The Only Relevant Part Of Warren Buffett’s Annual Letter

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Warren Buffett’s annual shareholder letters are very well known within the industry. If you haven’t read them before, I highly recommend it. You can find them here Berkshire Hathaway Shareholder Letters. And since his 2014 letter has already been publicized, here is the most important part and its application to today’s stock market (as far as I am concerned).

“Periodically, financial markets will become divorced from reality – you can count on that. …ever forget that 2+2 will always equal 4. And when someone tells you how old-fashioned that math is — zip up your wallet, take a vacation and come back in a few years to buy stocks at cheap prices.”

If Mr. Buffett is not talking about today’s stock market environment in the quote above, well, I give up. In other words, I continue to maintain that investors who look at today’s market and see a huge bubble, will be massively rewarded. Not only by preserving capital at this stage and going long at much lower prices a few years from now, but from having the ability to benefit on the short side. Just at they did at 2000 and 2007 tops.

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The Only Relevant Part Of Warren Buffett’s Annual Letter Google

Is Warren Buffett Right…..Is Active Money Management Worthless?

warren-buffett-investwithalexThus far, Warren Buffett is beating the pants off his rival in now infamous 10 year performance wager. Warren Buffett adds to his lead in $1 million hedge-fund bet

The wager is simple. According to Mr. Buffett, the S&P Index will beat a hand selected portfolio of hedge fund and fund of fund managers. The creme de la creme if you will. And the results thus far?

The S&P is up 63% Vs. Hedge Funds +20%.

This brings out an important question. Is active money management even worth your time? 

My opinion remains the same. If you NOT an active investor, pick the least expensive index ETF and keep putting money into it month after month.  Long-term, you will come out way ahead of 99.5% of money managers out there.

Otherwise, active money management does make sense. There are thousands of different ways to consistently outperform the market. Sometimes by a large margin. For as long as active investors dedicate their time and continue to improve their skill set, it is the only logical outcome. Someone will outperform this market and get rich, it might as well be you.

At the end of the day Warren Buffett himself is a perfect illustration on that.

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Is Warren Buffett Right…..Is Active Money Management Worthless?   Google

The Real Secret Behind Warren Buffett’s Success Is Finally Revealed

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 “I buy expensive suits. They just look cheap on me”
-Warren Buffett

KEY STATISTICS:  (Date of Analysis: November 7th, 2013)

Full Name: Warren Edward Buffett

STARTING CAPITAL: ZERO

NET WORTH NOW: $59 Billion (2013)

  • Date of Birth: August 30th, 1930 (age 83) Omaha, Nebraska
  • Current Residence: Omaha Nebraska
  • Parents: Howard Buffett and Leila Buffett
  • Education: Columbia Business School
  • Occupation: Chairman & CEO of Berkshire Hathaway
  • Family Life: Married to Astrid Menks (2006-present).  3 Children: Susan, Howard, Peter

QUICK SUMMARY:

Warren Buffett was born in 1930 to Howard Buffett a stock broker/US Representative and Leila Howard a housewife in Omaha, Nebraska. Buffett’s early life was unremarkable in many ways. Being born in the midst of a Great Depression to a typical American family and living in the heartland has allowed Buffett to learn American values from an early age. Starting his school in Omaha, Buffett later moved to Washington DC after his father was elected to the United States Congress.

Even from an early age Buffett showed that he had interest in stocks and an Entrepreneurial spirit. He often spend time in his father’s brokerage company trying to learn all that he could about stocks, finally pulling the trigger on his first stock investment at the age of 11. His young entrepreneurial exploits of buying soda, gum, investing in farms and other businesses is well documented as well. In 1950 he entered into a Columbia University Graduate School of Business to study under a well known analyst and investor Benjamin Graham (author of classic “The Intelligent Investor“) and that’s where Buffett’s story really begins.

After getting his graduate degree from Columbia in 1951 Buffett literally begged Benjamin Graham for a job at Graham’s investment firm for 3 years.  At the time Graham didn’t think much of Buffett and turned him down on numerous occasions. That is until he reluctantly agreed to hire Buffett in 1954, most likely because he was sick of Buffett pestering him. Buffett worked for Graham in New York until 1956, the year Graham has decided to close down his business.  

