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Warren Buffett paid homage to his late business partner in his 2024 letter to shareholders Saturday, calling Charlie Munger the “architect” of Berkshire Hathaway’s longtime business success.
Buffett told the story of how in 1965 he was lamenting his decision to purchase Berkshire, at the time a failing New England textile company.
That’s when Munger advised him to use Berkshire as an investment vehicle. Munger told Buffett as he sought to add to the company, he should focus on acquiring “wonderful businesses purchased at fair prices and give up buying fair businesses at wonderful prices.”
That, Buffett said, became the guiding principle that has made Berkshire what it is today.
“In reality, Charlie was the ‘architect’ of the present Berkshire, and I acted as the ‘general contractor’ to carry out the day-by-day construction of his vision,” Buffett wrote. “Charlie never sought to take credit for his role as creator but instead let me take the bows and receive the accolades.”
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Saturday’s annual letter was the first Buffett has published since the November death of the 99-year-old Munger, the feisty, brainy sidekick who served for decades as Buffett’s partner and Berkshire vice chairman.
Buffett noted that Munger’s advice flew in the face of what Buffett had learned from his own mentor, value investment guru Benjamin Graham. And it was offered years before Munger actually partnered with Buffett or owned a single share of Berkshire stock.
Munger’s importance continued in the decades the two worked together. Munger, Buffett wrote, often “jerked me back to sanity when my old habits surfaced.”
“Until his death, he continued in this role and together we, along with those who early on invested with us, ended up far better off than Charlie and I had ever dreamed possible,” Buffett wrote.
Buffett’s letter also recounted some of the reasons behind a solid year for Berkshire, which saw the operating income of its core companies increase 17% from $30.9 billion to $37.4 billion.
However, the fourth quarter operating results Berkshire also reported on Saturday were down more than $2 billion from the third quarter, leaving total annual results short of analysts’ projections.
James Shanahan, who analyzes Berkshire for investment firm Edward Jones, said the falling results can largely be traced to weak performance of Berkshire’s energy holdings. Berkshire Hathaway Energy is continuing to feel the effects of losses due to wildfires in California and Oregon.
Berkshire’s pile of cash at the end of the year reached a record $167 billion, up $39 billion from the year before.
Its growth reflects Buffett’s inability to find a large company to purchase, which Buffett again lamented is due to the fact Berkshire has grown so large it’s hard to find an attractive target that can “move the needle.”
“(F)or a while, we had an abundance of candidates to evaluate. If I missed one — and I missed plenty — another always came along,” Buffett wrote Saturday. “Those days are long behind us.”
Buffett noted that Berkshire did increase its stakes in both Occidental Petroleum and in five large Japanese companies it first invested in in 2019. The increased holdings in the Japanese companies came after Buffett traveled to Tokyo last year.
Buffett praised Berkshire’s stake of nearly 28% of Occidental Petroleum. He said the company’s investments in shale oil production has sharply reduced America’s reliance on foreign sources of oil.
“Occidental is doing the right things for both its country and its owners,” Buffett wrote.
Speaking to Berkshire’s large size, Buffett noted that Berkshire is now worth some $560 billion while the rest of the 499 S&P companies are worth about $9.5 trillion.
“By this measure, Berkshire now occupies nearly 6% of the universe in which it operates,” he wrote.
Berkshire also bought back $9.2 billion worth of its own stock in 2023, up from $7.9 billion the previous year. In all, Shanahan said, Berkshire has bought back $75 billion worth since 2018.
With Munger’s passing, the 93-year-old Buffett noted he will be joined only by vice chairmen Greg Abel and Ajit Jain when he takes the stage at the annual meeting in Omaha on May 4.
Buffett mused how he and Munger had both grown up in Omaha. And while Abel was born in Canada and Jain in India, before they joined Berkshire both lived in Omaha just blocks from Buffett’s home.
“Is it Omaha’s water? Is it Omaha’s air? Is it some strange planetary phenomenon akin to that which has produced Jamaica’s sprinters, Kenya’s marathon runners, or Russia’s chess experts?” Buffett wrote.
To find out, he encouraged shareholders to come to Omaha and sample the air and water themselves.
He also encouraged shareholders to pick up the new 4th edition of the book “Poor Charlie’s Almanack,” a collection of Munger’s speeches and writings.
“Charlie’s wisdom will improve your life as it has mine,” Buffett wrote.



