сряда, 23 декември 2009 г.

 
 

  WESCO FINANCIAL CORPORATION 
  LETTER TO SHAREHOLDERS 

  To Our Shareholders: 

  Consolidated ""normal'' net operating income (i.e., before irregularly occurring 
  items shown in the table below) for the calendar year 1999 increased to $45,904,000 
  ($6.44 per share) from $37,622,000 ($5.28 per share) in the previous year. 

  Consolidated net income (i.e., after irregularly occurring items shown in the 
  table below) decreased to $54,143,000 ($7.60 per share) from $71,803,000 
  ($10.08 per share) in the previous year. 

  Wesco had three major subsidiaries at yearend 1999: (1) Wesco-Financial 
  Insurance Company (""Wes-FIC''), headquartered in Omaha and engaged princi- 

  pally in the reinsurance business,

(2) The Kansas Bankers Surety Company (""KBS''), 

  owned by Wes-FIC and specializing in insurance products tailored to midwestern 

  banks, and

(3) Precision Steel, headquartered in Chicago and engaged in the steel   warehousing and specialty metal products businesses.

Consolidated net income for   the two years just ended breaks down as follows (in 000s except for per-share 

  (1) 
  amounts) : 

  Year Ended 
  December 31, 1999 December 31, 1998 
  Per Per 
  Wesco Wesco 
  Amount Share(2) Amount Share(2) 

  ""Normal'' net operating income of: 
  Wes-FIC and KBS insurance businesses IIIIIIIIIIII $43,610 $6.12 $34,654 $ 4.87 
  Precision Steel businessesIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 2,532 .35 3,154 .44 
  All other ""normal'' net operating income (loss)(3) IIII (238) (.03) (186) (.03) 

  45,904 6.44 37,622 5.28 
  Realized net securities gainsIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 7,271 1.02 33,609 4.72 
  Gain on sales of foreclosed properties IIIIIIIIIIIIIII 968 .14 572 .08 

  Wesco consolidated net incomeIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII $54,143 $7.60 $71,803 $10.08 

  (1) All Ngures are net of income taxes. 

  (2) Per-share data is based on 7,119,807 shares outstanding. Wesco has had no dilutive capital stock equivalents. 

  (3) After deduction of interest and other corporate expenses, and costs and expenses associated with foreclosed real estate
previously charged against Wesco's former Mutual Savings and Loan Association subsidiary.

Income was from ownership   of the Wesco headquarters oCce building, primarily leased to outside tenants, interest and dividend income from cash   equivalents and marketable securities owned outside the insurance subsidiaries, and, in 1999, the reduction of loss   reserves provided in prior years against possible losses on sales of loans and foreclosed real estate. 


  This supplementary breakdown of earnings diAers somewhat from that used in
  audited Nnancial statements which follow standard accounting convention.

The   supplementary breakdown is furnished because it is considered useful to   shareholders. 


  Wesco-Financial Insurance Company (""Wes-FIC'') 

  Wes-FIC's normal net income for 1999 was $43,610,000, versus $34,654,000 for 
  1998. The Ngures include $6,415,000 in 1999 and $4,987,000 in 1998 contributed by 
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  The Kansas Bankers Surety Company (""KBS''), owned by Wes-FIC since 1996. KBS 
  is discussed in the section, ""The Kansas Bankers Surety Company,'' below. 

  At the end of 1999 Wes-FIC retained about $21 million in invested assets, oAset   by claims reserves, from its former reinsurance arrangement with Fireman's Fund
  Group.

This arrangement was terminated August 31, 1989.

However, it will take a   long time before all claims are settled, and, meanwhile, Wes-FIC is being helped 

  over many years by proceeds from investing ""Ooat.'' 

  In addition, Wes-FIC has been engaged for several years in super-cat reinsurance, described in great detail in our pre-1999 annual reports, which Wesco
  shareholders should re-read each year.

Wes-FIC also engages in other reinsurance   business, including large and small quota share arrangements similar and dissimilar to   our previous reinsurance contract with Fireman's Fund Group. 


  In all recent reinsurance sold by us, other subsidiaries of our 80%-owning parent,   Berkshire Hathaway, sold four times as much reinsurance to the same customers on   the same terms, except that such subsidiaries usually take from us a 3%-of-premiums
  ceding commission on premium volume passed through them to Wes-FIC.

