Keep INVESTING Simple and Safe (KISS) ****Investment Philosophy, Strategy and various Valuation Methods**** The same forces that bring risk into investing in the stock market also make possible the large gains many investors enjoy. It’s true that the fluctuations in the market make for losses as well as gains but if you have a proven strategy and stick with it over the long term you will be a winner!****Warren Buffett: Rule No. 1 - Never lose money. Rule No. 2 - Never forget Rule No. 1.
Wednesday, 28 February 2024
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. 2023 Shareholder Letter
Operating Results, Fact and Fiction
Let's begin
with the numbers. The official annual
report begins on K-1 and extends for 124 pages. It is filled with a vast amount
of information - some important, some trivial.
Among its
disclosures many owners, along with financial reporters, will focus on page
K-72. There, they will find the proverbial "bottom line" labeled
"Net earnings (loss)." The numbers read $90 billion for 2021, ($23
billion) for 2022 and $96 billion for 2023.
What in the
world is going on?
You seek
guidance and are told that the procedures for calculating these
"earnings" are promulgated by a sober and credentialed Financial
Accounting Standards Board ("FASB"), mandated by a dedicated and
hard-working Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") and audited
by the world-class professionals at Deloitte & Touche
("D&T"). On page K-67, D&T pulls no punches: "In our
opinion, the financial statementspresent fairly, in all material respects (italics mine), the
financial position of the Company . . . . . and the results of its operations .
. . . . for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2023"
So
sanctified, this worse-than-useless "net income" figure quickly gets
transmitted throughout the world via the internet and media. All parties
believe they have done their job - and, legally, they have.
We,
however, are left uncomfortable. At Berkshire, our view
is that "earnings" should be a sensible concept that Bertie will find
somewhat useful - but only as a starting point-
in evaluating a business. Accordingly, Berkshire also reports to Bertie and you what we call
"operating earnings." Here is the story they tell: $27.6 billion for 2021; $30.9 billion
for 2022 and $37.4 billion for 2023.
The primary difference between the mandated figures
and the ones Berkshire prefers is that we exclude unrealized capital gains or
losses that at times can exceed $5 billion a day.
Ironically, our preference was pretty much the rule until 2018, when the
"improvement" was mandated. Galileo's experience, several centuries
ago, should have taught us not to mess with mandates from on high. But, at
Berkshire, we can be stubborn.
Make no
mistake about the significance of capital gains: I expect them to be a very important component of Berkshire's value
accretion during the decades ahead. Why else would we commit huge dollar
amounts of your money (and Bertie's) to marketable equities just as I have been
doing with my own funds throughout my investing lifetime?
I can't
remember a period since March 11, 1942 - the date of my first stock purchase -
that I have not had a majority of my
net worth in equities, U.S.-based equities.
And so far, so good. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell below 100 on that
fateful day in 1942 when I "pulled the trigger." I was down about $5
by the time school was out. Soon, things turned around and now that index
hovers around 38,000. America has been a terrific country for investors. All
they have needed to do is sit quietly, listening to no one.
It is more
than silly, however, to make judgments about Berkshire's investment value based
on "earnings" that incorporate the capricious day-by-day and, yes, even year-by-year movements
of the stock market. As Ben Graham taught me, "In the short run the market
acts as a voting machine; in the long run it becomes a weighing machine."
