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Warren Buffett and Charles Munger speak
Fortune 500 | May 2, 2005 | Jason Zweig

Posted on 05/14/2005 3:54:44 PM PDT by blueberry12

The following is an edited and approximate transcript of their remarks.

On real estate

Buffett: "A lot of the psychological well being of the American public comes from how well they've done with their house over the years. If indeed there's been a bubble, and it's pricked at some point, the net effect on Berkshire might well be positive [because the company's financial strength would allow it to buy real-estate-related businesses at bargain prices]....

"Certainly at the high end of the real estate market in some areas, you've seen extraordinary movement.... People go crazy in economics periodically, in all kinds of ways. Residential housing has different behavioral characteristics, simply because people live there. But when you get prices increasing faster than the underlying costs, sometimes there can be pretty serious consequences."

Munger: "You have a real asset-price bubble in places like parts of California and the suburbs of Washington, D.C."

Buffett: "I recently sold a house in Laguna for $3.5 million. It was on about 2,000 square feet of land, maybe a twentieth of an acre, and the house might cost about $500,000 if you wanted to replace it. So the land sold for something like $60 million an acre."

Munger: "I know someone who lives next door to what you would actually call a fairly modest house that just sold for $17 million. There are some very extreme housing price bubbles going on."

The trade deficit and the value of the dollar Buffett: "That really is the $64,000 question. It seems to me that a $618 billion trade deficit, rich as we are, strong as this country is, well, something will have to happen that will change that. Most economists will still say some kind of soft landing is possible. I don't know what a soft landing is exactly, in how the numbers come down softly from levels like these....

"There are more people [like hedge-fund managers] that go to bed at night with a hair trigger than ever before, it's an electronic herd, they can give vent to decisions that move billions and billions of dollars with the click of a key. We will have some exogenous event, we will have that. There will be some kind of stampede by that herd....

"When you have far greater sums than ever before, in one asset class after another, that are held by people who operate on a hair-trigger mechanism, then they lend themselves to more explosive outcomes. People with very short time horizons with huge sums of money, they can all try to head for the exits at the same time. The only way you can leave your seat in burning financial markets is to find someone else to take your seat, and that is not always easy...."

Munger: "The present era has no comparable referent in the past history of capitalism. We have a higher percentage of the intelligentsia engaged in buying and selling pieces of paper and promoting trading activity than in any past era. A lot of what I see now reminds me of Sodom and Gomorrah. You get activity feeding on itself, envy and imitation. It has happened in the past that there came bad consequences."

Buffett: "I have no idea on timing. It's far easier to tell what will happen than when it will happen. I would say that what is going on in terms of trade policy is going to have very important consequences."

Munger: "A great civilization will bear a lot of abuse, but there are dangers in the current situation that threaten anyone who swings for the fences."

Buffett to Munger: "What do you think the end will be?"

Munger: "Bad."

Buffett: "We're like an incredibly rich family that owns so much land they can't travel to the ends of their domain. And they sit on the front porch and consume a little bit of everything that comes in, all the riches of the land, and they consume roughly 6 percent more than they produce. And they pay for it by selling off land at the edge of the landholdings that can't see. They trade away a little piece every day or take out a mortgage on a piece.

"That scenario couldn't end well. And we, also, keep consuming more than we produce. It can go on a long time. The world has demonstrated a diminishing enthusiasm for dollars in the last few years as they get flooded with them – every day there's $2 billion more going out than in. I have a hard time thinking of any outcome from this that involves an appreciating dollar.

[But, Buffett later added, he is not predicting an end to U.S. economic power.] "If you have a good business in this country that's earning dollars, you'll still do okay. Twenty years from now, a couple percentage points of GDP may go to servicing the deficit, but you'll do fine.... I don't think trade deficits will pull down the whole place; the country will survive those dislocations. I'm not pessimistic about the U.S. at all.... We have over 80 percent of our money tied to the dollar. It's not like we've left the country."

The threat of terrorism

Buffett: My job is to think absolutely in terms of the worst case and to know enough about what's going on in both [Berkshire's] investments and operations that I don't lose sleep. Everything that can happen will happen.... It's Berkshire job to be prepared absolutely for the very worst. A few years ago we did not have NBCs [nuclear, biological and chemical attacks] excluded from our exposure, but we do now....

"If you go to lastbestchance.org, you can obtain a tape, free, that the Nuclear Threat Initiative has sponsored, that has a dramatization that is fictional but is not fanciful. We would regard ourselves as vulnerable to extinction as a company if we did not have nuclear, biological and chemical risks excluded from our policies. There could be events happening that could make it impossible for our checks to clear the next day."

The overall climate for investors

Buffett: "If the [stock] market gets cheaper, we will have many more opportunities to do something intelligent with money. We are going to be buying things [like stocks and other financial assets] for as long as I live, just as I'm going to be buying groceries for the rest of my life. Would I rather have grocery prices go up or down?