Excepting 

  this ceding commission, Wes-FIC has virtually no insurance-acquisition or insurance 
  administration costs. 

  Early in the current year (2000) Wes-FIC made an intracompany loan that funds 
  a large majority of the purchase price of CORT Business Services Corporation, 
  discussed below. 

  Wes-FIC remains a very strong insurance company, with very low costs, and, 
  one way or another, in the future as in the past, we expect to continue to Nnd and 
  seize at least a few sensible insurance opportunities. 

  On super-cat reinsurance accepted by Wes-FIC to date (March 3, 2000) there   has been no loss whatsoever that we know of, but some ""no-claims'' contingent   commissions have been paid to original cessors of business (i.e., cessors not 

  including Berkshire Hathaway).

Super-cat underwriting proNt of $1.4 million a year,   before taxes, beneNted earnings in 1999 and 1998.

The balance of pre-tax underwrit ing proNt amounted to $3.0 million for 1999 and $1.9 million for 1998.

These Ngures   came mostly from favorable revision of loss reserves on the old Fireman's Fund   contract. 


  Wesco shareholders should continue to realize that recent marvelous underwrit ing results are sure to be followed, sometime, by one or more horrible underwriting losses from super-cat or other insurance written by Wes-FIC. 

  The Kansas Bankers Surety Company (""KBS'') 

  KBS, purchased by Wes-FIC in 1996 for approximately $80 million in cash, 
  contributed $6,415,000 to the normal net operating income of the insurance   businesses in 1999 and $4,987,000 in 1998, after reductions for goodwill amortiza
tion under consolidated accounting convention of $782,000 each year.

The results of no graphics 


  KBS have been combined with those of Wes-FIC, and are included in the foregoing 
  table in the category, "" 'normal' net operating income of Wes-FIC and KBS insurance 
  businesses.'' 
  KBS was chartered in 1909 to underwrite deposit insurance for Kansas banks.

Its   oCces are in Topeka, Kansas. Over the years its service has continued to adapt to the   changing needs of the banking industry.

Today its customer base, consisting mostly   of small and medium-sized community banks, is spread throughout 25 mainly   midwestern states.

In addition to bank deposit guaranty bonds which insure deposits   in excess of FDIC coverage, KBS also oAers directors and oCcers indemnity policies, 

  bank employment practices policies, bank annuity and mutual funds indemnity 
  policies and bank insurance agents professional errors and omissions indemnity 
  policies. 

  A signiNcant change in KBS's operations occurred in 1998 and consisted of a
  large reduction in insurance premiums ceded to reinsurers.

The increased volume of   business retained (95% in 1999 and 94% in 1998 compares with 58% in 1997) 

  accompanied slightly higher underwriting income for 1999 after a reduction in the   amount for 1998.

KBS's combined ratio remained much better than average for 

  insurers, at 59.4% for 1999 and 62.2% for 1998, versus 37.2% for 1997, and we 
  expect volatile but favorable long-term eAects from increased insurance retained. 
  Part of KBS's continuing insurance volume is now ceded through reinsurance to 
  other Berkshire subsidiaries under reinsurance arrangements whereunder such other 
  Berkshire subsidiaries take 50% and unrelated reinsurers take the other 50%. 

  KBS is run by Donald Towle, President, assisted by 15 dedicated oCcers and 
  employees. 

  CORT Business Services Corporation (""CORT'')   In February 2000, Wesco purchased 100% of CORT Business Services Corpora-
  tion (""CORT'') for $384 million in cash.

In addition, CORT retains about $45 million 

  of previously existing debt. 

  CORT is a very long established company that is the country's leader in rentals
  of furniture that lessees have no intention of buying.

In the trade, people call CORT's   activity ""rent-to-rent'' to distinguish it from ""lease-to-purchase'' businesses that are, 

  in essence, installment sellers of furniture. 

  However, just as Hertz, as a rent-to-rent auto lessor in short-term arrangements,   must be skilled in selling used cars, CORT must be and is skilled in selling used   furniture. 

  In 1999, CORT had total revenues of $354 million. Of this, $295 million was
  furniture rental revenue and $59 million was furniture sales revenue.

CORT's pre-tax   earnings in 1999 were $46 million. 

 

  Thus, in essence, Wesco paid $384 million for $46 million in pre-tax earnings. 
  About 60% of the purchase price was attributable to goodwill, an intangible balance   sheet asset. 

