Warren Buffett, the chairman of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), is the most successful investor of our time. His daughter, Susan, worked as my assistant when I was the publisher of a magazine 40 years ago. Just before she got married, Susie told me she worried that her fiancé’s parents had bought a couple of shares of Berkshire stock — and what if it tanked? At the time, the price was about $1,000 a share. Today, it’s $507,000 a share. I hope the in-laws hung on.
In his latest annual report, Warren Buffett calculates that the average yearly gain in market value from his acquisition of Berkshire in 1965 through the end of 2022 was 19.8%, compared with 9.9% for the S&P 500 — an astounding difference, matched by no one of whom I’m aware. And Berkshire beat the market in two-thirds of the years.
First, let’s understand Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Buffett writes that in 1965 it was a “one-trick pony, the owner of a venerable — but doomed — New England textile operation.” Buffett switched to insurance and bought National Indemnity, a company he still owns.
Today, Berkshire has three major kinds of investments: cash (a war chest of $104 billion, as of March 31); companies that Berkshire operates and typically owns in full, ranging from GEICO to BNSF Railway to See’s Candies; and publicly traded stocks that you can buy yourself.
At last count, Berkshire owned shares of 46 different public companies, but a few dominate, with just five stocks accounting for three-fourths of the value of Buffett’s stock holdings: Apple (AAPL), Bank of America (BAC), Coca-Cola (KO), American Express (AXP) and Chevron (CVX). Buffett doesn’t worry about concentration. He likes to quote the actress Mae West: “Too much of a good thing can be wonderful!” But the overall portfolio (operating companies plus stocks) is certainly diversified by sector. He owns tech, banks, energy companies, consumer-goods firms, health care, automakers, retailers, media, railroads, charter jets, furniture, homebuilders, insurance and more.
Think like a partner
His goal, Buffett writes in the Chairman’s Letter of Berkshire’s 2022 annual report, “is to make meaningful investments in businesses with both long-lasting favorable economic characteristics and trustworthy managers.” The italics are his — and they’re essential. Buffett thinks of investing not as buying a symbol with a number attached but as becoming a silent partner in a business. “Charlie and I are not stock-pickers; we are business-pickers.” (Charlie Munger, Buffett’s longtime partner, turns 100 on January 1; Buffett, the youngster, was 93 in August.)
The great advantage of owning publicly traded businesses, he writes, is that you can buy pieces of them — from time to time — “at wonderful prices.” Buffett’s mentor, the Columbia University scholar Benjamin Graham, used a metaphor in his 1949 book, The Intelligent Investor, to explain why. Imagine a character called Mr. Market who is manic-depressive. Some days, he buys stocks in a mood of euphoria, pushing their prices to absurd heights; other days, he is depressed or panicked and sells at absurd depths. In the latter instances, Mr. Market presents opportunities for you to buy, especially businesses that throw off cash.
In his annual report, Buffett uses Coca-Cola as an example. Between 1987 and 1994, he bought $1.3 billion worth of shares and never bought any more. In 1994, Coke’s dividend came to $75 million for Berkshire. In 2022, the payout from those shares was $704 million. “Growth occurred every year, just as certain as birthdays. All Charlie and I were required to do was cash Coke’s dividend checks.” The value of Buffett’s Coke shares grew to $24.1 billion as of late June, an 18-fold increase.
Buffett writes that the “lesson for investors” is this: “The weeds wither away in significance as the flowers bloom. Over time, it takes just a few winners to work wonders.”
“Over time” is the operative phrase. Buffett’s preferred holding period is forever. He does sell, but not often. In 2022, for example, he unloaded 50 million shares of U.S. Bancorp and made minor reductions in a few other holdings, including General Motors (GM) and Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer BYD (BYD). When a firm’s prospects change, move your money. As Munger says, “Don’t bail away in a sinking boat if you can swim to one that is seaworthy.”
The wisdom of patience
Buffett follows the wisdom of Graham: “Day to day, the stock market is a voting machine; in the long term it’s a weighing machine.” Translation: In the short term, stock prices might reflect little more than a popularity contest, but eventually fundamental value will be revealed.
I frequently hear from readers who say that I tell them to invest for the long term, but they are already 70 years old, for goodness’ sake! If you believe your own time horizon is too short for the long term, you might remember that Buffett and Munger are patient in their nineties. Or pass the wisdom of patience on to the ones who really need it: your children and grandchildren. “Having a long attention span and the ability to concentrate on one thing for a long time is a huge advantage,” says Munger, and, to the delight of their shareholders, Munger and Buffett have concentrated on Berkshire — and we can expect their handpicked successors to do the same.
For your own portfolio, you can pick and choose among Berkshire’s stock holdings, which are widely tracked by the financial press, including Kiplinger. Among the companies I find particularly attractive: are Verisign, which manages internet infrastructure; Moody’s, the credit ratings agency; and Occidental Petroleum, of which Berkshire owns 25%.
Or you can buy Berkshire’s own stock. The Class A shares, which have never split, may cost a half-million bucks each, but the B shares, which were launched in 1996, were recently $341. Berkshire is now the eighth-largest U.S. company by market capitalization (shares outstanding times price).
No longer increasing at twice the rate of the S&P 500 index, Berkshire over the past 10 years has performed roughly the same, with an annualized gain of 11.6%. Is Buffett losing his touch? Has Berkshire become so big that its days of beating the market are over? Perhaps, but I’m betting on Buffett, Munger and their successors. The stock might even be a bargain.
A portfolio for patient investors
Berkshire Hathaway considers itself a partner in the businesses it invests in.
James K. Glassman chairs Glassman Advisory, a public-affairs consulting firm. He does not write about his clients. His most recent book is Safety Net: The Strategy for De-Risking Your Investments in a Time of Turbulence. Of the stocks mentioned here, he owns Berkshire Hathaway and Bank of America. You can contact him at JKGlassman@gmail.com.
Note: This item first appeared in Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine, a monthly, trustworthy source of advice and guidance. Subscribe to help you make more money and keep more of the money you make here.