BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY INC.
To the Shareholders of Berkshire Hathaway Inc.:
Our gain in net worth during 1994 was $1.45 billion or 13.9%.
Over the last 30 years (that is, since present management took
over) our per-share book value has grown from $19 to $10,083, or
at a rate of 23% compounded annually.
Charlie Munger, Berkshire's Vice Chairman and my partner,
and I make few predictions. One we will confidently offer,
however, is that the future performance of Berkshire won't come
close to matching the performance of the past.
The problem is not that what has worked in the past will
cease to work in the future. To the contrary, we believe that
our formula - the purchase at sensible prices of businesses that
have good underlying economics and are run by honest and able
people - is certain to produce reasonable success. We expect,
therefore, to keep on doing well.
A fat wallet, however, is the enemy of superior investment
results. And Berkshire now has a net worth of $11.9 billion
compared to about $22 million when Charlie and I began to manage
the company. Though there are as many good businesses as ever,
it is useless for us to make purchases that are inconsequential
in relation to Berkshire's capital. (As Charlie regularly
reminds me, "If something is not worth doing at all, it's not
worth doing well.") We now consider a security for purchase only
if we believe we can deploy at least $100 million in it. Given
that minimum, Berkshire's investment universe has shrunk
dramatically.
Nevertheless, we will stick with the approach that got us
here and try not to relax our standards. Ted Williams, in
The Story of My Life, explains why: "My argument is, to be
a good hitter, you've got to get a good ball to hit. It's the
first rule in the book. If I have to bite at stuff that is out
of my happy zone, I'm not a .344 hitter. I might only be a .250
hitter." Charlie and I agree and will try to wait for
opportunities that are well within our own "happy zone."
We will continue to ignore political and economic forecasts,
which are an expensive distraction for many investors and
businessmen. Thirty years ago, no one could have foreseen the
huge expansion of the Vietnam War, wage and price controls, two
oil shocks, the resignation of a president, the dissolution of
the Soviet Union, a one-day drop in the Dow of 508 points, or
treasury bill yields fluctuating between 2.8% and 17.4%.
But, surprise - none of these blockbuster events made the
slightest dent in Ben Graham's investment principles. Nor did
they render unsound the negotiated purchases of fine businesses
at sensible prices. Imagine the cost to us, then, if we had let
a fear of unknowns cause us to defer or alter the deployment of
capital. Indeed, we have usually made our best purchases when
apprehensions about some macro event were at a peak. Fear is the
foe of the faddist, but the friend of the fundamentalist.
A different set of major shocks is sure to occur in the next
30 years. We will neither try to predict these nor to profit
from them. If we can identify businesses similar to those we
have purchased in the past, external surprises will have little
effect on our long-term results.
What we promise you - along with more modest gains - is that
during your ownership of Berkshire, you will fare just as Charlie
and I do. If you suffer, we will suffer; if we prosper, so will
you. And we will not break this bond by introducing compensation
arrangements that give us a greater participation in the upside
than the downside.
We further promise you that our personal fortunes will
remain overwhelmingly concentrated in Berkshire shares: We will
not ask you to invest with us and then put our own money
elsewhere. In addition, Berkshire dominates both the investment
portfolios of most members of our families and of a great many
friends who belonged to partnerships that Charlie and I ran in
the 1960's. We could not be more motivated to do our best.
Luckily, we have a good base from which to work. Ten years
ago, in 1984, Berkshire's insurance companies held securities
having a value of $1.7 billion, or about $1,500 per Berkshire
share. Leaving aside all income and capital gains from those
securities, Berkshire's pre-tax earnings that year were only
about $6 million. We had earnings, yes, from our various
manufacturing, retailing and service businesses, but they were
almost entirely offset by the combination of underwriting losses
in our insurance business, corporate overhead and interest
expense.
Now we hold securities worth $18 billion, or over $15,000
per Berkshire share. If you again exclude all income from these
securities, our pre-tax earnings in 1994 were about $384 million.
During the decade, employment has grown from 5,000 to 22,000
(including eleven people at World Headquarters).
We achieved our gains through the efforts of a superb corps
of operating managers who get extraordinary results from some
ordinary-appearing businesses. Casey Stengel described managing
a baseball team as "getting paid for home runs other fellows
hit." That's my formula at Berkshire, also.
The businesses in which we have partial interests are
equally important to Berkshire's success. A few statistics will
illustrate their significance: In 1994, Coca-Cola sold about 280
billion 8-ounce servings and earned a little less than a penny on
each. But pennies add up. Through Berkshire's 7.8% ownership of
Coke, we have an economic interest in 21 billion of its servings,
which produce "soft-drink earnings" for us of nearly $200
million. Similarly, by way of its Gillette stock, Berkshire has
a 7% share of the world's razor and blade market (measured by
revenues, not by units), a proportion according us about $250
million of sales in 1994. And, at Wells Fargo, a $53 billion
bank, our 13% ownership translates into a $7 billion "Berkshire
Bank" that earned about $100 million during 1994.
It's far better to own a significant portion of the Hope
diamond than 100% of a rhinestone, and the companies just
mentioned easily qualify as rare gems. Best of all, we aren't
limited to simply a few of this breed, but instead possess a
growing collection.
Stock prices will continue to fluctuate - sometimes sharply
- and the economy will have its ups and down. Over time,
however, we believe it highly probable that the sort of
businesses we own will continue to increase in value at a
satisfactory rate.
Book Value and Intrinsic Value
We regularly report our per-share book value, an easily
calculable number, though one of limited use. Just as regularly,
we tell you that what counts is intrinsic value, a number that is
impossible to pinpoint but essential to estimate.
For example, in 1964, we could state with certitude that
Berkshire's per-share book value was $19.46. However, that
figure considerably overstated the stock's intrinsic value since
all of the company's resources were tied up in a sub-profitable
textile business. Our textile assets had neither going-concern
nor liquidation values equal to their carrying values. In 1964,
then, anyone inquiring into the soundness of Berkshire's balance
sheet might well have deserved the answer once offered up by a
Hollywood mogul of dubious reputation: "Don't worry, the
liabilities are solid."