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. 2023 Shareholder Letter
The Scorecard in 2023
Every
quarter we issue a press release that reports our summarized operating earnings
(or loss) in a manner similar to what is shown below. Here is the full-year
compilation:
(in $
millions) 20232022
2023 (in $ millions) |
2022 (in $ millions) |
|
Insurance-underwriting |
$ 5,428 |
$(30) |
Insurance-investment income |
9,567 |
6,484 |
Railroad |
5,087 |
5,946 |
Utilities and energy |
2,331 |
3,904 |
Other businesses and miscellaneous items |
14,937 |
14,549 |
Operating earnings |
$37,350 |
$30,853 |
At
Berkshire's annual gathering on May 6, 2023, I presented the first quarter's
results which had been released early that morning. I followed with a short
summary of the outlook for the full year: (1) most of our non-insurance businesses faced lower earnings in
2023; (2) that decline would be cushioned by decent results at our two largest
non-insurance businesses, BNSF and Berkshire Hathaway Energy ("BHE")
which, combined, had accounted for more than 30% of operating earnings in 2022;
(3) our investment income was certain to
materially grow because the huge U.S. Treasury bill position held by Berkshire
had finally begun to pay us far more than the pittance we had been receiving
and (4) insurance would likely do well, both because its underwriting earnings
are not correlated to earnings elsewhere in the economy and, beyond that,
property-casualty insurance prices had strengthened.
Insurance
came through as expected. I erred, however, in my expectations for both BNSF
and BHE. Let's take a look at each.
Rail is
essential to America's economic future. It is clearly the most efficient way -
measured by cost, fuel usage and carbon intensity - of moving heavy materials
to distant destinations. Trucking wins for short hauls, but many goods that
Americans need must travel to customers
many hundreds or even several thousands of miles away. The country can't run
without rail, and the industry's capital needs will always be huge. Indeed,
compared to most American businesses, railroads eat capital.
BNSF is the
largest of six major rail systems that blanket North America. Our railroad
carries its 23,759 miles of main track, 99 tunnels, 13,495 bridges, 7,521
locomotives and assorted other fixed assets at $70 billion on its balance
sheet. But my guess is that it would cost at least $500 billion to replicate
those assets and decades to complete the
job.
BNSF must
annually spend more than its depreciation charge to simply maintain its present level of business. This
reality is bad for owners, whatever the industry in which they have invested,
but it is particularly disadvantageous in capital-intensive industries.
At BNSF,
the outlays in excess of GAAP depreciation
charges since our purchase 14 years ago have totaled a staggering $22 billion
or more than $1 1/2 billion annually. Ouch! That sort of gap means BNSF
dividends paid to Berkshire, its owner, will regularly fall considerably short of BNSF's reported earnings
unless we regularly increase the railroad's debt. And that we do not intend to
do.
Consequently,
Berkshire is receiving an acceptable return on its purchase price, though less
than it might appear, and also a pittance on the replacement value of the
property. That's no surprise to me or Berkshire's board of directors. It
explains why we could buy BNSF in 2010 at a small fraction of its replacement
value.
North
America's rail system moves huge quantities of coal, grain, autos, imported and
exported goods, etc. one-way for
long distances and those trips often create a revenue problem for back-hauls.
Weather conditions are extreme and frequently hamper or even stymie the
utilization of track, bridges and equipment. Flooding can be a nightmare. None
of this is a surprise. While I sit in an always-comfortable office, railroading
is an outdoor activity with many employees working under trying and sometimes
dangerous conditions.
An evolving
problem is that a growing percentage of Americans are not looking for the
difficult, and often lonely, employment conditions inherent in some rail
operations. Engineers must deal with the fact that among an American population
of 335 million, some forlorn or mentally-disturbed Americans are going to elect
suicide by lying in front of a 100-car, extraordinarily heavy train that can't
be stopped in less than a mile or more. Would you like to
be the helpless engineer? This trauma happens about once a day in North
America; it is far more common in Europe and will always be with us.
Wage
negotiations in the rail industry can end up in the hands of the President and
Congress. Additionally, American railroads are required to
carry many dangerous products every day that the industry would much rather
avoid. The words "common carrier" define railroad responsibilities.
Last year
BNSF's earnings declined more than I expected, as revenues fell. Though fuel
costs also fell, wage increases, promulgated in Washington, were far beyond the
country's inflation goals. This differential may recur in future negotiations.
Though BNSF
carries more freight and spends more on capital expenditures than any of the
five other major North American railroads, its profit margins have slipped
relative to all five since our purchase. I believe that our vast service
territory is second to none and that therefore our margin comparisons can and
should improve.
