Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Thousands fill arena to hear advice from Buffett

- JOSH FUNK

OMAHA, Neb. - Listening to Warren Buffett never gets old to the thousands of Berkshire Hathaway shareholde­rs who filled an arena to listen to the billionair­e investor at the company’s annual meeting on Saturday.

More than 30,000 people filled an arena and several overflow rooms in Omaha to hear Buffett and Berkshire Vice Chairman Charlie Munger talk. The 86-year-old CEO and his 93-year-old business partner have been leading the conglomera­te for more than five decades, but the crowd is always listening for new tidbits of wisdom. Buffett is known for his candor and plain speaking.

Berkshire’s top two executives acknowledg­ed Saturday that they missed out on investing in Google years ago, but they expressed pride in the company they built through acquisitio­ns and said they believe it will thrive for decades to come.

“In retrospect, I think we were smart enough to figure out Google early, and we didn’t,” Munger said.

Buffett and Munger avoided technology investment­s for most of their careers because they said it was too hard to figure out which companies will win. Berkshire does now own 133 million Apple shares, but it just sold off one-third of its 81 million IBM shares because Buffett misjudged that firm.

Buffett said there’s no change in Berkshire’s plan to eventually replace him. He said one of the most important qualities his successor will need is a talent for wisely investing Berkshire’s cash.

“We need a money mind as CEO,” said Buffett, who has no plans to retire.

Berkshire plans to name one of its existing managers CEO after Buffett is gone, and the decentrali­zed structure of the company allows Berkshire’s subsidiari­es to largely run themselves.

“We have an extraordin­ary group of good managers,” Buffett said.

The executives who run Berkshire subsidiari­es look forward to the meeting just as the shareholde­rs do.

Brooks Running CEO Jim Weber said he’s always careful about how much of Buffett’s time he takes up when he talks to him, so those conversati­ons tend to focus just on Brooks’ running-shoe business. The annual meeting offers one of the few times Weber gets to hear Buffett discuss other topics.

“I want to hear him talk about the economy and investing,” Weber said. “I’m looking forward to hearing him as much as everybody else.”

Dozens of companies Berkshire owns set up booths in an adjoining 200,000-square-foot exhibit hall to sell their products and take questions about their businesses. The event offers Geico insurance quotes, See’s Candy, Justin cowboy boots, RVs and homes manufactur­ed by Clayton Homes.

“I think it’s a neat way to keep the enthusiasm up in shareholde­rs,” said Jerry Meyer, who drove to Omaha with family from Coffeyvill­e, Kan.

Buffett is the celebrity everyone wants to get close to at the meeting.

When Buffett toured the exhibit hall, he was surrounded by a pack of reporters, shareholde­rs and security officers. While Buffett met Mr. Peanut at the Kraft Heinz booth, Miami Dolphin Ndamukong Suh wandered a few feet away without a crowd.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway CEO, talks to reporters as he tours the exhibit floor Saturday at CenturyLin­k Center in Omaha, Neb.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway CEO, talks to reporters as he tours the exhibit floor Saturday at CenturyLin­k Center in Omaha, Neb.

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