2016 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting

Lessons from this meeting:

  1. Embrace Experimentation & Learn from Mistakes
    • Try new approaches (e.g., online insurance portals) knowing some will fail but valuable lessons will follow.
    • Keep iterating over decades—today’s “mistakes” often seed tomorrow’s breakthroughs.
  2. Prioritize Culture & Long Tenure
    • A strong, consistent culture attracts and retains managers who “love their jobs,” minimizing costly turnover.
    • Entrench values through aligned boards, investors, and managers rather than relying on titles or formal committees.
  3. Focus on Microeconomics, Not Macro Forecasts
    • Study the detailed economics of individual businesses—unit costs, customer behavior, competitive positioning.
    • Ignore “macro” noise; emphasize the specific drivers of cash flow within the companies you own.
  4. Value Trustworthy, Owner-Oriented Managers
    • Seek leaders whose incentives (ownership stakes, compensation plans) align with shareholders’—and whose character you can trust.
    • Negotiate swiftly and in good faith, avoiding drawn-out, zero-sum haggling that tests relationships.
  5. Keep Incentives Simple and Aligned
    • Tie bonuses to just a few clear metrics (e.g., GEICO’s growth in policies-in-force + profit on seasoned business).
    • Avoid one-size-fits-all schemes; design bespoke plans that reward precisely the behaviors you want.
  6. Be Patient but Opportunistic with Cash (Float)
    • Treat underwriting float as a long-duration option—willing to “pay a little now” (underwrite at a small loss) to control large sums.
    • In low-rate environments, stay ready to deploy cash into infrequent but high-return opportunities.
  7. Maintain a Margin of Safety in Valuations
    • Never pay up just because interest rates are low; stick to prices that justify future returns even if financing is “cheap.”
    • Don’t let the lure of near-zero rates seduce you into overpaying for “sure things.”
  8. Don’t Inflate Reported Earnings
    • Resist the temptation to carve out “one-time” charges or adjust every metric; transparent, conservatively stated results build trust.
    • Remember that aggressive depreciation or amortization can understate true economics—be clear about your accounting’s quirks.
  9. Avoid Over-Engineering Due Diligence
    • Checklist diligence (leases, patents, contracts) rarely catches the real risk: future industry economics and manager integrity.
    • Trust your business judgment and pattern recognition—deep dives only where they truly matter.
  10. Think in Generational Timeframes
  • Aim to add to normalized earnings per share every year; small, consistent gains compound into huge value.
  • Beware of size as an “enemy of performance”—focus on the best opportunities, not just “deploying” capital.

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