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The 2021 Berkshire AGM | Meeting notes

Moomoo News ·  May 1, 2021 19:24  · Trending

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Hi moomooers! 

Welcome to the 2021 Berkshire AGM live updates by moomoo.

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1:30 pm ET meeting starts

Participants: Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger, Ajit Jain, and Greg Abel

Warren Buffett begins the meeting with Charlie Munger by his side, along with a box of peanut brittle and some Coca-Cola products. 

He mentions that they are in LA because they all wanted to do this with Charlie Munger.

Buffett says he will introduce the three chairman with him and after that, he will be discussing Berkshire's earnings. Then he will have some "lessons" to show the record number of new investors that have just entered the market.

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Buffett: Don't look at Berkshire in a daily way, over time Berkshire would show a capital gain.

"The economy went off a cliff in March. It was resurrected in an extraordinarily effective way by Federal Reserve action and later on the fiscal front by Congress," Buffett said in opening remarks at Berkshire's annual shareholder meeting."

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Here is a list of the 20 largest companies by market cap in 1989.

None of the top 20 companies on the list 30 years ago has made it on the list 30 years later. 

It's a reminder of what extraordinary things could happen.

"It tells you that capitalism has worked incredibly well, especially for the capitalists ... The world can change in very, very dramatic ways," Buffett said, adding that the best way to invest is via index funds.

Buffett: There's a lot more to investing than picking a budding industry

Buffett put up a slide of all the auto companies from years ago that started with the letter "M;" however, the list was so long it didn’t fit on one slide. The "Oracle of Omaha" had to narrow the list to automobile manufacturers that started with "Ma" to fit the names on one page.

Buffett said there were about 2,000 companies that entered the auto business in the 1900′s because investors and entrepreneurs expected the industry to have an amazing future. In 2009, there were three automakers left and two went bankrupt, said Buffett.

Q&A section

Participants: Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger, Ajit Jain, and Greg Abel

Buffett still doesn't want to own airlines

"An industry that was really selling for less than $100 billion lost a significant amount of money, they lost prospective earnings power...international travel’s not come back...I do not consider it a great moment in Berkshire’s history but also we’ve got more net worth than any company in the United States...I think the airline business has done better because we sold and I wish them well but I still wouldn’t want to buy the airline business."

Buffett: I recommend the S&P 500 index fund ... I've never recommended Berkshire to anybody

"On my death, there's a fund for my then-widow, and 90% will go into an S&P 500 index fund."

"I do not think the average person can pick stocks, we happen to have a large group of people that didn't pick stocks but they picked Charlie and me to manage money for them 50, 60 years ago. So we have a very unusual group of shareholders I think who look at Berkshire as a lifetime savings vehicle and one that they don’t have to think about and one that they'll, you know, they don't look at it again for 10 to 20 years."

Buffett says he has no issue owning Chevron, other fossil fuel companies

"People who are on the extreme of both sides are a little nuts. I would hate to have all hydrocarbons banned in three years. It wouldn’t work. And on the other hand, what's happening will be adapted to overtime."

"There's something about every business that, if you knew it, you wouldn't like ... if you expect perfection in your spouse or in your friends or in companies, you're not going to find it."

Buffett and Munger never had an argument over the past 62 years

"Warren and I don’t have to agree on every damn little thing we do. We get along pretty well," the 97-year-old Munger said.

"We have never had an argument in 62 years. Not that we agree on everything but we’ve never gotten mad at each other," Buffett said.

Buffett said selling some Apple stock last year was ‘probably a mistake’

"We got a chance to buy it and I sold some stock last year...that was probably a mistake," said Buffett.

"The part it plays in their lives is huge," he said. "A car costs $35,000 and I’m sure with some people if you asked them whether they wanted to give up, had to give up, their Apple, they’d give up their car."

Buffett says of SPACs are similar to a 'gambling-type market' 

"The SPACs generally have to spend their money in two years, as I understand it. If you have to buy a business in two years, you put a gun to my head and said you've got to buy a business in two years, I'd buy one but it wouldn't be much of one," Buffett. 

"If you're running money from somebody else and you get a fee and you get the upside and you don't have the downside, you're going to buy something," he added. "And frankly we're not competitive with that." 

"It's an exaggerated version of what we've seen in kind of a gambling-type market," he added. 

"We’re not going to have much luck on acquisitions while this sort of a period continues."

Munger says unchecked federal spending will ‘end in disaster’

"The Modern Monetary Theorists are more confident than they ought to be, too. I don’t think any of us know what’s going to happen with this stuff," Munger said. "I do think there’s a good chance that this extreme conduct is more feasible than everybody thought. But I do know that if you just keep doing it without any limit it will end in disaster."

"Bernie Sanders has basically won": Munger

"I think one consequence of this present situation is, Bernie Sanders has basically won," Munger says. "Because with everything boomed out so high and interest rates so low, what's going to happen is, the millennial generation is going to have a hell of a time getting rich compared to our generation ... He did it by accident, but he won."

"The people who are criticizing it are bonkers," Munger says of those condemning stock buybacks 

"You're repurchasing stock. Just a bullet higher, it's deeply immoral," Munger said. "But if you're repurchasing stock because it's a fair thing to do in the interest of your existing shareholders, it's a highly moral act and the people who are criticizing it are bonkers." 

Bitcoin is "contrary to the interest of civilization": Munger

Warren Buffett declined to directly offer an opinion in response to a question on bitcoin.

Munger, however, issued a more direct attack. 

"Those who know me well are just waving the red flag at the bull. Of course, I hate the bitcoin success," he said. "And I don’t welcome a currency that’s so useful kidnappers and extortionists and so forth. Nor do I like shoveling out a few extra billions and billions and billions of dollars to somebody who just invented a new financial product out of thin air. So I think I should say modestly that the whole damn development is disgusting and contrary to the interest of civilization." 

"We're seeing substantial inflation," Buffett says 

"We're seeing substantial inflation. We're raising prices, people are raising prices to us. And it's being accepted," Buffett said. "We really do a lot of housing. The costs are just up, up, up. Steel costs. You know, just every day they're going up."

"It's an economy – really, it's red hot. And we weren't expecting it," he added. 

What’s the biggest lesson you’ve learned during the past year?

"My biggest lesson has been to listen more to Charlie," Buffett says.
"We're in sort of uncharted territory," Munger says.
"We enjoy, in a crazy way, actually seeing what happens," Buffett adds.

Shareholder meeting ends, Buffett looks forward to 2022 event in Omaha

"I really hope, and I think the odds are very, very good, that we get to hold this next year in Omaha. I hope that we get a record turnout of Berkshire shareholders, and we really look forward to meeting you in Omaha." 

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