Today, Berkshire's situation has reversed: Many of the
businesses we control are worth far more than their carrying
value. (Those we don't control, such as Coca-Cola or Gillette,
are carried at current market values.) We continue to give you
book value figures, however, because they serve as a rough,
albeit significantly understated, tracking measure for Berkshire's
intrinsic value. Last year, in fact, the two measures moved in
concert: Book value gained 13.9%, and that was the approximate
gain in intrinsic value also.
We define intrinsic value as the discounted value of the
cash that can be taken out of a business during its remaining
life. Anyone calculating intrinsic value necessarily comes up
with a highly subjective figure that will change both as
estimates of future cash flows are revised and as interest rates
move. Despite its fuzziness, however, intrinsic value is all-
important and is the only logical way to evaluate the relative
attractiveness of investments and businesses.
To see how historical input (book value) and future output
(intrinsic value) can diverge, let's look at another form of
investment, a college education. Think of the education's cost
as its "book value." If it is to be accurate, the cost should
include the earnings that were foregone by the student because he
chose college rather than a job.
For this exercise, we will ignore the important non-economic
benefits of an education and focus strictly on its economic
value. First, we must estimate the earnings that the graduate
will receive over his lifetime and subtract from that figure an
estimate of what he would have earned had he lacked his
education. That gives us an excess earnings figure, which must
then be discounted, at an appropriate interest rate, back to
graduation day. The dollar result equals the intrinsic economic
value of the education.
Some graduates will find that the book value of their
education exceeds its intrinsic value, which means that whoever
paid for the education didn't get his money's worth. In other
cases, the intrinsic value of an education will far exceed its
book value, a result that proves capital was wisely deployed. In
all cases, what is clear is that book value is meaningless as an
indicator of intrinsic value.
Now let's get less academic and look at Scott Fetzer, an
example from Berkshire's own experience. This account will not
only illustrate how the relationship of book value and intrinsic
value can change but also will provide an accounting lesson that
I know you have been breathlessly awaiting. Naturally, I've
chosen here to talk about an acquisition that has turned out to
be a huge winner.
Berkshire purchased Scott Fetzer at the beginning of 1986.
At the time, the company was a collection of 22 businesses, and
today we have exactly the same line-up - no additions and no
disposals. Scott Fetzer's main operations are World Book, Kirby,
and Campbell Hausfeld, but many other units are important
contributors to earnings as well.
We paid $315.2 million for Scott Fetzer, which at the time
had $172.6 million of book value. The $142.6 million premium we
handed over indicated our belief that the company's intrinsic
value was close to double its book value.
In the table below we trace the book value of Scott Fetzer,
as well as its earnings and dividends, since our purchase.
(1) (4)
Beginning (2) (3) Ending
Year Book Value Earnings Dividends Book Value
---- ---------- -------- --------- ----------
(In $ Millions) (1)+(2)-(3)
1986 ............... $172.6 $ 40.3 $125.0 $ 87.9
1987 ............... 87.9 48.6 41.0 95.5
1988 ............... 95.5 58.0 35.0 118.6
1989 ............... 118.6 58.5 71.5 105.5
1990 ............... 105.5 61.3 33.5 133.3
1991 ............... 133.3 61.4 74.0 120.7
1992 ............... 120.7 70.5 80.0 111.2
1993 ............... 111.2 77.5 98.0 90.7
1994 ............... 90.7 79.3 76.0 94.0
Because it had excess cash when our deal was made, Scott
Fetzer was able to pay Berkshire dividends of $125 million in
1986, though it earned only $40.3 million. I should mention that
we have not introduced leverage into Scott Fetzer's balance
sheet. In fact, the company has gone from very modest debt when
we purchased it to virtually no debt at all (except for debt used
by its finance subsidiary). Similarly, we have not sold plants
and leased them back, nor sold receivables, nor the like.
Throughout our years of ownership, Scott Fetzer has operated as a
conservatively-financed and liquid enterprise.
As you can see, Scott Fetzer's earnings have increased
steadily since we bought it, but book value has not grown
commensurately. Consequently, return on equity, which was
exceptional at the time of our purchase, has now become truly
extraordinary. Just how extraordinary is illustrated by
comparing Scott Fetzer's performance to that of the Fortune 500,
a group it would qualify for if it were a stand-alone company.
Had Scott Fetzer been on the 1993 500 list - the latest
available for inspection - the company's return on equity would
have ranked 4th. But that is far from the whole story. The top
three companies in return on equity were Insilco, LTV and Gaylord
Container, each of which emerged from bankruptcy in 1993 and none
of which achieved meaningful earnings that year except for those
they realized when they were accorded debt forgiveness in
bankruptcy proceedings. Leaving aside such non-operating
windfalls, Scott Fetzer's return on equity would have ranked it
first on the Fortune 500, well ahead of number two. Indeed,
Scott Fetzer's return on equity was double that of the company
ranking tenth.
You might expect that Scott Fetzer's success could only be
explained by a cyclical peak in earnings, a monopolistic
position, or leverage. But no such circumstances apply. Rather,
the company's success comes from the managerial expertise of CEO
Ralph Schey, of whom I'll tell you more later.
First, however, the promised accounting lesson: When we
paid a $142.6 million premium over book value for Scott Fetzer,
that figure had to be recorded on Berkshire's balance sheet.
I'll spare you the details of how this worked (these were laid
out in an appendix to our 1986 Annual Report) and get to the
bottom line: After a premium is initially recorded, it must in
almost all cases be written off over time through annual charges
that are shown as costs in the acquiring company's earnings
statement.
The following table shows, first, the annual charges
Berkshire has made to gradually extinguish the Scott Fetzer
acquisition premium and, second, the premium that remains on our
books. These charges have no effect on cash or the taxes we pay,
and are not, in our view, an economic cost (though many
accountants would disagree with us). They are merely a way for
us to reduce the carrying value of Scott Fetzer on our books so
that the figure will eventually match the net worth that Scott
Fetzer actually employs in its business.
