envy as part of your repertoire. Gluttony has some upside, with maybe some temporary side effects. Lust – of course I’ll let Charlie speak to that.

    Q61: Pharma? (How do you valuate the pipeline of drug companies)

    WB: Unlike many businesses, when we invest in pharma We don’t know answer on pipeline and it’ll be different pipeline 5 years from now anyway. We don’t know whether Pfizer or Merck etc have better chance, which of those will come out with a blockbuster. But we do feel we have a group of companies bought at a fair price that overall will do well - should offer chances for decent profits. These companies are doing very important things. I could not tell you potential in the pipeline. A group approach makes sense. Not the way we would go at banks. If you buy pharma at reasonable multiple, you will probably do okay 5 – 10 yrs from now.

    CM: You now have a monopoly on our joint knowledge of pharmacology.

    WB: He gets cranky at end of day. [laughter]

    Q62: Wuxi China. Thank you for observations on Olympics. We came here to see how companies should be run. You did a quick trade on Petrochina. What comes to mind when selling? Any suggestions to these Chinese executives?

    WB: I met Dr Gao recently from the China Investment Corp for lunch. I was very impressed with him – we had lunch in Omaha. Petrochina was at $35bil… and analysis was same when I thought value was 275b, and not undervalued. At $200-300 billion we thought it was fairly valued so we sold. It went up significantly afterwards because of A-share listing and at one point became the most valuable company in world by market cap. They’ve done terrific job. If it went to significant discount, we would buy again. I’m not so sure we don’t have a lot to learn from China vs. what we have to teach. China has a remarkable society. I traveled 45min outside of Dalian, and saw hundreds of plants developed in recent years. Chinese are starting to realize their potential. There is lots of ability but the system did not realize potential. I think it will continue to get better. I would look for best practices and I would discard rest. If you look at effective individual – why do people want to be around them? You should copy those qualities… I would look for what I admire and emulated, and try not to let things distasteful be copied.

    CM: I hope you will go back to China and tell them that you found one individual that really approves the Confucius’ respect for elderly males.

    Q63: Cynthia Beamon, California. What is your fondest hope for Berkshire?

    WB: I hope for two things. Decent performance, and that the culture is maintained – we are shareholder and manager oriented. We want to be best home in the world for wonderful family businesses. I fully expect that what we have tried to build into Berkshire will live into future far beyond my tenure as CEO. We have great candidates that succeed me and we have board and managers that have all seen what works. We have a very fine and strong culture. I am sure it will be continued – and that we get good results. I hope in 20 yrs that fine businesses will immediately think that if they have to sell the business they would sell it to Berkshire.

    CM: I would like to see Berkshire even more be deserved as an exemplar, and that we have even more influence on changes in other places. Things that have happened here would be useful to other companies.

    WB: We also want it to have the oldest living managers. [laughter, applause]

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