  After the transaction, Wesco's consolidated balance sheet will contain about   $260 million in goodwill (including $29 million from Wesco's 1996 purchase of
  Kansas Bankers Surety).

On a full year basis, Wesco's future reported earnings will 

  be reduced by about $6 million on account of mostly-non-tax-deductible amortiza- 
  tion of goodwill. We do not believe, however, that this accounting deduction reOects 
  any real deterioration in earnings-driving goodwill in place. 

  More details with respect to the CORT transaction are contained in Note 8 to 
  the accompanying Nnancial statements, and on the last page of this annual report, to 
  which careful attention is directed. 

  CORT has long been headed by Paul Arnold, age 53, who is a star executive as is
  convincingly demonstrated by his long record as CEO of CORT.

Paul will continue as   CEO of CORT, with no interference from Wesco headquarters. We would be crazy 

  to second-guess a man with his record in business.

We are absolutely delighted to 

  have Paul and CORT within Wesco and hope to see a considerable expansion of 
  CORT's business and earnings in future years. 

  Precision Steel 

  The businesses of Wesco's Precision Steel subsidiary, headquartered in the   outskirts of Chicago at Franklin Park, Illinois, contributed $2,532,000 to normal net
  operating income in 1999, compared with $3,154,000 in 1998.

The $622,000 decrease in 1999 net income occurred despite a 2.5% increase in pounds of product sold, and reOects mainly the pounding which competition gave to prices as costs of  principal raw materials declined.

Fewer dollars of gross proNt were available to absorb operating expenses.

Precision Steel's operations for 1999 and 1998 also reOect after-tax expenditures of approximately $225,000 and $350,000, respectively, necessitated to upgrade computers and computer systems to ensure that Precision Steel's order-taking and other data processing systems continue to function accu rately beyond December 31, 1999. 


  It is with mixed emotions that we report that David Hillstrom, President and Chief Executive oCcer of Precision Steel for more than twenty years, retired in the
 latter part of 1999 and that Terry Piper was elected to replace him.

Terry is a very   able man and is no stranger to Precision Steel.

He joined it as a salesman approxi mately forty years ago, steadily advanced, and served as President and General Manager of Precision Steel's Precision Brand Products subsidiary for the last thirteen years.

Terry now has the responsibility of carrying on the leadership of his predeces sor;

and, under their combined skills, Precision Steel's businesses in 1999 continued to provide an excellent return on resources employed. 

 

  Tag Ends from Savings and Loan Days 

  All that now remains outside Wes-FIC but within Wesco as a consequence of Wesco's former involvement with Mutual Savings, Wesco's long-held savings and loan subsidiary, is a small real estate subsidiary, MS Property Company, that holds tag
  ends of assets and liabilities with a net book value of about $15 million.

MS Property 

  Company's results of operations, immaterial versus Wesco's present size, are included in the foregoing breakdown of earnings within ""all other 'normal' net operating income (loss).'' 

  Of course, the main tag end from Wesco's savings and loan days is an investment in Freddie Mac common stock, purchased by Mutual Savings for $72 mil lion at a time when Freddie Mac shares could be lawfully owned only by a savings
 and loan association.

The 28,800,000 shares owned by Wes-FIC at yearend 1999 had 

  a market value of $1.4 billion. 

  All Other ""Normal'' Net Operating Income or Loss All other ""normal'' net operating income or loss, net of interest paid and general corporate expenses, amounted to after-tax losses of $238,000 in 1999 and $186,000
  in 1998.

Sources were

(1) rents ($2,862,000 gross in 1999) from Wesco's Pasadena 

  oCce property (leased almost entirely to outsiders, including California Federal Bank 

  as the ground Ooor tenant), and

(2) interest and dividends from cash equivalents 

  and marketable securities held outside the insurance subsidiaries, less

(3) costs and expenses of liquidating tag-end foreclosed real estate.

The loss widened in 1999 because fewer dividends were received during the year after forced conversion of 

  preferred stock of Citigroup Inc. (""Citigroup'') into lower-dividend-paying common  stock.

The ""other 'normal' net operating income or loss'' Ngures for 1999 and 1998 also include intercompany charges for interest expense ($353,000 and $102,000 after taxes, respectively) on borrowings from Wes-FIC.

This intercompany interest expense does not aAect Wesco's consolidated net income inasmuch as the same 

  amount is included as interest income in Wes-FIC's ""normal'' net operating income. 