Beginning Purchase-Premium Ending
Purchase Charge to Purchase
Year Premium Berkshire Earnings Premium
---- --------- ------------------ --------
(In $ Millions)
1986 ................ $142.6 $ 11.6 $131.0
1987 ................ 131.0 7.1 123.9
1988 ................ 123.9 7.9 115.9
1989 ................ 115.9 7.0 108.9
1990 ................ 108.9 7.1 101.9
1991 ................ 101.9 6.9 95.0
1992 ................ 95.0 7.7 87.2
1993 ................ 87.2 28.1 59.1
1994 ................ 59.1 4.9 54.2
Note that by the end of 1994 the premium was reduced to
$54.2 million. When this figure is added to Scott Fetzer's year-
end book value of $94 million, the total is $148.2 million, which
is the current carrying value of Scott Fetzer on Berkshire's
books. That amount is less than half of our carrying value for
the company when it was acquired. Yet Scott Fetzer is now
earning about twice what it then did. Clearly, the intrinsic
value of the business has consistently grown, even though we have
just as consistently marked down its carrying value through
purchase-premium charges that reduced Berkshire's earnings and
net worth.
The difference between Scott Fetzer's intrinsic value and
its carrying value on Berkshire's books is now huge. As I
mentioned earlier - but am delighted to mention again - credit
for this agreeable mismatch goes to Ralph Schey, a focused, smart
and high-grade manager.
The reasons for Ralph's success are not complicated. Ben
Graham taught me 45 years ago that in investing it is not
necessary to do extraordinary things to get extraordinary
results. In later life, I have been surprised to find that this
statement holds true in business management as well. What a
manager must do is handle the basics well and not get diverted.
That's precisely Ralph's formula. He establishes the right goals
and never forgets what he set out to do. On the personal side,
Ralph is a joy to work with. He's forthright about problems and
is self-confident without being self-important.
He is also experienced. Though I don't know Ralph's age, I
do know that, like many of our managers, he is over 65. At
Berkshire, we look to performance, not to the calendar. Charlie
and I, at 71 and 64 respectively, now keep George Foreman's
picture on our desks. You can make book that our scorn for a
mandatory retirement age will grow stronger every year.
Intrinsic Value and Capital Allocation
Understanding intrinsic value is as important for managers
as it is for investors. When managers are making capital
allocation decisions - including decisions to repurchase shares -
it's vital that they act in ways that increase per-share
intrinsic value and avoid moves that decrease it. This principle
may seem obvious but we constantly see it violated. And, when
misallocations occur, shareholders are hurt.
For example, in contemplating business mergers and
acquisitions, many managers tend to focus on whether the
transaction is immediately dilutive or anti-dilutive to earnings
per share (or, at financial institutions, to per-share book
value). An emphasis of this sort carries great dangers. Going
back to our college-education example, imagine that a 25-year-old
first-year MBA student is considering merging his future economic
interests with those of a 25-year-old day laborer. The MBA
student, a non-earner, would find that a "share-for-share" merger
of his equity interest in himself with that of the day laborer
would enhance his near-term earnings (in a big way!). But what
could be sillier for the student than a deal of this kind?
In corporate transactions, it's equally silly for the would-
be purchaser to focus on current earnings when the prospective
acquiree has either different prospects, different amounts of
non-operating assets, or a different capital structure. At
Berkshire, we have rejected many merger and purchase
opportunities that would have boosted current and near-term
earnings but that would have reduced per-share intrinsic value.
Our approach, rather, has been to follow Wayne Gretzky's advice:
"Go to where the puck is going to be, not to where it is." As a
result, our shareholders are now many billions of dollars richer
than they would have been if we had used the standard catechism.
The sad fact is that most major acquisitions display an
egregious imbalance: They are a bonanza for the shareholders of
the acquiree; they increase the income and status of the
acquirer's management; and they are a honey pot for the
investment bankers and other professionals on both sides. But,
alas, they usually reduce the wealth of the acquirer's shareholders,
often to a substantial extent. That happens because the acquirer
typically gives up more intrinsic value than it receives. Do that
enough, says John Medlin, the retired head of Wachovia Corp., and
"you are running a chain letter in reverse."
Over time, the skill with which a company's managers
allocate capital has an enormous impact on the enterprise's
value. Almost by definition, a really good business generates
far more money (at least after its early years) than it can use
internally. The company could, of course, distribute the money
to shareholders by way of dividends or share repurchases. But
often the CEO asks a strategic planning staff, consultants or
investment bankers whether an acquisition or two might make
sense. That's like asking your interior decorator whether you
need a $50,000 rug.
The acquisition problem is often compounded by a biological
bias: Many CEO's attain their positions in part because they
possess an abundance of animal spirits and ego. If an executive
is heavily endowed with these qualities - which, it should be
acknowledged, sometimes have their advantages - they won't
disappear when he reaches the top. When such a CEO is encouraged
by his advisors to make deals, he responds much as would a
teenage boy who is encouraged by his father to have a normal sex
life. It's not a push he needs.
Some years back, a CEO friend of mine - in jest, it must be
said - unintentionally described the pathology of many big deals.
This friend, who ran a property-casualty insurer, was explaining
to his directors why he wanted to acquire a certain life
insurance company. After droning rather unpersuasively through
the economics and strategic rationale for the acquisition, he
abruptly abandoned the script. With an impish look, he simply
said: "Aw, fellas, all the other kids have one."
At Berkshire, our managers will continue to earn
extraordinary returns from what appear to be ordinary businesses.
As a first step, these managers will look for ways to deploy
their earnings advantageously in their businesses. What's left,
they will send to Charlie and me. We then will try to use those
funds in ways that build per-share intrinsic value. Our goal
will be to acquire either part or all of businesses that we
believe we understand, that have good, sustainable underlying
economics, and that are run by managers whom we like, admire and
trust.
Compensation
At Berkshire, we try to be as logical about compensation as
about capital allocation. For example, we compensate Ralph Schey
based upon the results of Scott Fetzer rather than those of
Berkshire. What could make more sense, since he's responsible
for one operation but not the other? A cash bonus or a stock
option tied to the fortunes of Berkshire would provide totally
capricious rewards to Ralph. He could, for example, be hitting
home runs at Scott Fetzer while Charlie and I rang up mistakes at
Berkshire, thereby negating his efforts many times over.
Conversely, why should option profits or bonuses be heaped upon
Ralph if good things are occurring in other parts of Berkshire
but Scott Fetzer is lagging?
In setting compensation, we like to hold out the promise of
large carrots, but make sure their delivery is tied directly to
results in the area that a manager controls. When capital
invested in an operation is significant, we also both charge
managers a high rate for incremental capital they employ and
credit them at an equally high rate for capital they release.
