Muscat Daily

‘Never bet against America,’ Buffett advises investors

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Washington, US - Ninety year old billionair­e Warren Buffett reaffirmed his fervent belief in the American Dream in a letter to investors published on Saturday - advising them never to bet against the country despite its many problems.

“In its brief 232 years of existence, there has been no incubator for unleashing human potential like America,” he said in the message to investors in his Berkshire Hathaway conglomera­te.

Even after a particular­ly difficult 2020 - when the COVID-19 pandemic plunged the world’s largest economy into recession and pushed millions into poverty - ‘our country’s economic progress has been breathtaki­ng’, he said.

The man known as the Oracle of Omaha added, “Our unwavering conclusion: Never bet against America.”

Buffett’s annual letter is always highly anticipate­d by the business world because of his reputation as a prudent investor with a canny view to long-term trends.

But in his latest letter, Buffett did acknowledg­e a mistake made in 2016 that became evident last year: Berkshire’s purchase of

Precision Castparts (PCC), which led to an ‘ugly US$11bn write-down’.

“I paid too much for the company,” Buffett wrote. “No one misled me in any way - I was simply too optimistic about PCC’s normalised profit potential,” an error laid bare when the company’s aerospace customers fell on hard times last year.

Buffett also announced that Berkshire’s annual meeting, which in normal years draws thousands of shareholde­rs to Omaha, will take place virtually on May 1, as it was last year because of the pandemic.

He said he and partner Charlie

Munger would answer shareholde­rs’ questions.

Last year, Buffett wrote, the conglomera­te they led met neither of two goals, “Berkshire made no sizable acquisitio­ns and operating earnings fell 9 per cent.

“We did, though, increase Berkshire’s per-share intrinsic value by both retaining earnings and repurchasi­ng about 5 per cent of our shares.”

He voiced confidence that Berkshire’s capital gains from its investment holdings would be ‘substantia­l’ over time.

Looking ahead, Buffett said Berkshire would remain ‘a collection of controlled and non-controlled businesses’.

He said shareholde­rs’ capital would be invested in ‘whatever we believe makes the most sense, based on a company’s durable competitiv­e strengths, the capabiliti­es and character of its management, and price’.

Berkshire had net earnings in 2020 of US$42.5bn, helped by its insurance business, but the overall figure was down 48 per cent from 2019.

Berkshire last year sold its airline stocks because of the pandemic and invested more heavily in pharmaceut­ical products.

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Warren Buffett

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