"Other 'normal' net operating income or loss'' beneNted in 1999 by about $800,000 caused by reversals of reserves for possible losses on sales of loans and tag-end real estate, expensed in prior years. 


  Net Securities Gains and Losses Wesco's earnings contained securities gains of $7,271,000, after income taxes, for 1999, versus $33,609,000, after taxes, for 1998. 

  Although the realized gains materially impacted Wesco's reported earnings for
  each year, they had a very minor impact on Wesco's shareholders' equity.

Inasmuch as   the greater portion of each year's realized gains had previously been reOected in the   unrealized gain component of Wesco's shareholders' equity, those amounts were  merely switched from unrealized gains to retained earnings, another component of  shareholders' equity. 

 

  Consolidated Balance Sheet and Related Discussion 

  As indicated in the accompanying Nnancial statements, Wesco's net worth 
  decreased, as accountants compute it under their conventions, to $1.90 billion 
  ($266 per Wesco share) at yearend 1999 from $2.22 billion ($312 per Wesco 
  share) at yearend 1998. 

  The $328.4 million decrease in reported net worth in 1999 was the result of 

  (1) $54.1 million from 1999 net income;

less

(2) a $374.1 million decrease in the 

  market value of investments after provision for future taxes on capital gains;

and   (2) $8.4 million in dividends paid. 


  The foregoing $266-per-share book value approximates liquidation value assum- 
  ing that all Wesco's non-security assets would liquidate, after taxes, at book value. 

  Probably, this assumption is too conservative.

But our computation of liquidation 

  value is unlikely to be too low by more than two or three dollars per Wesco share, 

  because

(1) the liquidation value of Wesco's consolidated real estate holdings 

  (where interesting potential now lies almost entirely in Wesco's equity in its oCce 
  property in Pasadena containing only 125,000 net rentable square feet), and 
  (2) unrealized appreciation in other assets (primarily Precision Steel) cannot be 
  large enough, in relation to Wesco's overall size, to change very much the overall 
  computation of after-tax liquidating value. 

  Of course, so long as Wesco does not liquidate, and does not sell any 
  appreciated assets, it has, in eAect, an interest-free ""loan'' from the government 
  equal to its deferred income taxes on the unrealized gains, subtracted in determining 

  its net worth.

This interest-free ""loan'' from the government is at this moment   working for Wesco shareholders and amounted to about $99 per Wesco share at   yearend 1999. 


  However, some day, perhaps soon, major parts of the interest-free ""loan'' must
  be paid as assets are sold.

Therefore, Wesco's shareholders have no perpetual 

  advantage creating value for them of $99 per Wesco share. Instead, the present   value of Wesco's shareholders' advantage must logically be much lower than $99 per   Wesco share.

In the writer's judgment, the value of Wesco's advantage from its   temporary, interest-free ""loan'' was probably about $20 per Wesco share at yearend   1999. 


  After the value of the advantage inhering in the interest-free ""loan'' is estimated, 

  a reasonable approximation can be made of Wesco's intrinsic value per share.

This   approximation is made by simply adding

(1) the value of the advantage from the 

  interest-free ""loan'' per Wesco share and

(2) liquidating value per Wesco share. 

  Others may think diAerently, but the foregoing approach seems reasonable to the 
  writer as a way of estimating intrinsic value per Wesco share. 

  Thus, if the value of the advantage from the interest-free tax-deferral ""loan'' was 
  $20 per Wesco share at yearend 1999, and after-tax liquidating value was then about 
  $266 per share (Ngures that seem rational to the writer), Wesco's intrinsic value per 
  share would become about $286 per share at yearend 1999, down 16% from intrinsic 
 (04/07/2000 14:06) 

  value as guessed in a similar calculation at the end of 1998.

And, Nnally, this   reasonable-to-this-writer, $286-per-share Ngure for intrinsic per share value of   Wesco stock should be compared with the $245 per share price at which Wesco   stock was selling on December 31, 1999.

This comparison indicates that Wesco   stock was then selling about 14% below intrinsic value. 


  Wesco's investment portfolio suAered more than its commensurate share of 
  decline in market value in 1999. Last year, we said ""as Wesco's unrealized apprecia- 
  tion has continued to grow in frothy markets for securities, it should be remembered 
  that it is subject to market Ouctuation, possibly dramatic on the downside, with no
  guaranty as to its ultimate full realization .''