The product of this money's-not-free approach is definitely
visible at Scott Fetzer. If Ralph can employ incremental funds
at good returns, it pays him to do so: His bonus increases when
earnings on additional capital exceed a meaningful hurdle charge.
But our bonus calculation is symmetrical: If incremental
investment yields sub-standard returns, the shortfall is costly
to Ralph as well as to Berkshire. The consequence of this two-
way arrangement is that it pays Ralph - and pays him well - to
send to Omaha any cash he can't advantageously use in his
business.
It has become fashionable at public companies to describe
almost every compensation plan as aligning the interests of
management with those of shareholders. In our book, alignment
means being a partner in both directions, not just on the upside.
Many "alignment" plans flunk this basic test, being artful forms
of "heads I win, tails you lose."
A common form of misalignment occurs in the typical stock
option arrangement, which does not periodically increase the
option price to compensate for the fact that retained earnings
are building up the wealth of the company. Indeed, the
combination of a ten-year option, a low dividend payout, and
compound interest can provide lush gains to a manager who has
done no more than tread water in his job. A cynic might even
note that when payments to owners are held down, the profit to
the option-holding manager increases. I have yet to see this
vital point spelled out in a proxy statement asking shareholders
to approve an option plan.
I can't resist mentioning that our compensation arrangement
with Ralph Schey was worked out in about five minutes,
immediately upon our purchase of Scott Fetzer and without the
"help" of lawyers or compensation consultants. This arrangement
embodies a few very simple ideas - not the kind of terms favored
by consultants who cannot easily send a large bill unless they
have established that you have a large problem (and one, of
course, that requires an annual review). Our agreement with
Ralph has never been changed. It made sense to him and to me in
1986, and it makes sense now. Our compensation arrangements with
the managers of all our other units are similarly simple, though
the terms of each agreement vary to fit the economic
characteristics of the business at issue, the existence in some
cases of partial ownership of the unit by managers, etc.
In all instances, we pursue rationality. Arrangements that
pay off in capricious ways, unrelated to a manager's personal
accomplishments, may well be welcomed by certain managers. Who,
after all, refuses a free lottery ticket? But such arrangements
are wasteful to the company and cause the manager to lose focus
on what should be his real areas of concern. Additionally,
irrational behavior at the parent may well encourage imitative
behavior at subsidiaries.
At Berkshire, only Charlie and I have the managerial
responsibility for the entire business. Therefore, we are the
only parties who should logically be compensated on the basis of
what the enterprise does as a whole. Even so, that is not a
compensation arrangement we desire. We have carefully designed
both the company and our jobs so that we do things we enjoy with
people we like. Equally important, we are forced to do very few
boring or unpleasant tasks. We are the beneficiaries as well of
the abundant array of material and psychic perks that flow to the
heads of corporations. Under such idyllic conditions, we don't
expect shareholders to ante up loads of compensation for which we
have no possible need.
Indeed, if we were not paid at all, Charlie and I would be
delighted with the cushy jobs we hold. At bottom, we subscribe
to Ronald Reagan's creed: "It's probably true that hard work
never killed anyone, but I figure why take the chance."
Sources of Reported Earnings
The table on the next page shows the main sources of
Berkshire's reported earnings. In this presentation, purchase-
premium charges of the type we discussed in our earlier analysis
of Scott Fetzer are not assigned to the specific businesses to
which they apply, but are instead aggregated and shown
separately. This procedure lets you view the earnings of our
businesses as they would have been reported had we not purchased
them. This form of presentation seems to us to be more useful to
investors and managers than one utilizing GAAP, which requires
purchase premiums to be charged off, business-by-business. The
total earnings we show in the table are, of course, identical to
the GAAP total in our audited financial statements.
Berkshire's Share
of Net Earnings
(after taxes and
Pre-Tax Earnings minority interests)
------------------- -------------------
1994 1993 1994 1993
-------- -------- -------- --------
(000s omitted)
Operating Earnings:
Insurance Group:
Underwriting ............... $129,926 $ 30,876 $ 80,860 $ 20,156
Net Investment Income ...... 419,422 375,946 350,453 321,321
Buffalo News ................. 54,238 50,962 31,685 29,696
Fechheimer ................... 14,260 13,442 7,107 6,931
Finance Businesses ........... 21,568 22,695 14,293 14,161
Kirby ........................ 42,349 39,147 27,719 25,056
Nebraska Furniture Mart ...... 17,356 21,540 8,652 10,398
Scott Fetzer Manufacturing Group 39,435 38,196 24,909 23,809
See's Candies ................ 47,539 41,150 28,247 24,367
Shoe Group ................... 85,503 44,025* 55,750 28,829
World Book ................... 24,662 19,915 17,275 13,537
Purchase-Price Premium Charges (22,595) (17,033) (19,355) (13,996)
Interest Expense** ........... (60,111) (56,545) (37,264) (35,614)
Shareholder-Designated
Contributions ............. (10,419) (9,448) (6,668) (5,994)
Other ........................ 36,232 28,428 22,576 15,094
-------- -------- -------- --------
Operating Earnings ............. 839,365 643,296 606,239 477,751
Sales of Securities ............ 91,332 546,422 61,138 356,702
Decline in Value of
USAir Preferred Stock ..... (268,500) --- (172,579) ---
Tax Accruals Caused by
New Accounting Rules ...... --- --- --- (146,332)
-------- --------- -------- --------
Total Earnings - All Entities .. $662,197 $1,189,718 $494,798 $688,121
======== ========= ======== ========
* Includes Dexter's earnings only from the date it was acquired,
November 7, 1993.
**Excludes interest expense of Finance Businesses.
A large amount of information about these businesses is given
on pages 37-48, where you will also find our segment earnings
reported on a GAAP basis. In addition, on pages 53-59, we have
rearranged Berkshire's financial data into four segments on a non-
GAAP basis, a presentation that corresponds to the way Charlie and
I think about the company. Our intent is to supply you with the
financial information that we would wish you to give us if our
positions were reversed.