After closure, Warren Buffet moved back to Omaha to start his own investment partnership (aka hedge fund). Starting with a little over $100,000 raised ffamily and friends, Buffett has managed to accumulate a personal net worth of close to $25 Million in just 13 years by investing in undervalued stocks. In 1969 Buffett liquidated his investment partnership and returned all of the capital to investors.  At the same time he kept most of his money invested in various companies, including Berkshire Hathaway, a company that he eventually brought under his control.

Thereafter, through his control of Berkshire Hathaway and through a series of brilliant investments spanning multiple decades Buffett has turned his $25 Million fortune into a $59 Billion mega fortune today. Simply put, Mr.Buffett is a brilliant investor, analyst and an oracle of sorts succeeding beyond belief in one of the most competitive fields in the world. The stock market. What we can learn from him and his approach is priceless.  

FUN FACTS ABOUT WARREN BUFFETT:

  • Warren Buffett, the 3rd richest man in the world, still lives in the $31,500 house he bought in 1957.
  • Warren Buffett gave 85% of his money to charity (mostly to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation) to a total of 40.7 billion dollars.
  • Warren Buffett filed his first tax return in 1944, at the age of 14, and took a $35 deduction for the use of his bike and watch on his paper route.
  • In 2010, a lunch with Warren Buffett was auctioned off to a man for $2.63 million dollars
  • If you invested $1000 with Warren Buffett in 1957, you would have amassed upwards of $30 Million today.

WARREN BUFFETT QUOTES:

“If past history was all there was to the game, the richest people would be librarians.”

“Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.”

“Rule No.1: Never lose money. Rule No.2: Never forget rule No.1.”

DIFFICULT TIMES & OVERCOMING PROBLEMS:

Being a money manager is one of the most difficult professions in the world. You are constantly dealing with various pressures while trying to perform to the best of your ability. There is no consistency and your world is always volatile (just like the stock market itself). Obviously Warren Buffett has thrived in this environment for many years.

His toughest challenge came in 1991 when Warren Buffett was unwillingly sucked into a huge Salomon Brothers scandal involving the US Government.  Warren Buffett was forced to take over the company as the CEO and manage the company through its darkest days. The company was hours away from being literally destroyed by the US Government and it was only Mr. Buffett’s personal assurance at the time that saved the company. By leveraging his reputation and pushing through the rough times he was able to save Salomon and his own net worth.  

PERSONAL CHARACTER TRAITS:

  • Down To Earth: Even though Warren Buffett is the fourth richest person in the world, he doesn’t show it. He still lives in the house he bought back in 1957 and is not known to splurge on luxury. He lives a simple life to the point where you wouldn’t be able to guess that he is even a millionaire if you see him walking down the street or eating in one of his favorite restaurants in Omaha.  
  • Hard Working: Officially Warren Buffett has been working since 1951 without taking (as far as I know) any real time off. Unofficially, he has been hustling since the age of 8 or for 75 years. Yet, he doesn’t call it work. He has famously said that he tap dances to work every day. Simply put, he loves what he does and its more of a play than work for him.  
  • Fair & Honest: Warren Buffett is famous for saying that rich should pay their fair share of taxes (arguing that they should pay more). He even lobbied the congress to increase taxes. You see the same consistency throughout his business career. He puts a significant amount of premium on his own reputation and believes the only way to get a good one is too be fair and honest in all of his business dealings.
  • A Great Sense Of Humor: Warren Buffett is known for his corky sense of humor and his ability to cut through the bullshit and point out the obvious. His annual report letter to the shareholders is as treasure throve of jokes and incredibly valuable real world advice. It should be on everyone’s reading list.
  • A Masterful Politician:  Even though you wouldn’t think of Warren Buffett as a politician, he is a natural born pro. If you study his career you will never see him take extreme sides of any issue. He is always somewhere in the middle. Even though he knows a lot more than he says, he rarely takes sides either for or against something.

SUCCESS ANALYSIS:

Warren Buffett’s success is very difficult to analyze. First, he wasn’t involved in one company that made him rich. He has built his fortune over the last 57 years, one day at a time and through acquiring over 50 companies that now reside under Berkshire Hathaway. He did have major scores, but a steady annual compounding of his money is what really did it for him. Second, most of his work is analytical in nature and out of the public eye. He spent most of his time analyzing companies and making investment decisions. That in itself is very difficult to pinpoint. Luckily for you, I do something very similar. Here are the factors that contributed directly to his success.