"The stock market works the same way: If I'm a net buyer, obviously I would rather have prices go down than up. Charlie and I spend no time talking about what the stock market is going to do, because we don't know. We're not operating on basis of a market forecast. We don't make a list of the good things that are happening, or bad things.

"Overall, I'm an enormous bull on the country. This is the most remarkable success story in the history of the world. It does not make sense to bet against America. I do not get pessimistic about the country. The real worry is what can be done by terrorists or governments that may have access to nuclear or other weapons....

"If you had to make a choice between long-term bonds at around 4.5 percent and equities for the next 20 years, I would certainly prefer equities. But if people think they can earn more than 6-7 percent a year, they're making a big mistake. I don't think we're in bubble-type valuations in equities -- or anywhere close to bargain valuations.

"If you told me I had to go away for 20 years, I would rather take an index fund over long-term bonds. You'll get a chance to do something extremely intelligent with your money in the next few years. But right now there doesn't seem to be a clear enough direction to conclude anything dramatic."

The auto industry

Buffett: "[GM boss] Rick Wagoner and [Ford chairman] Bill Ford have both been handed, by past managers, extremely difficult hands to play. They're not the consequences of their own doing, but they have inherited a legacy cost structure, with contracts put in place decades ago, that make it very difficult for them to be competitive in today's world.

"Just imagine if they'd been made to sign contracts that made them pay several more tons per steel than their competitors have to, people would feel that's untenable. [GM and Ford] have to pay contracts that give them immense obligations for health-care and retirement annuities at high cost. Their competitors can buy steel and other commodities no cheaper, but the competitors don't have nearly the same level of costs for these [health-care and retirement expenses].

"Someone once asked Bill Buckley what he would do if he actually won his race for New York mayor back and the 1960s and he said, 'First thing I'd do is ask for a recount.' Well, that's what I'd do at GM. You've got a $90 billion pension fund, $20 billion set aside for health-care liabilities, and the whole equity value of the company is $14 billion. That's not sustainable.... Something will have to give."

Munger: "Warren gave a very optimistic prognosis. Some people seem to think there's no trouble just because it hasn't happened yet. If you jump out the window at the 42nd floor and you're still doing fine as you pass the 27th floor, that doesn't mean you don't have a serious problem. I would want to address the problem right now. They'd better face it."

The NYSE's merger with Archipelago

Buffett: "I personally think it would be better if the NYSE remained as a neutral, not-for-big-profit institution. The exchange has done a very good job over the centuries. It's one of the most important institutions in the world. The enemy of investment is activity.... I know the American investor will not be better off if volume doubles on the NYSE, and I know the NYSE will be trying to figure out how to do that if it is trying to maximize its own earnings per share. GM or IBM will not earn more money if their stock turns over more actively, but a for-profit NYSE will."

Munger: "I think we have lost our way when people like the [board of] governors and the CEO of the NYSE fail to realize they have a duty to the rest of us to act as exemplars. You do not want your first-grade school teacher to be fornicating on the floor or drinking alcohol in the closet and, similarly, you do not want your stock exchange to be setting the wrong moral example."

Whether pharmaceutical stocks have become bargains Buffett: "That industry is in a state of flux right now. It's historically earned very good returns on invested capital, but it could well be that the world will unfold differently in the future than in the past. I'm not sure I can give you a good answer on that."

Munger: "We just throw some decisions into the 'too hard' file and go onto others."


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: business; currency; dollar; tradedeficit; warrenbuffet; warrenbuffett
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1 posted on 05/14/2005 3:54:44 PM PDT by blueberry12
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To: blueberry12

I have to disagree with him on the trade deficit. It defies logic, but we're always at our best when we have a trade deficit. Perhaps that's why Warren lost a couple of hundred million in the currency market?


2 posted on 05/14/2005 4:04:00 PM PDT by Jaysun (No matter how hot she is, some man, somewhere, is tired of her sh*t)
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To: Jaysun

The dollar is on the upswing... It won't be long before Buffet bails.


3 posted on 05/14/2005 4:07:01 PM PDT by demlosers (Rumsfeld: "We don't have an exit strategy, we have a victory strategy.'')
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To: Jaysun

He lost?

Maybe that's what he says just so we would feel sorry for him. I say you cannot trust people with big money! It's interesting to hear what they have to say, but I wouldn't draw conclusions based on their views.


4 posted on 05/14/2005 4:08:04 PM PDT by blueberry12
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To: blueberry12
You'll get a chance to do something extremely intelligent with your money in the next few years.

A promissory warning from a master.

5 posted on 05/14/2005 4:09:11 PM PDT by snarks_when_bored
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To: Jaysun
we're always at our best when we have a trade deficit

I'm sure you have some basis for this statement. Please fill me in.