"Look-Through" Earnings
In past reports, we've discussed look-through earnings, which
we believe more accurately portray the earnings of Berkshire than
does our GAAP result. As we calculate them, look-through earnings
consist of: (1) the operating earnings reported in the previous
section, plus; (2) the retained operating earnings of major
investees that, under GAAP accounting, are not reflected in our
profits, less; (3) an allowance for the tax that would be paid by
Berkshire if these retained earnings of investees had instead been
distributed to us. The "operating earnings" of which we speak here
exclude capital gains, special accounting items and major
restructuring charges.
If our intrinsic value is to grow at our target rate of 15%,
our look-through earnings, over time, must also increase at about
that pace. When I first explained this concept a few years back, I
told you that meeting this 15% goal would require us to generate
look-through earnings of about $1.8 billion by 2000. Because we've
since issued about 3% more shares, that figure has grown to $1.85
billion.
We are now modestly ahead of schedule in meeting our goal, but
to a significant degree that is because our super-cat insurance
business has recently delivered earnings far above trend-line
expectancy (an outcome I will discuss in the next section). Giving
due weight to that abnormality, we still expect to hit our target
but that, of course, is no sure thing.
The following table shows how we calculate look-through
earnings, though I warn you that the figures are necessarily very
rough. (The dividends paid to us by these investees have been
included in the operating earnings itemized on page 12, mostly
under "Insurance Group: Net Investment Income.")
Berkshire's Share
of Undistributed
Berkshire's Approximate Operating Earnings
Berkshire's Major Investees Ownership at Yearend (in millions)
--------------------------- ----------------------- ------------------
1994 1993 1994 1993
------ ------ ------ ------
American Express Company ...... 5.5% 2.4% $ 25(2) $ 16
Capital Cities/ABC, Inc. ...... 13.0% 13.0% 85 83(2)
The Coca-Cola Company ......... 7.8% 7.2% 116(2) 94
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. 6.3%(1) 6.8%(1) 47(2) 41(2)
Gannett Co., Inc. ............. 4.9% --- 4(2) ---
GEICO Corp. ................... 50.2% 48.4% 63(3) 76(3)
The Gillette Company .......... 10.8% 10.9% 51 44
PNC Bank Corp. ................ 8.3% --- 10(2) ---
The Washington Post Company ... 15.2% 14.8% 18 15
Wells Fargo & Company ......... 13.3% 12.2% 73 53(2)
------ ------
Berkshire's share of undistributed
earnings of major investees $ 492 $422
Hypothetical tax on these undistributed
investee earnings(4) (68) (59)
Reported operating earnings of Berkshire 606 478
------- ------
Total look-through earnings of Berkshire $1,030 $ 841
(1) Does not include shares allocable to the minority interest
at Wesco
(2) Calculated on average ownership for the year
(3) Excludes realized capital gains, which have been both
recurring and significant
(4) The tax rate used is 14%, which is the rate Berkshire pays
on the dividends it receives
Insurance Operations
As we've explained in past reports, what counts in our
insurance business is, first, the amount of "float" we develop and,
second, its cost to us. Float is money we hold but don't own. In
an insurance operation, float arises because most policies require
that premiums be prepaid and, more importantly, because it usually
takes time for an insurer to hear about and resolve loss claims.
Typically, the premiums that an insurer takes in do not cover
the losses and expenses it must pay. That leaves it running an
"underwriting loss" - and that loss is the cost of float.
An insurance business is profitable over time if its cost of
float is less than the cost the company would otherwise incur to
obtain funds. But the business has a negative value if the cost of
its float is higher than market rates for money.
As the numbers in the following table show, Berkshire's
insurance business has been an enormous winner. For the table, we
have compiled our float - which we generate in exceptional amounts
relative to our premium volume - by adding loss reserves, loss
adjustment reserves, funds held under reinsurance assumed and unearned
premium reserves and then subtracting agents' balances, prepaid
acquisition costs, prepaid taxes and deferred charges applicable to
assumed reinsurance. Our cost of float is determined by our
underwriting loss or profit. In those years when we have had an
underwriting profit, such as the last two, our cost of float has been
negative, and we have determined our insurance earnings by adding
underwriting profit to float income.
(1) (2) Yearend Yield
Underwriting Approximate on Long-Term
Loss Average Float Cost of Funds Govt. Bonds
------------ ------------- ------------- -------------
(In $ Millions) (Ratio of 1 to 2)
1967 .......... profit $ 17.3 less than zero 5.50%
1968 .......... profit 19.9 less than zero 5.90%
1969 .......... profit 23.4 less than zero 6.79%
1970 .......... $ 0.37 32.4 1.14% 6.25%
1971 .......... profit 52.5 less than zero 5.81%
1972 .......... profit 69.5 less than zero 5.82%
1973 .......... profit 73.3 less than zero 7.27%
1974 .......... 7.36 79.1 9.30% 8.13%
1975 .......... 11.35 87.6 12.96% 8.03%
1976 .......... profit 102.6 less than zero 7.30%
1977 .......... profit 139.0 less than zero 7.97%
1978 .......... profit 190.4 less than zero 8.93%
1979 .......... profit 227.3 less than zero 10.08%
1980 .......... profit 237.0 less than zero 11.94%
1981 .......... profit 228.4 less than zero 13.61%
1982 .......... 21.56 220.6 9.77% 10.64%
1983 .......... 33.87 231.3 14.64% 11.84%
1984 .......... 48.06 253.2 18.98% 11.58%
1985 .......... 44.23 390.2 11.34% 9.34%
1986 .......... 55.84 797.5 7.00% 7.60%
1987 .......... 55.43 1,266.7 4.38% 8.95%
1988 .......... 11.08 1,497.7 0.74% 9.00%
1989 .......... 24.40 1,541.3 1.58% 7.97%
1990 .......... 26.65 1,637.3 1.63% 8.24%
1991 .......... 119.59 1,895.0 6.31% 7.40%
1992 .......... 108.96 2,290.4 4.76% 7.39%
1993 .......... profit 2,624.7 less than zero 6.35%
1994 .......... profit 3,056.6 less than zero 7.88%
Charlie and I are delighted that our float grew in 1994 and
are even more pleased that it proved to be cost-free. But our
message this year echoes the one we delivered in 1993: Though we
have a fine insurance business, it is not as good as it currently
looks.