Photos: 30 images of Warren Buffett through the years
Buffett family at home in 1956
Warren and Susan Buffett at their home at 5202 Underwood Ave. in 1956. The family was “back in Omaha and ready for a picnic,” The World-Herald reported. Susie was 2½, and Howard was 17 months.
Buffett, 1966
Warren Buffett in 1966.
Warren Buffett in 1966
From left: Bill Scott, Warren Buffett and John Harding in May 1966.
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1969: Warren Buffett was a vice president of Omaha’s Boys Club. Here, member Spencer McGruder, center, gives the president’s gavel to C. Clifton Nelson, left, as Buffett looks on.
Buffett in the 1970s
Warren Buffett in the mid-1970s.
Buffett, Blumkin, 1983
Warren Buffett and Rose Blumkin announce the partnership between Nebraska Furniture Mart and Berkshire Hathaway in September 1983. They are seated in the carpet department of the Mart.
Buffett, 1982
Warren Buffett at his Kiewit Plaza office in 1982.
Fortune magazine cover
Warren Buffett was featured on the cover of Fortune magazine in April 1988.
Buffett, Munger, 1989
Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger take questions from shareholders after Berkshire’s annual meeting in April 1989.
Buffett grabs a Coke
Warren Buffett checks out the Coca-Cola at the Berkshire meeting in April 1989.
Buffett playing bridge, 1990
Warren Buffett and Dick Denton play bridge in 1990 at the Omaha Bridge Studio.
Warren Buffett and his mother
Leila Buffett, then 88, talks with her son Warren Buffett before the company’s annual meeting in 1992. At center is Charles Higgins, president of See’s Candy.
Buffett at Omaha Royals game, 2003
Warren Buffett tosses out a pitch before the start of the Omaha Royals’ home opener at Rosenblatt Stadium on April 11, 2003. Buffett’s jersey was retired before the game.
Buffett, 1992
Warren Buffett drinks a Coke at the First National Bank Building in 1992.
Buffett on TV show
Warren Buffett guest starred on an episode of “All My Children” in 1993. Here he has a scene with Jill Larson as Opal Cortlandt.
Buffett at office, 1993
Warren Buffett at his Berkshire office at Kiewit Plaza in 1993. He’d placed his hands and feet in cement for a fundraiser for the Omaha Community Playhouse.
Buffett throwing out first pitch, 1995
Warren Buffett winds up to throw out the first pitch at an Omaha Royals/Buffalo game in April 1995.
Buffett driving, 1996
Warren Buffett drives himself away from a Berkshire Hathaway meeting at the Holiday Inn in 1996.
Buffett at ’98 Texas game
A photographer captures Warren Buffett on the sidelines of the Texas/Nebraska game in October 1998 for a Fortune Magazine feature.
Buffett and Gates, 1995
Bill Gates says Warren Buffett has basically stuck to eating what he liked when he was 6 years old. He mostly eats hamburgers, ice cream, and Coke. Here, two of the world’s richest men are about to get some burgers and fries during a 1995 visit to McDonald’s in Hong Kong. Said Gates of Buffett: “Always thrifty, Warren paid with coupons.”
Buffett and Gates, 2004
Warren Buffett and Bill Gates play a hand of bridge for the press before the start of a bridge tournament at the Omaha Bridge Studio in 2004.
Winning hand
Warren Buffet collects his chips after winning a hand next to Joe Moglia, CEO of TD Ameritrade, during the Omega/Casino Royale Texas Hold ‘Em Tournament as part of the Borsheims grand reopening in 2006.
Buffett at Berkshire meeting, 2011
Warren Buffett eats a Dilly Bar and talks with reporters at the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway exhibit during the 2011 Berkshire meeting.
Buffett at his high school alma mater
David Rubenstein, president of the Economic Club of Washington, D.C., gives Buffett a jacket from his high school alma mater, Woodrow Wilson High School, with the “47” on the sleeve for Buffett’s graduation class of 1947. Buffett’s response: “Go, Tigers!” That’s the name of the Wilson High mascot.
Advantage, Buffett
Warren Buffett breaks out a giant paddle while playing against Olympian Ariel Hsing during several rounds of ping pong at Regency Court in Omaha on May 6, 2012.
Buffett playing cards, 2016
Warren Buffett plays cards during a Berkshire Hathaway event at Regency Court on May 1, 2016.
Buffett at 2017 meeting
Warren Buffett takes a swig of a Cherry Coke before participating in the newspaper toss at the 2017 Berkshire Hathaway shareholder meeting.
Buffett at UNO, 2013
Warren Buffett poses with a large image of himself at UNO’s Mammel Hall in 2013.
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