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Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger

Katie Brown

    Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger’s legendary friendship began in 1959 when they met at a dinner party. They immediately connected over shared interests in investing philosophy focused on buying undervalued...

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    Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger’s legendary friendship began in 1959 when they met at a dinner party. They immediately connected over shared interests in investing philosophy focused on buying undervalued companies with strong underlying economics. This chance encounter ignited a spark that developed into an over 60 year partnership at the helm of Berkshire Hathaway.When Buffett took control of Berkshire in 1965, it was a struggling textile manufacturer. He used it as vessel for investing in insurance companies like GEICO, which Munger convinced him to buy by framing it as “buying dollar bills for 40 cents.” This investment laid the foundation for Berkshire’s future acquisition strategy, providing capital to purchase privately held businesses. Buffett’s personable public persona and Munger’s ruthless willingness to challenge assumptions combined to convince acquired companies that their legacies would be preserved. This trust was key in deals like the $1 billion purchase of family-owned firm Ben Bridge Jeweler in 2000.Core to Buffett and Munger’s partnership was melding their complementary skillsets while uniting around shared investing principles. They believed markets often mispriced companies, providing opportunities to buy quality businesses with economic moats at fair valuations. These could generate consistent returns as underlying value compounds. For example, a $100 million investment in Coca-Cola in 1988 has yielded billions in returns. Avoiding over-diversification, Buffett and Munger made strategic big bets in concentrated areas like insurance and consumer brands that transformed Berkshire Hathaway into the $700 billion conglomerate it is today.This success reflects the decentralized organizational culture Buffett and Munger instilled. Empowering managers replicated Ben Graham’s idea of “having an able man at the top and leaving him there to run things.” Insurance heads Ajit Jain and Greg Abel execute billions in deals with autonomy. Acquired companies like BNSF Railway operate independently thanks to trust in leadership. This efficiency and appreciation for time zone advantages has allowed small corporate headquarters to oversee a holding company with over $700 billion in market capitalization.The full impact of Buffett and Munger’s interleaved personal and professional partnership spanning over 60 years will only be fully measured in their absence. As Berkshire enters its inevitable leadership transition, fundamental questions hang over the organization’s future. While successors like Ajit Jain and Greg Abel bring decades of experience, no one can fully replicate the chemistry behind Buffett and Munger’s collaboration. The company traded over 1.5% higher the day after Buffett assured shareholders the next CEO was “already on the payroll” but its stock price will remain tied to perception of leadership continuity. Ultimately through vision, integrity, and principles built over a lifetime, Buffett and Munger constructed something larger than themselves, even if their mind meld exits with them. Their six decade friendship and partnership formed the foundation enabling Berkshire Hathaway’s unprecedented success and continued growth against all odds.
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