I am
particularly proud of both BNSF's contribution to the country and the people
who work in sub-zero outdoor jobs in North Dakota and Montana winters to keep
America's commercial arteries open. Railroads don't get much attention when
they are working but, were they unavailable, the void would be noticed
immediately throughout America.
A century
from now, BNSF will continue to be a major asset of the country and of
Berkshire. You can count on that.
Our second
and even more severe earnings disappointment last year occurred at BHE. Most of its large electric-utility businesses, as
well as its extensive gas pipelines, performed about as expected. But the
regulatory climate in a few states has raised the specter of zero profitability
or even bankruptcy (an actual outcome at California's largest utility and a
current threat in Hawaii). In such jurisdictions, it is difficult to project
both earnings and asset values in what was once regarded as among the most
stable industries in America.
For more
than a century, electric utilities raised huge sums to finance their growth
through a state-by-state promise of a fixed return on equity (sometimes with a
small bonus for superior performance). With this approach, massive investments
were made for capacity that would likely be required a few years down the road.
That forward-looking regulation reflected the reality that utilities build
generating and transmission assets that often take many years to construct.
BHE's extensive multi-state transmission project in the West was initiated in
2006 and remains some years from completion. Eventually, it will serve 10
states comprising 30% of the acreage in the continental United States.
With this
model employed by both private and public-power systems, the lights stayed on,
even if population growth or industrial demand exceeded expectations. The
"margin of safety" approach seemed sensible to regulators, investors
and the public. Now, the fixed-but-satisfactory- return pact has been broken in
a few states, and investors are becoming apprehensive that such ruptures may
spread. Climate change adds to their worries. Underground transmission may be
required but who, a few decades ago, wanted to pay the staggering costs for
such construction?
At
Berkshire, we have made a best estimate for the amount of losses that have
occurred. These costs arose from forest fires, whose frequency and intensity
have increased - and will likely continue to increase - if convective storms
become more frequent.
It will be
many years until we know the final tally from BHE's forest-fire losses and can
intelligently make decisions about the desirability of future investments in
vulnerable western states. It remains to be seen whether the regulatory
environment will change elsewhere.
Other
electric utilities may face survival problems resembling those of Pacific Gas
and Electric (PCG) and Hawaiian
Electric (HE). A
confiscatory resolution of our present problems would obviously be a negative
for BHE, but both that company and Berkshire itself are structured to survive
negative surprises. We regularly get these in our insurance business, where our
basic product is risk assumption, and they will occur elsewhere. Berkshire can
sustain financial surprises but we will not knowingly throw
good money after bad.
Whatever
the case at Berkshire, the final result for the utility industry may be
ominous: Certain utilities might no longer attract the savings of American
citizens and will be forced to adopt the public-power model. Nebraska made this
choice in the 1930s and there are many public-power operations throughout the
country. Eventually, voters, taxpayers and users will decide which model they
prefer.
When the
dust settles, America's power needs and the consequent capital expenditure will
be staggering. I did not anticipate or even consider the adverse developments
in regulatory returns and, along with Berkshire's two partners at BHE, I made a
costly mistake in not doing so.
Enough
about problems: Our insurance business performed exceptionally well last year,
setting records in sales, float and underwriting profits. Property-casualty
insurance ("P/C") provides the core of Berkshire's well-being and
growth. We have been in the business for 57 years and despite our nearly 5,000-fold increase in volume - from $17 million
to $83 billion- we have much room to grow.
Beyond
that, we have learned - too often, painfully - a good deal about what types of
insurance business and what sort of people to avoid. The most
important lesson is that our underwriters can be thin, fat, male, female,
young, old, foreign or domestic. But they can't be
optimists at the office, however desirable that quality may generally be in
life.
Surprises in the P/C business -
which can occur decades after six-month or one-year policies have expired - are
almost always negative. The industry's accounting is designed to recognize this
reality, but estimation mistakes can be huge. And when charlatans are involved,
detection is often both slow and costly. Berkshire will always attempt to be
accurate in its estimates of future loss payments but inflation - both monetary
and the "legal" variety - is a wild card.