The stock of several of our largest   investees lagged the market in 1999 by a large margin.

It's no sure thing that the   value of our marketable securities will quickly recover.

Unrealized after-tax appreciation represented 69% of Wesco's shareholders' equity at 1999 yearend, versus 76%   and 73% one and two years earlier. 


  Business and human quality in place at Wesco continues to be not nearly as
  good, all factors considered, as that in place at Berkshire Hathaway.

Wesco is not an equally-good-but-smaller version of Berkshire Hathaway, better because its small   size makes growth easier.

Instead, each dollar of book value at Wesco continues   plainly to provide much less intrinsic value than a similar dollar of book value at  Berkshire Hathaway.

Moreover, the quality disparity in book value's intrinsic merits 

  has, in recent years, been widening in favor of Berkshire Hathaway. 

  All that said, we make no attempt to appraise relative attractiveness for invest- 
  ment of Wesco versus Berkshire Hathaway stock at present stock-market quotations. 

  The Board of Directors recently increased Wesco's regular dividend from 
  29Y cents per share to 30Y cents per share, payable March 8, 2000, to shareholders 
  of record as of the close of business on February 9, 2000. 

  This annual report contains Form 10-K, a report Nled with the Securities and 
  Exchange Commission, and includes detailed information about Wesco and its 

  subsidiaries as well as audited Nnancial statements bearing extensive footnotes.

As   usual, your careful attention is sought with respect to these items. 


  Charles T. Munger 
  Chairman of the Board 

  March 3, 2000 
  WESCO FINANCIAL CORPORATION 
  LETTER TO SHAREHOLDERS 

To Our Shareholders: 

  Consolidated ""normal'' net operating income (i.e., before irregularly occurring 
items shown in the table below) for the calendar year 1998 decreased to 
$37,622,000 ($5.28 per share) from $38,262,000 ($5.38 per share) in the previous 
year. 

  Consolidated net income (i.e., after irregularly occurring items shown in the 
table below) decreased to $71,803,000 ($10.08 per share) from $101,809,000 
 ($14.30 per share) in the previous year. 

  Wesco has three major subsidiaries: (1) Wesco-Financial Insurance Company 
 (""Wes-FIC''), headquartered in Omaha and engaged principally in the reinsurance 
business, (2) The Kansas Bankers Surety Company (""KBS''), owned by Wes-FIC 
and specializing in insurance products tailored to midwestern banks, and (3) 
Precision Steel, headquartered in Chicago and engaged in the steel warehousing and 
specialty metal products businesses. Consolidated net income for the two years just 
  (1) 
ended breaks down as follows (in 000s except for per-share amounts) : 

  Year Ended 
  December 31, 1998 December 31, 1997 
  Per Per 
  Wesco Wesco 
  Amount Share(2) Amount Share(2) 

""Normal'' net operating income of: 
  Wes-FIC and KBS insurance businessesIIIIIIIIIII $34,654 $ 4.87 $ 33,507 $ 4.71 
  Precision Steel businesses IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 3,154 .44 3,622 .51 
All other ""normal'' net operating income (loss)(3) III (186) (.03) 1,133 .16 

  37,622 5.28 38,262 5.38 
Realized net securities gains IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 33,609 4.72 62,697 8.80 
Gain on sales of foreclosed propertiesIIIIIIIIIIIIII 572 .08 850 .12 

Wesco consolidated net income IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII $71,803 $10.08 $101,809 $14.30 

(1) All Ngures are net of income taxes. 

(2) Per-share data is based on 7,119,807 shares outstanding. Wesco has had no dilutive capital stock equivalents. 

(3) After deduction of interest and other corporate expenses, and costs and expenses associated with foreclosed real estate 
  previously charged against Wesco's former Mutual Savings and Loan Association subsidiary. Income was from ownership 
  of the Wesco headquarters oCce building, primarily leased to outside tenants, interest and dividend income from cash 
  equivalents and marketable securities owned outside the insurance subsidiaries, and, in 1997, the reduction of loss 
  reserves provided in prior years against possible losses on sales of foreclosed real estate. 

This supplementary breakdown of earnings diAers somewhat from that used in 
audited Nnancial statements which follow standard accounting convention. The 
supplementary breakdown is furnished because it is considered useful to 
shareholders. 
Wesco-Financial Insurance Company (""Wes-FIC'') 

  Wes-FIC's normal net income for 1998 was $34,654,000, versus $33,507,000 for 
1997. The Ngures include $4,987,000 in 1998 and $6,044,000 in 1997 contributed by 
The Kansas Bankers Surety Company (""KBS''), owned by Wes-FIC since 1996. KBS 
is discussed in the section, ""The Kansas Bankers Surety Company,'' below. 

