In May 2003, I was fortunate enough to to attend the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska. (Full disclosure: I attended the meeting because I was then and remain now a Berkshire shareholder.) While at the meeting I struck up a conversation with some other attendees, who turned out to be a group of
Warren Buffett
A Closer Look at Buffett’s Shareholders’ Letter
Warren Buffett’s annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders has become a capitalist cult classic, eagerly awaited each year not only by Berkshire shareholders but also by a broader audience of readers keen to read Buffett’s observations about both his company and the larger business and economic environment. This year’s letter (here), issued after…
Houses of Glory, Mansions of Shame: CEOs’ Homes and Corporate Performance
It is now a well-established part of the mythology of American capitalism that Warren Buffett still lives in the same modest brick colonial in Omaha, pictured above, that he bought in 1958 for $31,000. (According to Forbes magazine’s annual survey of billionaires’ houses, here, Buffett’s home had a 2003 tax valuation of $700,000.) Intuitively,…
A Closer Look At Buffett’s Annual Letter
For years, Warren Buffett’s annual Letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders has been a trove of business insight and commercial wisdom, and this year’s letter (here), released on March 1, 2007, is no exception. While the general focus of the letter is a year-end review of the various Berkshire businesses, Buffett still managed to…