10/04/2012

Buffett: Better Investor or Better Businessman?

 
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Buffett: Better Investor or Better Businessman?
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-B) Chairman and CEO Warren Buffett has often written and said, “I am a better investor because I am a businessman and I am a better businessman because I am an investor.”  This is not unlike Buffett’s mentor Ben Graham’s remark in The Intelligent Investor (and I am paraphrasing here) that all investing will be successful to the extent that it is business-like.  And while I couldn’t agree more with either of these statements, it is true that Buffett is probably better known now more as a businessman than he is as an investor.  This obviously begs the questions, if you had to pick one of these traits, would you conclude that Buffett is a better businessman or is he a better investor?
Let’s first examine Buffett as an investor.  For some time now Buffett and the phrase value investing have become synonymous.  He studied under the father of value investing Ben Graham at Columbia University, worked for Graham at the Graham-Newman firm, and then after leaving Graham’s partnership, formed his own firm, which ultimately became the foundation for Berkshire Hathaway. 
Buffett’s partnership was not unlike most modern day hedge funds.  He pooled money from various individuals, and invested their money in what he deemed to be undervalued securities and special situations.  In his partnership letters Buffett referred to the latter as “work-outs.”  Similar to many hedge fund managers of today, Buffett also didn’t take any of the profits for himself until he had earned a certain return on his investors’ capital each year.  This is now known as a hurdle rate.  Buffett’s compensation structure, though, was slightly different from most of today’s hedge fund managers.  Most of today’s managers charge a management fee (1 to 2 percent of assets) and then a performance fee (typically 20 percent of the profits) over the specified hurdle rate.  Buffett, on the other hand, charged 0 percent management fee, but took 25 percent of the profits over his specified hurdle rate.
And Buffett’s partnership results were fantastic, handily trouncing most widely accepted benchmarks (Dow, S&P, etc), and tending to do much better in down markets than in up markets.  This success meant that when most other money managers were busy trying to recoup losses, Buffett was able to further pull away from the pack.  He put fresh capital to work during down markets, thereby giving an even bigger boost to his long-term returns.  Not surprisingly, these results made Buffett fabulously wealthy by most standards.
Yet, by the late 1960’s amid a massive bull market, Buffett began to have trouble putting capital to work with new ideas—and was also likely tired of the money management business in practice—so he eventually closed down his partnership, and returned capital to his investors.
This action set the stage for the building blocks of what today is known as the investment conglomerate, Berkshire Hathaway.  While running Berkshire, an old New England textile manufacturer, was certainly more of an entree into running a business, Berkshire’s early results were fueled by its acquisition of insurance company National Indemnity.  And insurance became Berkshire’s compounding machine, as Buffett became able to source capital and low to negative costs, and invest it in undervalued securities—and eventually wholly owned business—with the benefit of insurance leverage (investable assets as a multiple of equity).
Thus, one would rightly argue, that in the first decade of Buffett’s control of Berkshire, the company’s growth was driven more by his prowess as an investor than his abilities as a businessman.  In fact, it wasn’t probably until the mid-1980’s, as more and more of Berkshire’s earnings were attributable to its wholly owned businesses that Buffett became known more as a businessman.
Over the ensuing years, this earnings stream has become a bigger and bigger component of Berkshire’s net worth, as the conglomerate now owns everything from utilities to insurance to retailers to railroads.  With this expansion, not only has Buffett’s reputation as a businessman grown, but he has become a go to source for commentary on the state of American—and in some cases global—businesses.
And while I generally agree with his reputation as a source of economic insights—and certainly follow his commentary myself—given his more than 60 years of studying businesses, economies, and human behavior, as well as the fact that he is seeing data almost daily on all of Berkshire’s businesses, I for one, still think his success is derived more from his abilities as an investor than as a businessman.
At Berkshire, Buffett doesn’t run any of the businesses on a day-to-day basis.  Nor does he individually manage the thousands of employees that work in all of the Berkshire subsidiaries.  In addition, I do not suspect that he regularly meets with individual clients face to face, nor does he likely regularly meet with regulators or suppliers or any number of other constituencies that most people running businesses (either large or small) have to deal with on a daily basis.           
What Buffett does do--and he has repeatedly said this himself--is to make major capital allocation decisions either in business acquisitions or in securities purchases.  In addition, his schedule is relatively open, which allows him to read a lot and to study other potential businesses that might fit under the Berkshire umbrella.  Throughout his career, he has worked through other managers by encouraging them and by giving them resources, and then sharing in their successes and failures.
And most likely, that is Buffett’s strong suit, staying back and making decisions, rather than having to get his hands deep in the mud like so many other businessman and leaders must do.  To that end, if you were to write a job description for him, it would probably sound more like a securities analyst than a typical CEO.
Given his track record and his job description, I tend to think of Buffett as a better investor than a businessman, though his investing is very much as Graham said, “business-like.”  And in a way, he selects investments for Berkshire in the same way as he ran the Buffett partnership.  The main difference, however, is that Berkshire exists in the public domain, which in my mind has made people more aware of him as a businessman, even though he seems to still be an investor at heart.
I’d love to hear your thoughts on Buffett as a businessman or Buffett as an investor, so please do send me any comments or suggestions you may have.
Justin 
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