  At the end of 1998 Wes-FIC retained about $24 million in invested assets, oAset 
by claims reserves, from its former reinsurance arrangement with Fireman's Fund 
Group. This arrangement was terminated August 31, 1989. However, it will take a 
long time before all claims are settled, and, meanwhile, Wes-FIC is being helped 
over many years by proceeds from investing ""Ooat.'' 

  We previously informed shareholders that Wes-FIC had entered into the busi- 
ness of super-cat reinsurance through retrocessions from the Insurance Group of 
Berkshire Hathaway, Wesco's ultimate parent. Wes-FIC's entry into the super-cat 
reinsurance business early in 1994 followed the large augmentation of its claims- 
paying capacity caused by its merger with Mutual Savings, the former savings and 
loan subsidiary of Wesco. In 1994, in recognition of Wes-FIC's sound Nnancial 
condition, Standard and Poor's Corporation assigned to Wes-FIC the highest possible 
claims-paying-ability rating: AAA. 

  The super-cat reinsurance business, in which Wes-FIC is engaged, continues to 
be a very logical business for Wes-FIC. Wes-FIC has a large net worth in relation to 
annual premiums being earned. And this is exactly the condition rationally required 
for any insurance company planning to be a ""stand alone'' reinsurer covering super- 
catastrophe risks it can't safely pass on to others sure to remain solvent if a large 
super-catastrophe comes. Such a ""stand alone'' reinsurer must be a kind of Fort 
Knox, prepared occasionally, without calling on any other reinsurers for help, to pay 
out in a single year many times more than premiums coming in, as it covers losses 
from some super catastrophe worse than Hurricane Andrew. In short, it needs a 
balance sheet a lot like Wes-FIC's. 

  In connection with the retrocessions of super-cat reinsurance to Wes-FIC from 
the Berkshire Hathaway Insurance Group, the nature of the situation as it has 
evolved is such that Berkshire Hathaway, owning 100% of its Insurance Group and 
only 80% of Wesco and Wes-FIC, does not, for some philanthropic reason, ordinarily 
retrocede to Wes-FIC any reinsurance business that Berkshire Hathaway considers 
desirable and that is available only in amounts below what Berkshire Hathaway 
wants for itself on the terms oAered. Instead, retrocessions occur only occasionally, 
under limited conditions and with some compensation to Berkshire Hathaway. Such 
retrocessions ordinarily happen only when (1) Berkshire Hathaway, for some reason 
(usually a policy of overall risk limitation), desires lower amounts of business than 
are available on the terms oAered and (2) Wes-FIC has adequate capacity to bear 
the risk assumed and (3) Wes-FIC pays a fair ceding commission designed to cover 
part of the cost of getting and managing insurance business. 

 Generally, Berkshire Hathaway, in dealing with partly owned subsidiaries, tries 
to lean over a little backward in an attempt to observe what Justice Cardozo called 
""the punctilio of an honor the most sensitive,'' but it cannot be expected to make 
large and plain giveaways of Berkshire Hathaway assets or business to a partially 
owned subsidiary like Wes-FIC. 

  Given Berkshire Hathaway's unwillingness to make plain giveaways to Wes-FIC 
and reductions in opportunities in the super-cat reinsurance market in recent years, 
prospects are often poor for Wes-FIC's acquisition of retroceded super-cat 
reinsurance. 

  Moreover, Wesco shareholders should continue to realize that super-cat rein- 
surance is not for the faint of heart. A huge variation in annual results, with some very 
unpleasant future years for Wes-FIC, is inevitable. 