  • Right Timing: While you might not see a direct connection, Warren Buffett’s timing was perfect. If he would have been born just 5 years later, he wouldn’t be as much of a success as he is today. He would still be rich, but probably not that rich. Here is why. US Financial markets started a major BULL move in 1949 and completed it in 1966. Warren Buffett started his investment firm in 1956, giving him 10 years of one of the fastest BULL markets in history to work with. Yes, he is a great stock picker, but having a BULL market at your back makes one hell of a difference. That’s what helped him to accumulate his initial capital of $25 million. If he would have shown up just 5 years later, I doubt he would have been able to accumulate as much capital in the tough bear market years of 1970’s.  With a smaller nest egg to work with, his net worth would be a lot less today.  
  • Loves To Make Money:  From an early age Warren Buffett loved to make money. Starting with selling gum and soda at his school he quickly transitioned to buying farmland and investing in stocks.  While the money itself is meaningless to him, he uses it to keep score and to make sure he is winning.
  • Highly Intelligent & Analytical: I firmly believe that investment world (and not academia) attracts the best minds in the world. Among those people Warren Buffett is the king. Very few have been able to replicate his success over an extended period of time. This speaks to his high level of intelligence and analytics ability. Is he the smartest guy on the planet? Well, even if he is not, he is not that far behind.    
  • Incredibly Aggressive:  You might view Warren Buffett as this grandfatherly character who is always smiling and is a nice person.  Surely he is, but he is a naturally born predator as well. Case in point, his $5 Billion investment in Goldman Sachs in the darkest days of 2008 financial crisis.  He has done the same thing throughout his career on multiple occasions. You have to be aggressive to do that.  
  • Consistency & Concentration:  Starting at a young age Warren Buffett never really deviated from his original investment strategy. He has always made Value Investing his bread and butter and has spent the last 75 years perfecting his skills. I believe sticking to what he knows and understands the best is what has made him a huge success.
  • Balls Of Steel:  If you have ever been in an investment business you know that at certain points you will be standing on a edge of a cliff looking down into the deep abyss. Just as night follows day, that is unavoidable.  Yet, it is the quality of staying calm while everyone else is freaking out is what separates great investors from everybody else.  Warren Buffett has proved on multiple occasions that he can stand on the brink and whistle without a care in the world. That takes major cojones when billions of dollars are at stake.
  • Great Manager & Motivator:  Delegation and letting his managers run his companies is what has made Warren Buffett so rich.  He is not interested in running day to day operations and he prides himself on finding top management talent, motivating them and letting them do the hard work.
  • Ruthless Shark:  A well known saying in the investment community that is incredibly difficult to follow. As Warren Buffett himself says “Be fearful when others are greedy and be greedy when others are fearful”.  Meaning, one should buy stocks when the blood is running on the streets (Ex: 2007-2009 collapse). Yet, very few investors can do that. Warren Buffett has done so consistently throughout his long career.

CONCLUSION:

While Warren Buffett seems like a friendly Mr. Rogers from a few doors down the road, he is not. He is a ruthless capitalist who loves making money and allocating capital. I do not believe the money itself play an important role in his life, but the process of making it is everything to him.  It is a score card of sorts that shows him how well he has done and in what areas he needs to improve.

Warren Buffett plays to win. It is no accident that he was named the most successful investor of the last century. Yes, investing provides his with a way to show off his intelligence, but it goes much deeper than that.  Warren Buffett has also redefined the game and has shown everyone that it is possible to take it easy and be nice to people while at the same time being one of the most coldblooded capitalist on the face of this earth.

So, what can we learn from Mr. Buffett to help us become Billionaires as well? Taking out factors that we cannot control, here is what you can replicate.  

  1. Do What You Love: In most cases you will not become filthy rich overnight. Most of us will have to build our fortunes over an extended period of time while working incredibly hard. The only way to do that is to find something that you love and stick to it.  As Warren Buffett says, you must love being in the office.
  2. Fall In Loves With The Money:  There is absolutely nothing wrong with loving money.  In fact, if you don’t love money, you will never attract enough of it into your life. Warren Buffett loves money, so why shouldn’t you?  
  3. Become Aggressive:  As we see with most of our Billionaires you must be aggressive and you must play to win in all of your business dealings. Get it through your head and start winning. 
  4. Consistency & Concentration:  A truly important and timeless quality to have. If you are to become an expert in your field you are bound to outperform your competition.  Plus, maintaining consistency helps you get through the hard time without sacrificing your integrity or the integrity of your business.
  5. Grow A Pair:  Listen, you need to grow a big pair if you want to play with the big boys. Simple as that.  
  6. Delegate:  Find great people and delegate as much work as you possibly can to them. This will allow you to concentrate on more important tasks that you love.
  7. Become Ruthless:  Not ruthless enough to take candy from a crying baby, but ruthless enough to make money from the misfortunes of others.  There is nothing wrong with buying assets when others are fearful or filing for bankruptcy. It’s their problem, not yours. Buy low, sell high. Get rich. 

