Ah. I understand. So, you wish to talk down to me rather than engage in a discussion. I wonder why that would be.Quote from tomcole:
I'm not here to argue with you - simply pointing out that your comments which appear reasonable, are simply naive based upon your lack of significant experience.
Quote from Sparohok:
Ah. I understand. So, you wish to talk down to me rather than engage in a discussion. I wonder why that would be.
Here is one reason why it is much easier to manage small portfolios to market beating returns than large portfolios:
http://www.stanford.edu/~wfsharpe/art/active/active.htm
Or, Warren Buffett in Business Week, 1999:
"If I was running $1 million today or $10 million for that matter, I'd be fully invested. Compared to running billions, it is a huge structural advantage not to have a lot of money. "
He may not wish to engage in a discussion, but I might.
Having "a lot of money" would be a structural ADVANTAGE in a secular bull market. Mister Buffett has experienced two, 1949-1966 and 1982 to 2000.
As a senior in high school he had amassed $10,000 ( in 1948 dollars) primarily from ENTREPENEURIAL activities. Just in time for a 17 year secular bull run. Three years after the top, he disbanded the 13 year old Buffett partnership in 1969 , and transformed Berkshire Hathaway from a New England operating entity to a holding company. NOL's didn't hurt either
F unny, as evidenced by the net 8 year return in BRK.A , he hasn't faired as well without secular assistance. . Both in returns and venturing..... AWAY....... from equities. Taking a large position in silver in 1998 or in effect being short the dollar more recently are NOT "buying pieces of businesses. One of Buffett's many public expressed adages (along with buying and HOLDING or weapons of mass financial destruction)
Not being a groupie nor having a 7 year old Business Week article matted, framed and illuminated under soft track lighting, I cannot surmise when he had his first million, but I do know he had his first billion in 1983. His personal net worth is now roughly 40 billion. I'm contending THAT results as much from a SECULAR BULL MARKET fueled with constant stream(S) of cash as his acumen. Geico alone is an ATM.
In a secular bull market, most blue chips, which, in contrast to sweetheart deals, any Joe Sixpack can buy (and hold) will rise under their own accord with passive attention. To wit: Coca Cola, Disney, McDonalds. However, those three have been mediocre investments since 1999. Hmmm, rather consistent with BRK.A's ho hum stock price. Recent buying BUD and WMT shrewd?
Yep, you're probably correct in reflecting having a lot of money is a structural DISADVANTAGE during more "normal" times. The point where true talent make strides in "catching up"
I imagine you think Babe Ruth was a great athlete, eh?
Quote from Sparohok:
<i>Having "a lot of money" would be a structural ADVANTAGE in a secular bull market.</i>
Why? The advantages of a small portfolio (better liquidity, lower market impact, wider investing opportunities) apply in any market.
<i>Mister Buffett has experienced two, 1949-1966 and 1982 to 2000.</i>
To summarize, your argument seems to be that Buffett went from $10,000 to $45B through purely fortuitous market timing, riding along with secular blue-chip trends, and occasionally violating his own principles. You also mention the cash flow from Geico as if it were bestowed upon him as manna from Heaven rather than the result of investment prowess. Yet none of this is sour grapes of any sort, nor tinged by envy in the slightest. Oooooookay.
And you're NOT a groupie?????????????
Cutting to the chase, Buffett bought heavily in the capitulation of the 73-74 bear. Shrewd? Perhaps. Washington Post was a sweetheart deal too. I'm starting to think about Valentine's day.
The.......eh......better liquidity of a smaller portfolio is inconsequential to a buy and hold intent.
In 1983, he first went over the billion mark in personal net worth.
In 1998, his personal net worth couldn't be too far off the $40 billion mark since 40% of his net worth is in BRK and in the last 8 years BRK has a net increase of 10%.
In between those two points in time, that 40-fold increase is for the most part a rising tide lifts all boats in conjunction with additional continual infusions from CASH cows. Compounding. FORTY FOLD. Dig?
His performance, at least in BRK, since 1998 and straying away from equites is the emperor without clothes
To reiterate, buying BUD and WMT shrewd? Perhaps WMT. But in 1970 not 2006.
Geico wasn't from heaven, it was from GRAHAM. His purchase. Buffett bought in in 1976 (same year as Ben's death) for a song (as the market was emerging from a true bear market). You know.........with capitualtion. He did cultivate it. That's not investment prowness, that's managerial prowness Ditto for General Re and the other insurance companies. In Geico's case, that includes saturated marketing.
If I were to envy/emulate anyone, it would probably be Paul Tudor Jones, or Bruce Covner, Marcus, Seykota. I try to adhere to Jone's quip that "only losers average losers" Diametric to how Buffett adds. In the foreign curreny arena, the flavor of this thread, perhaps Stanley Druckenmiller or Bill Lipchitiz. You know, talent. Fluent with their arena.
Do you really think Babe Ruth was a great "athlete"?
Martin