The wit and wisdom of Warren Buffett, 'Oracle of Omaha'
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Billionaire investor Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway Inc Vice Chairman Charlie Munger answered five hours of questions from shareholders, journalists and analysts at Berkshire’s annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska.
The weekend, known as “Woodstock for Capitalists”, is unique in corporate America and a celebration of Buffett’s success at a conglomerate whose businesses range from Geico insurance to the BNSF railroad to See’s candies to Ginsu knives.
Below are the comments from Buffett, the “Oracle of Omaha,” on a wide range of investments and other topics:

On large acquisitions outside the United States

“Outside the United States ... we are not embedded in (sellers’) minds in the same way. We are on the radar screen big-time in the United States ... I hope tomorrow I’ll get a call from Germany or Britain ... or Australia ... and we’ll get an opportunity.”
“In terms of getting a lot of money into something, many billions ... that can be tougher in markets that you’re unfamiliar working in. Accumulating a 6 or 8 or 10 billion [US dollar] position outside the United States can be very difficult.
“Charlie keeps pushing me to do more in China.”

On Amazon.com and Alphabet

“We’ve certainly looked that them ... the truth is, I’ve watched Amazon from the start and what Jeff Bezos has done is something close to a miracle. If I think something is a miracle, I tend not to bet on it. Bill Gates told me early on [to look at] Google ...
“I’ll miss a lot of things that I don’t feel I understand well enough, and there is no penalty in investing if you don’t swing at a ball that’s in the strike zone, as long as you swing at something at some point ... We’ll try to stay within our circle of competence, and Charlie and I generally agree on where that circle ends ... We’ll try to stay within our circle of competence ... We’re going to miss a lot of things.”
“I made the wrong decision on Google and Amazon.”
Munger: “I’ve been to Google headquarters - it looks like a kindergarten.”

On corporate profits

“American industry has gotten incredibly more profitable in aggregate in the last 20-30 years ... This has become somewhat an asset-light economy ... It is a changing world and [the biggest companies] will earn even more money with the tax rate going down.”

On Berkshire's company culture

“I’ve been on 19 boards, and I’ve never seen a board like ours ... It’s a group of owner-oriented, Berkshire-conscious, business-savvy owners ... People opt into it to a great deal.”

On Apple's cash hoard

“It’s extremely hard to find acquisitions that would be accretive to Apple [in] the 50-100 billion [US dollar] range. As I look around the horizon, I don’t see anything that would make sense for them, whereas I do see a business that they know everything about ... I’m delighted to see them repurchasing shares ... Mentally, you can say we own 5 percent of it ... Over the passage of time, we may own 6 or 7 percent because they repurchase shares.”

On BNSF railroad

“We get a decent return on the capital-intensive businesses. We bought most at decent prices and they’ve been run very well.”

On newspapers

"No one except the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and [now] the Washington Post has come up with a digital product that will in a significant way replace the revenue being lost as print newspapers lose cir and advertising ... the Journal, the Times and probably the Post have an economically viable model in the digital world.”
“Where the daily newspaper was a primary [source of information], they’re no longer primary.”

On US exceptionalism

“This country really, really works ... this country has six times the per capita GDP growth that it had when I was born ... this is a remarkable, remarkable country ... I would love to be a baby born in the United States today.”

On cryptocurrencies being a bubble

“[They’re] non-productive assets. It essentially will not deliver anything other than supposed scarcity. What does it produce itself? ... Anytime you buy non-productive assets, you are counting on someone later on buying a non-productive asset. It does come to a bad ending ... cryptocurrencies will come to bad endings.”

On reinsurance

“We will be in the reinsurance business 5 years from now, 10 years from now, 20 years from now ... It will be subject to more ups and downs than something like Geico ... but it will be an important part of Berkshire.”

On the Wells Fargo scandal

“Wells Fargo is a company that proved the efficacy of incentives, and it’s just that they just had the wrong incentives ... The fact that you are going to have problems at some large institutions is not unique ... I see no reason why Wells Fargo as a company ... going forward is in any way inferior to the other big banks with which it competes. We have a large unrealized gain [in the stock]. I like it as an investment. [The CEO] is correcting mistakes made by other people.”

On measuring the effect of tax cuts

“It’s very, very difficult in economics to measure the impact of single variables. Every question you get in economics, you should then say, ‘And then what?’”

On the healthcare partnership with JP Morgan and Amazon.com

“We simply have three organizations with leaders I admire and trust ... We have a hugely non-competitive medical cost in American business relating to any country in the world ... The motivations are not primarily profit making. We want our employees to get better medical services at lower cost .... we know the resistance will be unbelievable, and if we fail - at least we tried. I think we’ll probably have a CEO within a couple of months.”

On GE investment in 2008

“We probably could’ve extracted better terms. It might have been counterproductive in the end ... We could have made better purchases 3-4 months later. We didn’t push it to the limit.”

On using cash for a special dividend

“We had a vote on whether people wanted a dividend ... the B-shares voted 47-1 against it. They expect us to do whatever we think makes sense for all shareholders, and if we thought we can’t use the money effectively in the business, we should get it out ... We won’t always be in a world of low interest rates or high private-market prices ... It’s very unlikely we’d pay out a big special dividend.”

On investing in gun manufacturers

“I do not believe in imposing my political opinions on the activities of our businesses.”

On President Donald Trump's proposed tariffs

BUFFETT: “We’ve seen steel costs increase somewhat. I don’t think either [the US or China] will dig themselves into something that precipitates and continues any real trade war ... The benefits of trade are basically not visible. No one thinks about benefits day by day ... The negatives, and there are negatives, are very apparent and very painful.”
MUNGER: “The conditions in steel were almost unbelievably adverse to the American steel industry. Even Donald Trump can be right on some of this stuff.”
On China-US trade
“In August, I will be 88, in a year that ends in an 8. Eight is a lucky number in China. ... The United States and China are going to be the two superpowers of the world, economically and in other ways for a long, long, long time. We have a lot of common interests and like any two big economic entities there are times when there will be tensions. But it is a win-win situation when the world trades.”
Source(s): Reuters