I've told
the story of our insurance operations so many times that I will simply direct
newcomers to page 18. Here, I will only repeat that our position would not be
what it is if Ajit Jain had not joined Berkshire in 1986. Before that lucky day
- aside from an almost unbelievably wonderful experience with GEICO that began
early in 1951 and will never end - I was largely wandering in the wilderness,
as I struggled to build our insurance operation.
Ajit's
achievements since joining Berkshire have been supported by a large cast of
hugely-talented insurance executives in our various P/C operations. Their names
and faces are unknown to most of the press and the public. Berkshire's lineup
of managers, however, is to P/C insurance what Cooperstown's honorees are to
baseball.
Bertie, you
can feel good about the fact that you own a piece of an incredible P/C
operation that now operates worldwide with unmatched financial resources,
reputation and talent. It carried the day in 2023.
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. 2023 Shareholder Letter
Non-controlled Businesses That Leave Us Comfortable
Last year I
mentioned two of Berkshire's long-duration partial-ownership positions -
Coca-Cola and American Express. These are not huge commitments like our Apple
position. Each only accounts for 4-5% of Berkshire's GAAP net worth. But they
are meaningful assets and also illustrate our thought processes.
American
Express began operations in 1850, and Coca-Cola was launched in an Atlanta drug
store in 1886. (Berkshire is not big on
newcomers.) Both companies tried expanding into unrelated areas over the years
and both found little success in these attempts. In the past - but definitely not now - both were even mismanaged.
But each
was hugely successful in its base business, reshaped here and there as
conditions called for. And, crucially, their products "traveled."
Both Coke and AMEX became recognizable names worldwide as did their core
products, and the consumption of
liquids and the need for unquestioned financial trust are timeless essentials
of our world.
During
2023, we did not buy or sell a share of either AMEX or Coke - extending our own
Rip Van Winkle slumber that has now lasted well over two decades. Both
companies again rewarded our inaction last year by increasing their earnings
and dividends. Indeed, our share of AMEX earnings in
2023 considerably exceeded the $1.3 billion cost of our
long-ago purchase.
Both AMEX
and Coke will almost certainly increase their dividends in 2024 - about 16% in
the case of AMEX - and we will most
certainly leave our holdings untouched throughout the year. Could I create a better worldwide business than these
two enjoy? As Bertie will tell you: "No way."
Though
Berkshire did not purchase shares of either company in 2023, your indirect ownership of both Coke and AMEX
increased a bit last year because of share repurchases we made at Berkshire.
Such repurchases work to increase your participation in every asset that Berkshire owns. To this obvious
but often overlooked truth, I add my usual caveat: All stock repurchases should be price-dependent.
What is sensible at a discount to business-value becomes stupid if done at a
premium.
The lesson
from Coke and AMEX? When you find a truly wonderful business, stick with
it. Patience pays, and one wonderful business can
offset the many mediocre decisions that are inevitable.
This year,
I would like to describe two other investments that we expect to maintain
indefinitely. Like Coke and AMEX, these commitments are not huge relative to
our resources. They are worthwhile, however, and we were able to increase both
positions during 2023.
At yearend,
Berkshire owned 27.8% of Occidental Petroleum's common shares and also owned
warrants that, for more than five years, give us the option to materially increase our ownership at a
fixed price. Though we very much like our ownership, as well as the option,
Berkshire has no interest in purchasing or managing Occidental. We particularly
like its vast oil and gas holdings in the United States, as well as its
leadership in carbon-capture initiatives, though the economic feasibility of
this technique has yet to be proven. Both of these activities are very much in
our country's interest.