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The Real Secret Behind Warren Buffett’s Success Is Finally Revealed Google

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What You Ought To Know About Warren Buffett

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FUN FACTS ABOUT WARREN BUFFETT: 

  • Warren Buffett, the 3rd richest man in the world, still lives in the $31,500 house he bought in 1957.
  • Warren Buffett gave 85% of his money to charity (mostly to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation) to a total of 40.7 billion dollars.
  • Warren Buffett filed his first tax return in 1944, at the age of 14, and took a $35 deduction for the use of his bike and watch on his paper route.
  • In 2010, a lunch with Warren Buffett was auctioned off to a man for $2.63 million dollars
  • If you invested $1000 with Warren Buffett in 1957, you would have amassed upwards of $30 Million today.

WARREN BUFFETT QUOTES:

  • “If past history was all there was to the game, the richest people would be librarians.”
  • “Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.”
  • “Rule No.1: Never lose money. Rule No.2: Never forget rule No.1.”

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What You Ought To Know About Warren Buffett Google

Warren Buffett Is Losing It

Dow 100,000, people have learned their lesson in 2008 meltdown, stocks will not drop 50% from the current levels, unicorn farm is opening up on the moon, etc…..Whatever you say Mr. Buffett.

Actually, I agree with him on two issues. No matter how much the Perma Bears huff and puff, the stock market will not decline over 50% in the upcoming Bear Market of 2014-2017. Our mathematical and timing work confirms the same. Sorry, Elliot Wave followers. The market is not going down 95%. I also agree that we will see DOW 100,000 right before the BIG WAR starts.  Most of the gains will be from inflation thou.

I do take issue with Mr. Buffett when he states that “people have learned their lesson from the 2008”. I disagree, not when the Federal Government comes in and bails everyone out. In fact, current economic environment is continuation of insane macroeconomic policies that FED has implemented. The balance sheet is massively leveraged and our existing economy depends entirely on cheap credit and speculation. No doubt, Buffett understands this very clearly. He just can’t say it. 

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Warren Buffett Is Losing It Google

 

Warren Buffett told CNBC on Friday he would be “surprised a lot” if stock prices around the world fell 50 percent from their current levels.

Aanother financial crisis “someday” in the years ahead that will shock financial markets, but he doesn’t think it will happen anytime soon.

“Humans will behave in crazy ways, both on the upside and the downside in the next 50 years. It’s very unlikely they do it in the next few years because after something like 2008, once they get out of the emergency room, they’re a little more careful for awhile.”

During an appearance on CNBC’s “ Squawk Box ,” Buffett told 58-year-old host Joe Kernen that he will live to see the Dow at 100,000. “I won’t, but you will,” the 83-year-old Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-A) chairman said.

Buffett pointed out that Berkshire stock has dropped 50 percent four times in its history, but always recovered.

While he now thinks his characterization of the 2008 crisis as an “economic Pearl Harbor” now looks understated, the U.S. did recover and he believes “this country will come through anything.”

Buffett said he’s been bullish on the U.S. economy since the fall of 2008, but he doesn’t expect it to rapidly accelerate this year. Instead, he thinks it will continue its slow upward trajectory.

 

Buffett said he’d advise people to “stay away” from bitcoinbecause the cryptocurrency is a “mirage” without any intrinsic value, although it’s an efficient way to transfer dollars.

Buffett also said Berkshire Hathaway has “almost” eliminated its catastrophe insurance in the U.S. because rates have dropped too much.

“The rates came down dramatically, and we do not regard the exposure as having come down dramatically,” Buffett said.

Berkshire is still writing policies in Asia.

Asked about the controversy over faulty ignition switches in General Motors (GM) cars, Buffett said CEO Mary Barra has a “new chance” because she just started in the post but the company needs to tell the truth and act quickly to fix any problems.