6 posted on 05/14/2005 4:11:07 PM PDT by Doe Eyes
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To: demlosers
This ugly chart will have to change sooner or later. It could change if the US dollar would sink even further. The US dollar may go up for a short time (year or two), but the long-term trend is I believe down Down DOWN.
7 posted on 05/14/2005 4:11:57 PM PDT by blueberry12
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To: blueberry12; demlosers
Maybe that's what he says just so we would feel sorry for him. I say you cannot trust people with big money! It's interesting to hear what they have to say, but I wouldn't draw conclusions based on their views.

I trade currencies and I have to say that it's WAY different than stocks. Warren's system is really quite simple. In a nutshell, he finds companies in which the stock prices haven't risen to reflect earnings. Eventually, the stock prices rise to reflect the earnings - and he makes a bundle.
8 posted on 05/14/2005 4:17:17 PM PDT by Jaysun (No matter how hot she is, some man, somewhere, is tired of her sh*t)
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To: Doe Eyes
I'm sure you have some basis for this statement. Please fill me in.

The first thing you should do is ask yourself why they're bad. Whatever your answer, prove it. Then continue reading below.








Contrary to popular belief, the trade deficit is not caused by unfair trade practices abroad or declining industrial competitiveness at home. Trade deficits reflect the flow of capital across international borders, flows that are determined by national rates of savings and investment. This renders trade policy an ineffective tool for reducing a nation's trade deficit. Our exports have been going up.

Trade deficits don't cause rising unemployment. Quite the opposite (what's the rate right now? Pretty damned good). Look at the chart below and notice that unemployment was highest when the trade deficit was lowest. We actually had a trade surplus in 1975 (boy those were the days). Notice how unemployment - the blue line - drops as the trade deficit grows, and vice versa.


None of the common concerns about the trade deficit holds up to empirical scrutiny. Trade deficits cannot be blamed for unemployment or slower growth, nor are they a sign of unfair trade practices abroad or declining industrial competitiveness at home.

In the final analysis, nations do not trade with each other people do. Every international transaction that Americans engage in will, by definition, leave both parties to the transaction believing they are better off than before - otherwise the transaction would not occur. By this measure, the "balance of trade" is always positive, benefiting the nation as a whole.

We're by far the richest nation on earth. Doesn't it stand to reason that the nation with the most money will have the most to spend?
9 posted on 05/14/2005 4:40:08 PM PDT by Jaysun (No matter how hot she is, some man, somewhere, is tired of her sh*t)
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To: Jaysun
"We're by far the richest nation on earth. Doesn't it stand to reason that the nation with the most money will have the most to spend?" Yes, but a growing trade deficit means that US dollar is going overseas and foreign products are coming in. So, money is going out of the US which means we have less and less money to spend. Am I wrong? "Every international transaction that Americans engage in will, by definition, leave both parties to the transaction believing they are better off than before - otherwise the transaction would not occur. By this measure, the "balance of trade" is always positive, benefiting the nation as a whole." Yes, but trading does not mean that in the end both parties will profit. Both parties may be better off RIGHT NOW; but as time passes, they find out who had a better deal. If it were true that both parties profit from trading, then nobody would lose money on Wall Street, for example, because both parties (sellers and buyers) would end up with a profit. That sounds impossible...
10 posted on 05/14/2005 4:54:49 PM PDT by blueberry12
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To: Jaysun
"We're by far the richest nation on earth. Doesn't it stand to reason that the nation with the most money will have the most to spend?"

Yes, but a growing trade deficit means that US dollar is going overseas and foreign products are coming in. So, money is going out of the US which means we have less and less money to spend. Am I wrong?

"Every international transaction that Americans engage in will, by definition, leave both parties to the transaction believing they are better off than before - otherwise the transaction would not occur. By this measure, the 'balance of trade' is always positive, benefiting the nation as a whole."

Yes, but trading does not mean that in the end both parties will profit. Both parties may be better off RIGHT NOW; but as time passes, they find out who had a better deal. If it were true that both parties profit from trading, then nobody would lose money on Wall Street, for example, because both parties (sellers and buyers) would end up with a profit. That sounds impossible...

11 posted on 05/14/2005 5:08:50 PM PDT by blueberry12
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To: blueberry12
A lot of what I see now reminds me of Sodom and Gomorrah.

Huh? Because of hedge funds? when the SAG 500 crashed? What is he talking about? these guys are just plain weird and full of themselves.

Buffett lost $2.3 billion in the past 10 trading days as the euro fell from 1.3100 to 1.2600. the next chart support is below 1.2500. Parity is likely within 18 months. The EC economy is horrible, and our trade and budget deficits are actually falling the last 2 months. Anyone who listens to Buffett is an idiot.