Not so long
ago, the U.S. was woefully dependent on foreign oil, and carbon capture had no
meaningful constituency. Indeed, in 1975, U.S. production was eight million
barrels of oil-equivalent per day ("BOEPD"), a level far short of the
country's needs. From the favorable energy position that facilitated the U.S.
mobilization in World War II, the country had retreated to become heavily
dependent on foreign - potentially unstable - suppliers. Further declines in
oil production were predicted along with future increases in usage.
For a long
time, the pessimism appeared to be correct, with production falling to five
million BOEPD by 2007. Meanwhile, the U.S. government created a Strategic
Petroleum Reserve ("SPR") in 1975 to alleviate - though not come
close to eliminating - this erosion of American self-sufficiency.
And then -
Hallelujah! - shale economics became feasible in 2011, and our energy
dependency ended. Now, U.S. production is more than 13 million BOEPD, and OPEC
no longer has the upper hand. Occidental itself has annual U.S. oil production
that each year comes close to matching the entire inventory of the SPR. Our
country would be very - very- nervous
today if domestic production had remained at five million BOEPD, and it found
itself hugely dependent on non-U.S. sources. At that level, the SPR would have
been emptied within months if foreign oil became unavailable.
Under Vicki
Hollub's leadership, Occidental is doing the right things for both its
country and its owners. No one knows what oil prices will
do over the next month, year, or decade. But Vicki does know how to separate
oil from rock, and that's an uncommon talent, valuable to her shareholders and
to her country.
Additionally,
Berkshire continues to hold its passive and long-term interest in five very
large Japanese companies, each of which operates in a highly-diversified manner
somewhat similar to the way Berkshire itself is run. We increased our holdings
in all five last year after Greg Abel and I made a trip to Tokyo to talk with
their managements.
Berkshire
now owns about 9% of each of the five. (A minor point: Japanese companies
calculate outstanding shares in a manner different from the practice in the
U.S.) Berkshire has also pledged to each company that it will not purchase
shares that will take our holdings beyond 9.9%. Our cost for the five totals
¥1.6 trillion, and the yearend market value of the five was ¥2.9 trillion.
However, the yen has weakened in recent years and our yearend unrealized gain
in dollars was 61% or $8 billion.
Neither
Greg nor I believe we can forecast market prices of major currencies. We also
don't believe we can hire anyone with this ability. Therefore, Berkshire has
financed most of its Japanese position with the proceeds from ¥1.3 trillion of
bonds. This debt has been very well-received in Japan, and I believe Berkshire
has more yen-denominated debt outstanding than any other American company. The
weakened yen has produced a yearend gain for Berkshire of $1.9 billion, a sum
that, pursuant to GAAP rules, has periodically been recognized in income over
the 2020-23 period.
In certain
important ways, all five companies - Itochu, Marubeni, Mitsubishi, Mitsui and
Sumitomo - follow shareholder-friendly policies that are much superior to those
customarily practiced in the U.S. Since we began our Japanese purchases, each of the five has reduced the number of its
outstanding shares at attractive prices.
Meanwhile,
the managements of all five companies have been far less
aggressive about their own compensation than is typical in the United States.
Note as well that each of the five is applying only about 1/3 of its earnings
to dividends. The large sums the five retain are used both to build their many
businesses and, to a lesser degree, to repurchase shares. Like Berkshire, the
five companies are reluctant to issue shares.
An
additional benefit for Berkshire is the possibility that our investment may
lead to opportunities for us to partner around the world with five large,
well-managed and well-respected companies. Their interests are far more broad
than ours. And, on their side, the Japanese CEOs have the comfort of knowing
that Berkshire will always possess huge liquid resources that can be instantly
available for such partnerships, whatever their size may be.
Our
Japanese purchases began on July 4, 2019. Given Berkshire's present size,
building positions through open-market purchases takes a lot of patience and an
extended period of "friendly" prices. The process is like turning a
battleship. That is an important disadvantage which we did not face in our
early days at Berkshire.