He said his advice is to “Get it right, get it fast, get it out, get it over, but get it right first.”

Buffett appeared on CNBC with Dan Gilbert to promote their “Quicken Loans Billion Dollar Bracket Challenge with Yahoo Sports” in which anyone who correctly predicts the outcome of every game in the NCAA basketball tournament will win $1 billion.

10 Amazing Quotes By Warren Buffett

This needs no introduction

  1. I try to buy stock in businesses that are so wonderful that an idiot can run them. Because sooner or later, one will.
  2. “Rule No. 1: never lose money; rule No. 2: don’t forget rule No. 1”
  3. “Investors should remember that excitement and expenses are their enemies. And if they insist on trying to time their participation in equities, they should try to be fearful when others are greedy and greedy only when others are fearful.”
  4. “It’s far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.”
  5. “The stock market is a no-called-strike game. You don’t have to swing at everything–you can wait for your pitch. The problem when you’re a money manager is that your fans keep yelling, ‘Swing, you bum!'”
  6. “Wall Street is the only place that people ride to in a Rolls-Royce to get advice from those who take the subway.”
  7. “You don’t need to be a rocket scientist. Investing is not a game where the guy with the 160 IQ beats the guy with 130 IQ.”
  8. “After all, you only find out who is swimming naked when the tide goes out.”
  9. “Our approach is very much profiting from lack of change rather than from change. With Wrigley chewing gum, it’s the lack of change that appeals to me. I don’t think it is going to be hurt by the Internet. That’s the kind of business I like.”
  10. “Time is the friend of the wonderful business, the enemy of the mediocre.”

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10 Amazing Quotes By Warren Buffett Google

When Buffett Speaks Peasants Listen

Over the last few days Warren Buffett released his annual letter to shareholders as well as did a few interviews. Here are some of the highlights. 

  • Ukraine doesn’t matter – I agree. 
  • The stock market is NOT being manipulated – I agree. 
  • The US Economy is OK, but it will be fine. – Disagree. As per my mathematical & timing work, we will have a severe bear market and a recession over the next 3 years. 
  • Railroads will do very well in the future –  hmm, OK, check out some railroad stocks everyone. 
  • Bitcoin is a speculative BS – I agree

Whether or not you agree with Buffett or his policies, it always good to read or listen to one of the brightest minds on the face of this Earth. You can check his latest letter to shareholders here Berkshire Letters  

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Two days after publishing his annual letter to shareholders, Warren Buffett is on CNBC speaking with Becky Quick.

Equity fund managers Todd Combs and Ted Weschler will also be on later in an extremely rare appearance.

On Ukraine

Off the bat, Quick asked for his take on the tension in Ukraine.

Rather than addressing the turmoil directly, Buffett said that he does not consider these types of skirmishes when he invests in companies.

“I never really buy businesses based on macro factors,” he said.

He noted that he invested in his first business in the wake of the attack on Pearl Harbor.

On The Stock Market

Regarding the market itself, Quick asked if the mom-and-pop investor really could get a fair shot as some argue that the market is actually rigged.

Buffett was skeptical that the $20-plus-trillion stock market could actually be rigged.

“People should stop calling it the stock market,” he said. “It’s American business.”

On The U.S. Economy

“Exactly what’s been going on since the fall of 2009 continues,” he said, reminding us that he gets live updates from the 80+ companies he invests in. “Moderate but consistent growth for four and a half years. Every now and then we get excited about a speeding up and every now and again we worry about a double dip.

“In terms of what we see, it’s been almost a straight line, but not at the kind of slope that people would like. But not flat either.”

“We haven’t gotten wildly optimistic and we haven’t gotten wildly pessimistic,” he added, emphasizing that things have been pretty steady.

On Weather

“It’s certainly a factor,” he said. “Our railroads don’t work as well … and those things compound.”

“The biggest risk … to us would be earthquakes in New Zealand,” said Buffett recognizing that the hurricane insurance business has been very good to Berkshire.

On Selling Coca-Cola, Wells Fargo, And American Express:

“None of the stocks are forever but they’re for very long terms,” said Buffett to a question of when he planned on selling these stocks.

On IBM

A reader asked if Buffett felt he made a mistake with this stock.