The reason we must repeat this caution is that our "super-cat"
business (which sells policies that insurance and reinsurance
companies buy to protect themselves from the effects of mega-
catastrophes) was again highly profitable. Since truly major
catastrophes occur infrequently, our super-cat business can be
expected to show large profits in most years but occasionally to
record a huge loss. In other words, the attractiveness of our
super-cat business will take many years to measure. Certainly 1994
should be regarded as close to a best-case. Our only significant
losses arose from the California earthquake in January. I will add
that we do not expect to suffer a major loss from the early-1995
Kobe earthquake.
Super-cat policies are small in number, large in size and non-
standardized. Therefore, the underwriting of this business
requires far more judgment than, say, the underwriting of auto
policies, for which a mass of data is available. Here Berkshire
has a major advantage: Ajit Jain, our super-cat manager, whose
underwriting skills are the finest. His value to us is simply
enormous.
In addition, Berkshire has a special advantage in the super-
cat business because of our towering financial strength, which
helps us in two ways. First, a prudent insurer will want its
protection against true mega-catastrophes - such as a $50 billion
windstorm loss on Long Island or an earthquake of similar cost in
California - to be absolutely certain. But that same insurer knows
that the disaster making it dependent on a large super-cat recovery
is also the disaster that could cause many reinsurers to default.
There's not much sense in paying premiums for coverage that will
evaporate precisely when it is needed. So the certainty that
Berkshire will be both solvent and liquid after a catastrophe of
unthinkable proportions is a major competitive advantage for us.
The second benefit of our capital strength is that we can
write policies for amounts that no one else can even consider. For
example, during 1994, a primary insurer wished to buy a short-term
policy for $400 million of California earthquake coverage and we
wrote the policy immediately. We know of no one else in the world
who would take a $400 million risk, or anything close to it, for
their own account.
Generally, brokers attempt to place coverage for large amounts
by spreading the burden over a number of small policies. But, at
best, coverage of that sort takes considerable time to arrange. In
the meantime, the company desiring reinsurance is left holding a
risk it doesn't want and that may seriously threaten its well-
being. At Berkshire, on the other hand, we will quote prices for
coverage as great as $500 million on the same day that we are asked
to bid. No one else in the industry will do the same.
By writing coverages in large lumps, we obviously expose
Berkshire to lumpy financial results. That's totally acceptable to
us: Too often, insurers (as well as other businesses) follow sub-
optimum strategies in order to "smooth" their reported earnings.
By accepting the prospect of volatility, we expect to earn higher
long-term returns than we would by pursuing predictability.
Given the risks we accept, Ajit and I constantly focus on our
"worst case," knowing, of course, that it is difficult to judge
what this is, since you could conceivably have a Long Island
hurricane, a California earthquake, and Super Cat X all in the same
year. Additionally, insurance losses could be accompanied by non-
insurance troubles. For example, were we to have super-cat losses
from a large Southern California earthquake, they might well be
accompanied by a major drop in the value of our holdings in See's,
Wells Fargo and Freddie Mac.
All things considered, we believe our worst-caseinsurance
loss from a super-cat is now about $600 million after-tax, an
amount that would slightly exceed Berkshire's annual earnings from
other sources. If you are not comfortable with this level of
exposure, the time to sell your Berkshire stock is now, not after
the inevitable mega-catastrophe.
Our super-cat volume will probably be down in 1995. Prices
for garden-variety policies have fallen somewhat, and the torrent
of capital that was committed to the reinsurance business a few
years ago will be inclined to chase premiums, irrespective of their
adequacy. Nevertheless, we have strong relations with an important
group of clients who will provide us with a substantial amount of
business in 1995.
Berkshire's other insurance operations had excellent results
in 1994. Our homestate operation, led by Rod Eldred; our workers'
compensation business, headed by Brad Kinstler; our credit card
operation, managed by the Kizer family; National Indemnity's
traditional auto and general liability business, led by Don Wurster
- all of these generated significant underwriting profits
accompanied by substantial float.
We can conclude this section as we did last year: All in all,
we have a first-class insurance business. Though its results will
be highly volatile, this operation possesses an intrinsic value
that exceeds its book value by a large amount - larger, in fact,
than is the case at any other Berkshire business.
Common Stock Investments
Below we list our common stockholdings having a value of over
$300 million. A small portion of these investments belongs to
subsidiaries of which Berkshire owns less than 100%.
12/31/94
Shares Company Cost Market
------ ------- ---------- ----------
(000s omitted)
27,759,941 American Express Company. .......... $ 723,919 $ 818,918
20,000,000 Capital Cities/ABC, Inc. ........... 345,000 1,705,000
100,000,000 The Coca-Cola Company. ............. 1,298,888 5,150,000
12,761,200 Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.
("Freddie Mac") ................. 270,468 644,441
6,854,500 Gannett Co., Inc. .................. 335,216 365,002
34,250,000 GEICO Corp. ........................ 45,713 1,678,250
24,000,000 The Gillette Company ............... 600,000 1,797,000
19,453,300 PNC Bank Corporation ............... 503,046 410,951
1,727,765 The Washington Post Company ........ 9,731 418,983
6,791,218 Wells Fargo & Company .............. 423,680 984,727
Our investments continue to be few in number and simple in
concept: The truly big investment idea can usually be explained in
a short paragraph. We like a business with enduring competitive
advantages that is run by able and owner-oriented people. When
these attributes exist, and when we can make purchases at sensible
prices, it is hard to go wrong (a challenge we periodically manage
to overcome).
Investors should remember that their scorecard is not computed
using Olympic-diving methods: Degree-of-difficulty doesn't count.
If you are right about a business whose value is largely dependent
on a single key factor that is both easy to understand and
enduring, the payoff is the same as if you had correctly analyzed
an investment alternative characterized by many constantly shifting
and complex variables.
We try toprice, rather thantime, purchases. In our view, it
is folly to forego buying shares in an outstanding business whose
long-term future is predictable, because of short-term worries
about an economy or a stock market that we know to be
unpredictable. Why scrap an informed decision because of an
uninformed guess?
We purchased National Indemnity in 1967, See's in 1972,
Buffalo News in 1977, Nebraska Furniture Mart in 1983, and Scott
Fetzer in 1986 because those are the years they became available
and because we thought the prices they carried were acceptable. In
each case, we pondered what the business was likely to do, not what
the Dow, the Fed, or the economy might do. If we see this approach
as making sense in the purchase of businesses in their entirety,
why should we change tack when we are purchasing small pieces of
wonderful businesses in the stock market?