12 posted on 05/14/2005 5:14:29 PM PDT by montag813
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To: Jaysun
Perhaps that's why Warren lost a couple of hundred million in the currency market?

Actually, Berkshire reported a loss of $2.1 billion on his dollar short gamble. Our estimates show he lost an additional $2.3 billion in the past 2 weeks alone.

13 posted on 05/14/2005 5:22:25 PM PDT by montag813
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To: blueberry12
This ugly chart will have to change sooner or later.

Look at where the biigest rise in our trade deficit in history occurred...during the Klintoon regime.

One note: the trade deficit last month unexpectedly dropped sharply (along with the budget deficit)...this is what caused the recent Euro collapse through key support.

14 posted on 05/14/2005 5:24:25 PM PDT by montag813
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To: Jaysun

I too trade currencies. Mr Buffett should stick with his "simple" stocks.


15 posted on 05/14/2005 5:25:51 PM PDT by montag813
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To: Jaysun
None of the common concerns about the trade deficit holds up to empirical scrutiny.

Excellent analysis.

Next time you're in NYC, please allow me to buy you a beer.

16 posted on 05/14/2005 5:28:03 PM PDT by montag813
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To: blueberry12

But if there is an imbalance, obviously we came out on top. After all, we got actual goods and services, while the other guys got dollars.

Either dollars will remain strong, in which case everybody wins, or dollars will drop, in which case we still have all the great stuff we bought, and the other nations are stuck with a lot of worthless paper.

I realise that if the dollar drops like that, THEN we will be unable to buy as much from foreign sources -- and if that happens maybe we will have some domestic production start up, for a lot of what we buy it isn't hard.

Of course, if things get real expensive then we will buy less foreign stuff, it might slow down the economy, unemployment will rise, which will just make it harder to buy, which will mean dollars NOT going overseas.

But the thought that we have to find some goods we can sell others in order to come out ahead just doesn't make sense.

Any more than it makes sense to consider the trade deficit of Delaware vs the other states. Oh, you didn't know that Delaware had a massive trade deficit? Well, I don't know either, so far as I can tell nobody keeps that data (or nobody publishes it). I have to think that is because we realise it doesn't matter.

But why doesn't it matter from state to state, if it matters from country to country?


17 posted on 05/14/2005 11:49:24 PM PDT by CharlesWayneCT (http://spaces.msn.com/members/criticallythinking)
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To: Jaysun
We're by far the richest nation on earth. Doesn't it stand to reason that the nation with the most money will have the most to spend?

Bingo. I may add the US economy creates new wealth better than the rest. And much of the trade deficit can be contributed to oil or US companies moving their manufacturing base to overseas location.

18 posted on 05/15/2005 6:09:03 AM PDT by demlosers (Rumsfeld: "We don't have an exit strategy, we have a victory strategy.'')
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To: montag813
the next chart support is below 1.2500. Parity is likely within 18 months. The EC economy is horrible, and our trade and budget deficits are actually falling the last 2 months. Anyone who listens to Buffett is an idiot.

LoL! You're right on. I've been saying the dollar's downfall has reached a high water mark and is now on an upswing. The good US economic data is getting harder and harder for people to ignore.

19 posted on 05/15/2005 6:22:34 AM PDT by demlosers (Rumsfeld: "We don't have an exit strategy, we have a victory strategy.'')
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To: blueberry12
Yes, but a growing trade deficit means that US dollar is going overseas and foreign products are coming in. So, money is going out of the US which means we have less and less money to spend. Am I wrong?

Yes, but trading does not mean that in the end both parties will profit. Both parties may be better off RIGHT NOW; but as time passes, they find out who had a better deal. If it were true that both parties profit from trading, then nobody would lose money on Wall Street, for example, because both parties (sellers and buyers) would end up with a profit. That sounds impossible...


This may not be a perfect example, but I can't think of a better way to explain it. Let's say you get a job for the first time and your income is $500 per week. After a few weeks you decide to go to the mall to get some things for your apartment, and let's say that you spend $50, and you continue to spend $50 per month at the mall. Now you're running a "trade deficit" of -$50 per month and the mall is running a "trade surplus" of $50 per month. After working three years you get promotions and raises and now you're making $2,000 per week. Let's suppose that by now it's not abnormal for you to spend $750 at the mall every month. Your "trade deficit" has grown - it's 15 times higher than it was just 3 years ago!

The fact is that you're spending more because you're making more. The fact that you're able to spend $750 per month on the things you want and need is a positive thing - it shows that you're doing well. The flip side of that is your loser pal from high school. He doesn't work and he never has. He also has a very low "trade deficit".

So it is with America.

Does that make sense?
20 posted on 05/15/2005 8:50:12 PM PDT by Jaysun (No matter how hot she is, some man, somewhere, is tired of her sh*t)
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