“The financial performance has been pretty good but it’s been helped with low tax rates,” Buffett said, adding that there was a lot going on in the business due to cloud tech. “It’s fair to say I know less about the future of IBM than I do about Wells Fargo or Coca-Cola. … In terms of the price action, that means little to me. The fewer the shares outstanding the better I like it. … I would like to see the revenues pick up.

“We bought a few more shares last year, but not many. We bought a few shares this year.”

On Railroads

Buffett’s still bullish on the industry

“The future of railroads is very good,”  he said.

On The Keystone Pipeline

 It’s a “very good idea for the country.” 

“I’d vote yes,” he said later.

On Being Considered “Too Big To Fail”

Buffett says Berkshire has heard nothing from regulators about the derivatives on his book making his company TBTF. “We never have any significant short-term debt, we always have bundles of cash. … We’re large, but Exxon Mobile is large. … It’s very unlikely we’d be categorized like that.”

On Washington

“It’s more or less a stalemate,” said Buffett, who also said he can’t imagine things getting worse.

On Raising The Minimum Wage

“It really cuts both ways, you’d like to have people getting paid more but you also want more people employed. I could argue both sides. … What you really should do is increase the earned income tax credit. … I think you can accomplish way more through the earned income tax credit. … There’s trade offs on the minimum wage and you can do all these studies but they don’t know.”

The Greatest Thing Obama Can Do To Create Jobs

“Further fiscal stimulus would increase job growth,” said Buffett, “but you pay a price for that.”

Buffett also disagrees with the view that the Fed’s low-interest policy is exacerbating the issue.

Who’s doing a better job cleaning up their mess? — Obama or BofA CEO Brian Moynihan

“Brian Moynihan didn’t have to convince the United States Congress,” said Buffett.

On Ukraine as WWIII or the next Cold War

“The last thing you’d want to do is hold money during a war. … During WWII the stock market advanced. … You’re gonna be a lot better off holding productive assets over the next 50 years over stocks or bitcoin.”

On Bitcoin

“It’s not a currency,” he said. “I wouldn’t be surprised if it wasn’t around in the next 10-20 years.”

“It’s being priced off the dollar,” Buffett added. “It is not a durable means of exchange.”

On Todd Combs And Ted Weschler

“Todd and ted look at investments very much like I do,” he said, noting that they think about businesses rather than stocks.

“It’s a combination of soundness and brilliance,” he added saying that they think about the things that haven’t happened yet.

“They’ve made Berkshire billions already.”

 Todd Combs, Ted Weschler and Tracy Britt Speak

“Ninety percent of things you can dismiss within five minutes,” said Todd Combs, who said he spends much of his time reading company filings.

“Know the situation; wait for the right price,” said Weschler on his investment process. “Be ready.”

On activist investing:

“The way some people use the word ‘shareholder value’ kind of puzzles me,” said Buffett, at Berkshire he wants to build sustainable earning power over time. He said this in reference to Carl Icahn’s push for Apple to buy back stock. He said that Apple’s refusal to go all the way with Icahn’s proposal was likely a sign that it was looking to do the same thing.

On an economic slowdown:

“My impression is that the American economy over the last five years has been moving at a steady rate, upwards.”

Buffett said that some sectors may not be doing as well, and the economy isn’t growing as fast as people would like.

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When Buffett Speaks Peasants Listen Google

Warning: Warren Buffett Shares His Secret On Getting Rich

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Today’s 5 Minute Podcast Covers The Following Topics.

    • Warren Buffett’s secret on getting rich is finally revealed.  
    • Examples and what does it have to do with today’s market. 
    • Why is it so difficult to buy low and sell high. 
    • When will the bear market start? 

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Warning: Warren Buffett Shares His Secret On Getting Rich  

What Are You Smoking Mr.Buffett?

Bloomberg Writes: Buffett Calls Fed History’s Greatest Hedge Fund

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Billionaire investor Warren Buffett compared the U.S. Federal Reserve to a hedge fund because of the central bank’s ability to profit from bond purchases while accumulating a balance sheet of more than $3 trillion.

 

“The Fed is the greatest hedge fund in history,” Buffett told students yesterday at Georgetown University in Washington. It’s generating “$80 billion or $90 billion a year probably” in revenue for the U.S. government, he said. “And that wasn’t the case a few years back.”

The central bank has been buying $85 billion of bonds a month to help the U.S. recover as it emerges from the deepest slump since the Great Depression. Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and other Fed policy makers unexpectedly opted this week to sustain that pace of asset purchases instead of tapering it, saying they need to see more signs of lasting improvement in the economy.