Before looking at new investments, we consider adding to old
ones. If a business is attractive enough to buy once, it may well
pay to repeat the process. We would love to increase our economic
interest in See's or Scott Fetzer, but we haven't found a way to
add to a 100% holding. In the stock market, however, an investor
frequently gets the chance to increase his economic interest in
businesses he knows and likes. Last year we went that direction by
enlarging our holdings in Coca-Cola and American Express.
Our history with American Express goes way back and, in fact,
fits the pattern of my pulling current investment decisions out of
past associations. In 1951, for example, GEICO shares comprised
70% of my personal portfolio and GEICO was also the first stock I
sold - I was then 20 - as a security salesman (the sale was 100
shares to my Aunt Alice who, bless her, would have bought anything
I suggested). Twenty-five years later, Berkshire purchased a major
stake in GEICO at the time it was threatened with insolvency. In
another instance, that of the Washington Post, about half of my
initial investment funds came from delivering the paper in the
1940's. Three decades later Berkshire purchased a large position
in the company two years after it went public. As for Coca-Cola,
my first business venture - this was in the 1930's - was buying a
six-pack of Coke for 25 cents and selling each bottle for 5 cents.
It took only fifty years before I finally got it: The real money
was in the syrup.
My American Express history includes a couple of episodes: In
the mid-1960's, just after the stock was battered by the company's
infamous salad-oil scandal, we put about 40% of Buffett Partnership
Ltd.'s capital into the stock - the largest investment the
partnership had ever made. I should add that this commitment gave
us over 5% ownership in Amex at a cost of $13 million. As I write
this, we own just under 10%, which has cost us $1.36 billion.
(Amex earned $12.5 million in 1964 and $1.4 billion in 1994.)
My history with Amex's IDS unit, which today contributes about
a third of the earnings of the company, goes back even further. I
first purchased stock in IDS in 1953 when it was growing rapidly
and selling at a price-earnings ratio of only 3. (There was a lot
of low-hanging fruit in those days.) I even produced a long report
- do I ever write a short one? - on the company that I sold for $1
through an ad in the Wall Street Journal.
Obviously American Express and IDS (recently renamed American
Express Financial Advisors) are far different operations today from
what they were then. Nevertheless, I find that a long-term
familiarity with a company and its products is often helpful in
evaluating it.
Mistake Du Jour
Mistakes occur at the time of decision. We can only make our
mistake-du-jour award, however, when the foolishness of the
decision become obvious. By this measure, 1994 was a vintage year
with keen competition for the gold medal. Here, I would like to
tell you that the mistakes I will describe originated with Charlie.
But whenever I try to explain things that way, my nose begins to
grow.
And the nominees are . . .
Late in 1993 I sold 10 million shares of Cap Cities at $63; at
year-end 1994, the price was $85.25. (The difference is $222.5
million for those of you who wish to avoid the pain of calculating
the damage yourself.) When we purchased the stock at $17.25 in
1986, I told you that I had previously sold our Cap Cities holdings
at $4.30 per share during 1978-80, and added that I was at a loss
to explain my earlier behavior. Now I've become a repeat offender.
Maybe it's time to get a guardian appointed.
Egregious as it is, the Cap Cities decision earns only a
silver medal. Top honors go to a mistake I made five years ago
that fully ripened in 1994: Our $358 million purchase of USAir
preferred stock, on which the dividend was suspended in September.
In the 1990 Annual Report I correctly described this deal as an
"unforced error," meaning that I was neither pushed into the
investment nor misled by anyone when making it. Rather, this was a
case of sloppy analysis, a lapse that may have been caused by the
fact that we were buying a senior security or by hubris. Whatever
the reason, the mistake was large.
Before this purchase, I simply failed to focus on the problems
that would inevitably beset a carrier whose costs were both high
and extremely difficult to lower. In earlier years, these life-
threatening costs posed few problems. Airlines were then protected
from competition by regulation, and carriers could absorb high
costs because they could pass them along by way of fares that were
also high.
When deregulation came along, it did not immediately change
the picture: The capacity of low-cost carriers was so small that
the high-cost lines could, in large part, maintain their existing
fare structures. During this period, with the longer-term problems
largely invisible but slowly metastasizing, the costs that were
non-sustainable became further embedded.
As the seat capacity of the low-cost operators expanded, their
fares began to force the old-line, high-cost airlines to cut their
own. The day of reckoning for these airlines could be delayed by
infusions of capital (such as ours into USAir), but eventually a
fundamental rule of economics prevailed: In an unregulated
commodity business, a company must lower its costs to competitive
levels or face extinction. This principle should have been obvious
to your Chairman, but I missed it.
Seth Schofield, CEO of USAir, has worked diligently to correct
the company's historical cost problems but, to date, has not
managed to do so. In part, this is because he has had to deal with
a moving target, the result of certain major carriers having
obtained labor concessions and other carriers having benefitted
from "fresh-start" costs that came out of bankruptcy proceedings.
(As Herb Kelleher, CEO of Southwest Airlines, has said:
"Bankruptcy court for airlines has become a health spa.")
Additionally, it should be no surprise to anyone that those airline
employees who contractually receive above-market salaries will
resist any reduction in these as long as their checks continue to
clear.
Despite this difficult situation, USAir may yet achieve the
cost reductions it needs to maintain its viability long-term. But
it is far from sure that will happen.
Accordingly, we wrote our USAir investment down to $89.5
million, 25 cents on the dollar at yearend 1994. This valuation
reflects both a possibility that our preferred will have its value
fully or largely restored and an opposite possibility that the
stock will eventually become worthless. Whatever the outcome, we
will heed a prime rule of investing: You don't have to make it
back the way that you lost it.
The accounting effects of our USAir writedown are complicated.
Under GAAP accounting, insurance companies are required to carry
all stocks on their balance sheets at estimated market value.
Therefore, at the end of last year's third quarter, we were
carrying our USAir preferred at $89.5 million, or 25% of cost. In
other words, our net worth was at that time reflecting a value for
USAir that was far below our $358 million cost.
But in the fourth quarter, we concluded that the decline in
value was, in accounting terms, "other than temporary," and that
judgment required us to send the writedown of $269 million through
our income statement. The amount will have no other fourth-quarter
effect. That is, it will not reduce our net worth, because the
diminution of value had already been reflected.