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. 2023 Shareholder Letter
Our Not-So-Secret Weapon
Occasionally,
markets and/or the economy will cause stocks and bonds of some large and
fundamentally good businesses to be strikingly mispriced. Indeed, markets can -
and will - unpredictably seize up or even vanish as
they did for four months in 1914 and for a few days in 2001. If you believe
that American investors are now more stable than in the past, think back to
September 2008. Speed of communication and the wonders of technology facilitate instant worldwide paralysis, and we
have come a long way since smoke signals. Such instant panics won't happen
often - but they will happen.
Berkshire's
ability to immediately respond to market seizures with both huge sums and
certainty of performance may offer us
an occasional large-scale opportunity. Though the stock market is massively
larger than it was in our early years, today's active participants
are neither more emotionally stable nor better taught than when I was in
school. For whatever reasons, markets now exhibit far more casino-like behavior
than they did when I was young. The casino now resides in many homes and daily
tempts the occupants.
One fact of
financial life should never be forgotten. Wall Street - to use the term in its
figurative sense - would like its
customers to make money, but what truly causes its denizens' juices to flow is
feverish activity. At such times, whatever foolishness can be marketed will be vigorously marketed - not by everyone but
always by someone.
Occasionally,
the scene turns ugly. The politicians then become enraged; the most flagrant
perpetrators of misdeeds slip away, rich and unpunished; and your friend next
door becomes bewildered, poorer and sometimes vengeful. Money, he learns, has
trumped morality.
One
investment rule at Berkshire has not and will not change: Never risk permanent loss of capital. Thanks to
the American tailwind and the power of compound interest, the arena in which we
operate has been - and will be - rewarding if you make
a couple of good decisions during a lifetime and avoid
serious mistakes.
I believe
Berkshire can handle financial disasters
of a magnitude beyond any heretofore experienced. This ability is one we will
not relinquish. When economic upsets occur, as they will, Berkshire's goal will
be to function as an asset to the
country - just as it was in a very minor way in 2008-9 - and to help extinguish the financial fire rather than to be
among the many companies that, inadvertently or otherwise, ignited the
conflagration.
Our goal is
realistic. Berkshire's strength comes from its Niagara of diverse earnings
delivered after interest costs, taxes
and substantial charges for depreciation and amortization ("EBITDA"
is a banned measurement at Berkshire). We also operate with minimal
requirements for cash, even if the country encounters a prolonged period of
global economic weakness, fear and near-paralysis.
Berkshire
does not currently pay dividends, and its share repurchases are 100%
discretionary. Annual debt maturities are never material.
Your
company also holds a cash and U.S. Treasury bill position far in excess of what
conventional wisdom deems necessary. During the 2008 panic, Berkshire generated cash from operations and did not rely in
any manner on commercial paper, bank lines or debt markets. We did not predict the time of an economic paralysis but
we were always prepared for one.
Extreme
fiscal conservatism is a corporate pledge we make to those who have joined us
in ownership of Berkshire. In most years - indeed in most decades - our caution
will likely prove to be unneeded behavior - akin to an insurance policy on a
fortress-like building thought to
be fireproof. But Berkshire does not want to inflict permanent financial damage - quotational shrinkage
for extended periods can't be avoided - on Bertie or any of the individuals who have trusted us with
their savings.
Berkshire
is built to last.
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. 2023 Shareholder Letter
What We Do
Our goal at
Berkshire is simple: We want to own either all or a portion of businesses that
enjoy good economics that are fundamental and enduring. Within capitalism, some
businesses will flourish for a very long time while others will prove to be
sinkholes. It's harder than you would think to predict which will be the
winners and losers. And those who tell you they know the answer are usually
either self-delusional or snake-oil salesmen.
At
Berkshire, we particularly favor the rare enterprise that can deploy additional capital at high returns in the future.
Owning only one of these companies - and simply sitting tight - can deliver
wealth almost beyond measure. Even heirs to such a holding can - ugh! -
sometimes live a lifetime of leisure.
We also
hope these favored businesses are run by able and trustworthy managers, though
that is a more difficult judgment to make, however, and Berkshire has had its
share of disappointments.