The Fed remitted $88.4 billion to the U.S. Treasury Department last year. The payments have ballooned as the central bank built its balance sheet during the past five years.

The Fed “is under no pressure, none whatsoever to have to deleverage,” Buffett said. “So it can pick its time, and if you have somebody wise there — and I think Bernanke is wise, and I certainly expect his successor to be — it can be handled. But it is something that’s never quite been done on this scale. It will be interesting to watch.”

Read The Rest Of The Article Here.

 

This article is a must read for everyone. If it doesn’t illustrate to you that our credit finance depended US Economy is nothing more than a huge FRAUD, nothing will.

Here is how the FRAUD works.

  1. Mr. Bernanke sits in his comfortable leather chair at the FED, pushes a computer button on his keyboard and BOOM, about $85 Billion (yes, billion) appear out of thin air. That happens every month.
  2. Mr. Bernanke then pushes another button on the keyboard and buys $85 Billion worth of US Treasury. Every month. (AKA. Lending to the US Government)
  3. The US Government then proceeds to pay interest on such “out of thin air” money and that goes to the FED.
  4. The FED then turns around and pays the interest money back to the US Government. Net of fees of course(which I don’t even want to go in here).

Does anyone know how I can get into this free money business?

Keep in mind that most if not all financial institutions (including banks) in the US are currently making money off of this scheme.

So, what’s the problem?

Well, all of this happens on the money that never actually existed in the first place. We can talk about structural problems that this action leads to, such as currency debasement and inflation, but for our purpose lets concentrate on something else.

This does, in fact, make the FED the largest hedge fund in the world. Excuse me, not a hedge fund, but a Ponzi Scheme (since they are creating money out of thin air). Usually this goes uninterrupted until and unless the confidence goes away. At that point, the Ponzi Scheme collapses within a very short period of time.   

As of the right now the FED has an substantial amount of confidence from both domestic and international investors. Will that continue? Probably, until one day it doesn’t. When will that day come? No one knows, but when it does the whole thing will collapse within a short period of time. No doubt about it.

The only problem is, instead of these fraudsters playing with just your retirement account, these guys play with the entire US Economy. When it goes…and it will….everything will collapse.

And they put Bernie Madoff and Martha Steward in jail? These guys are not even on the same planet when it comes to defrauding the American people.

So, is Mr. Buffett smoking something and doesn’t see this? Of course he sees and fully understands the stated above. However, he owns/runs a huge conglomerate that depends on growth and stability of the overall US Economy. For him to say anything else but what he said would be foolish. But not for me. 

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Buffett Can’t Find Any Stocks

Reuters Writes: Buffett lauds Bernanke but laments lack of investment bargains

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(Reuters) – Warren Buffett said on Thursday he would recommend reappointing Ben Bernanke as Federal Reserve chairman, while adding that low interest rates have inflated asset values and complicated his hunt for investments at his company Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

The billionaire investor spoke one day after the central bank surprised investors by postponing its expected wind-down of monetary stimulus, which has in five years more than tripled the Fed’s balance sheet to above $3.6 trillion.

“Since the panic of five years ago, he’s done a terrific job,” Buffett said on CNBC television in a joint interview with Brian Moynihan, chief executive of Bank of America Corp.

Asked if he would reappoint Bernanke when his term expires, Buffett said: “That’s what I would do.”

Nevertheless, at an event later Thursday afternoon at Georgetown University, Buffett said that the Fed’s eventual exit from its monthly bond-buying program will carry unforeseen risks.

“We are in an experiment which hasn’t really been tried before,” he said, adding that “buying securities is usually easier than selling securities.”

Read The Rest Of The Article Here

As the article indicates Mr. Buffett  claims not to be able to find any bargains or value stocks. I second that sentiment.   As of right now I am unable to find any worthwhile value stocks at all. There are some special situations here and there, but overall everything is either fairly priced or overpriced.

That in itself is not necessary a problem.  It is the nature of the stock market to cycle up and down to provide trading opportunities. However, when you combine the current macro economic backdrop with the fact that most stocks are too expensive, the situation is not pretty.

Can they get even more expensive? Of course they can, but as my stock market timing work indicates that shouldn’t last for long. The stock market is in the topping process and when complete we should receive a number of confirmations that the bear market is back. Once again, I don’t believe we have to wait too much longer now.  

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