Charlie and I will not stand for reelection to USAir's board
at the upcoming annual meeting. Should Seth wish to consult with
us, however, we will be pleased to be of any help that we can.
Miscellaneous
Two CEO's who have done great things for Berkshire
shareholders retired last year: Dan Burke of Capital Cities/ABC
and Carl Reichardt of Wells Fargo. Dan and Carl encountered very
tough industry conditions in recent years. But their skill as
managers allowed the businesses they ran to emerge from these
periods with record earnings, added luster, and bright prospects.
Additionally, Dan and Carl prepared well for their departure and
left their companies in outstanding hands. We owe them our
gratitude.
* * * * * * * * * * * *
About 95.7% of all eligible shares participated in Berkshire's
1994 shareholder-designated contributions program. Contributions
made through the program were $10.4 million and 3,300 charities
were recipients.
Every year a few shareholders miss participating in the
program because they either do not have their shares registered in
their own names on the prescribed record date or because they fail
to get the designation form back to us within the 60-day period
allowed for its return. Since we don't make exceptions when
requirements aren't met, we urge that both new shareholders and old
read the description of our shareholder-designated contributions
program that appears on pages 50-51.
To participate in future programs, you must make sure your
shares are registered in the name of the actual owner, not in the
nominee name of a broker, bank or depository. Shares not so
registered on August 31, 1995 will be ineligible for the 1995
program.
* * * * * * * * * * * *
We made only one minor acquisition during 1994 - a small
retail shoe chain - but our interest in finding good candidates
remains as keen as ever. The criteria we employ for purchases or
mergers is detailed in the appendix on page 21.
Last spring, we offered to merge with a large, family-
controlled business on terms that included a Berkshire convertible
preferred stock. Though we failed to reach an agreement, this
episode made me realize that we needed to ask our shareholders to
authorize preferred shares in case we wanted in the future to move
quickly if a similar acquisition opportunity were to appear.
Accordingly, our proxy presents a proposal that you authorize a
large amount of preferred stock, which will be issuable on terms
set by the Board of Directors. You can be sure that Charlie and I
will not use these shares without being completely satisfied that
we are receiving as much in intrinsic value as we are giving.
* * * * * * * * * * * *
Charlie and I hope you can come to the Annual Meeting - at a
new site. Last year, we slightly overran the Orpheum Theater's
seating capacity of 2,750, and therefore we will assemble at 9:30
a.m. on Monday, May 1, 1995, at the Holiday Convention Centre. The
main ballroom at the Centre can handle 3,300, and if need be, we
will have audio and video equipment in an adjacent room capable of
handling another 1,000 people.
Last year we displayed some of Berkshire's products at the
meeting, and as a result sold about 800 pounds of candy, 507 pairs
of shoes, and over $12,000 of World Books and related publications.
All these goods will be available again this year. Though we like
to think of the meeting as a spiritual experience, we must remember
that even the least secular of religions includes the ritual of the
collection plate.
Of course, what you really should be purchasing is a video
tape of the 1995 Orange Bowl. Your Chairman views this classic
nightly, switching to slow motion for the fourth quarter. Our
cover color this year is a salute to Nebraska's football coach, Tom
Osborne, and his Cornhuskers, the country's top college team. I
urge you to wear Husker red to the annual meeting and promise you
that at least 50% of your managerial duo will be in appropriate
attire.
We recommend that you promptly get hotel reservations for the
meeting, as we expect a large crowd. Those of you who like to be
downtown (about six miles from the Centre) may wish to stay at the
Radisson Redick Tower, a small (88 rooms) but nice hotel or at the
much larger Red Lion Hotel a few blocks away. In the vicinity of
the Centre are the Holiday Inn (403 rooms), Homewood Suites (118
rooms) and Hampton Inn (136 rooms). Another recommended spot is
the Marriott, whose west Omaha location is about 100 yards from
Borsheim's and a ten-minute drive from the Centre. There will be
buses at the Marriott that will leave at 8:45 and 9:00 for the
meeting and return after it ends.
An attachment to our proxy material explains how you can
obtain the card you will need for admission to the meeting. A
good-sized parking area is available at the Centre, while those who
stay at the Holiday Inn, Homewood Suites and Hampton Inn will be
able to walk to the meeting.
As usual, we will have buses to take you to the Nebraska
Furniture Mart and Borsheim's after the meeting and to take you
from there to hotels or the airport later. I hope you make a
special effort to visit the Nebraska Furniture Mart because it has
opened the Mega Mart, a true retailing marvel that sells
electronics, appliances, computers, CD's, cameras and audio
equipment. Sales have been sensational since the opening, and you
will be amazed by both the variety of products available and their
display on the floor.
The Mega Mart, adjacent to NFM's main store, is on our 64-acre
site about two miles north of the Centre. The stores are open from
10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Fridays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturdays and
noon to 6 p.m. on Sundays. When you're there be sure to say hello
to Mrs. B, who, at 101, will be hard at work in our Mrs. B's
Warehouse. She never misses a day at the store - or, for that
matter, an hour.
Borsheim's normally is closed on Sunday but will be open for
shareholders and their guests from noon to 6 p.m. on Sunday. This
is always a special day, and we will try to have a few surprises.
Usually this is the biggest sales day of the year, so for more
reasons than one Charlie and I hope to see you there.
On Saturday evening, April 29, there will be a baseball game
at Rosenblatt Stadium between the Omaha Royals and the Buffalo
Bisons. The Buffalo team is owned by my friends, Mindy and Bob
Rich, Jr., and I'm hoping they will attend. If so, I will try to
entice Bob into a one-pitch duel on the mound. Bob is a
capitalist's Randy Johnson - young, strong and athletic - and not
the sort of fellow you want to face early in the season. So I will
need plenty of vocal support.
The proxy statement will include information about obtaining
tickets to the game. About 1,400 shareholders attended the event
last year. Opening the game that night, I had my stuff and threw a
strike that the scoreboard reported at eight miles per hour. What
many fans missed was that I shook off the catcher's call for my
fast ball and instead delivered my change-up. This year it will be
all smoke.
Warren E. Buffett
March 7, 1995 Chairman of the Board