  But it is precisely what must, in the nature of things, be associated with these 
bad possibilities, with their huge and embarrassing adverse consequences in occa- 
sional years, that makes Wes-FIC like its way of being in the super-cat business. 
Buyers (particularly wise buyers) of super-cat reinsurance often want to deal with 
Berkshire Hathaway subsidiaries (possessing as they do the highest possible credit 
ratings and a reliable corporate personality) instead of other reinsurers less cautious, 
straightforward and well endowed. And many competing sellers of super-cat reinsur- 
ance are looking for a liberal ""intermediary's'' proNt, hard to get because they must 
Nnd a ""layoA'' reinsurer both (1) so smart that it is sure to stay strong enough to pay 
possible losses yet (2) so casual about costs that it is not much bothered by a liberal 
proNt earned by some intermediary entity not willing to retain any major risk. Thus 
the forces in place can rationally be expected to cause acceptable long-term results 
for well-Nnanced, disciplined decision makers, despite horrible losses in some years 
and other years of restricted opportunity to write business. And, again, we wish to 
repeat that we expect only acceptable long-term results. We see no possibility for 
bonanza. 

  It should also be noted that Wes-FIC, in the arrangements with the Insurance 
Group of Berkshire Hathaway, receives a special business-acquisition advantage 
from using Berkshire Hathaway's general reputation. Under all the circumstances, 
the 3% ceding commission now being paid seems more than fair to Wes-FIC. 
Certainly and obviously, Berkshire Hathaway would not oAer terms so good to any 
other entity outside the Berkshire Hathaway aCliated group. 

  Finally, we repeat an important disclosure about Wes-FIC's super-cat-reinsur- 
ance-acquisition mechanics. It is impractical to have people in California make 
complex accept-or-reject decisions for Wes-FIC when retrocessions of reinsurance 
are oAered by the Berkshire Hathaway Insurance Group. But, happily, the Berkshire 
Hathaway Insurance Group executives making original business-acquisition deci- 
sions are greatly admired and trusted by the writer and will be ""eating their own 
cooking.'' Under such circumstances, Wesco's and Wes-FIC's boards of directors, on 
the writer's recommendation, have simply approved automatic retrocessions of 
reinsurance to Wes-FIC as oAered by one or more wholly owned Berkshire 
Hathaway subsidiaries. Each retrocession is to be accepted forthwith in writing in 
Nebraska by agents of Wes-FIC who are at the same time salaried employees of 
wholly owned subsidiaries of Berkshire Hathaway. Moreover, each retrocession will 
be made at a 3%-of-premiums ceding commission. Finally, two conditions must be 
satisNed: (1) Wes-FIC must get 20% or less of the risk (before taking into account 
eAects from the ceding commission) and (2) wholly owned Berkshire Hathaway 
subsidiaries must retain at least 80% of the identical risk (again, without taking into 
account eAects from the ceding commission). 

  We will not ordinarily describe individual super-cat reinsurance contracts in full 
detail to Wesco shareholders. That would be contrary to our competitive interest. 
Instead, we will try to summarize reasonably any items of very large importance. 

  Will more reinsurance be later available to Wes-FIC through Berkshire 
Hathaway subsidiaries on the basis and using the automatic procedure we have 
above described? Well, we have often proved poor prognosticators. We can only say 
that we hope so and that more reinsurance should come, albeit irregularly and with 
long intermissions. No new contracts became available to Wes-FIC in 1998. As of 
1998 yearend, the one remaining super-cat contract, plus one other contract, not a 
super-cat contract, represented Wes-FIC's active reinsurance business. 

  We continue to examine other possible insurance-writing opportunities, and 
also insurance company acquisitions, like and unlike the purchase of KBS. 

  Wes-FIC is now a very strong insurance company, with very low costs, and, one 
way or another, in the future as in the past, we expect to continue to Nnd and seize at 
least a few sensible insurance opportunities. 

  On super-cat reinsurance accepted by Wes-FIC to date (March 8, 1999) there 
has been no loss whatsoever that we know of, but some ""no-claims'' contingent 
commissions have been paid to original cessors of business (i.e., cessors not 
including Berkshire Hathaway). Super-cat underwriting proNt of $1.4 million, before 
taxes, beneNted 1998 earnings, versus $2.3 million in 1997. The balance of pre-tax 
underwriting proNt amounted to $1.9 million for 1998 and $2.8 million for 1997. 
These Ngures came mostly from favorable revision of loss reserves on the old 
Fireman's Fund contract. 

The Kansas Bankers Surety Company (""KBS'') 

  KBS, purchased by Wes-FIC in 1996 for approximately $80 million in cash, 
contributed $4,987,000 to the normal net operating income of the insurance 
businesses in 1998 and $6,044,000 in 1997, after reductions for goodwill amortiza- 
tion under consolidated accounting convention of $782,000 each year. The results of 
KBS have been combined with those of Wes-FIC, and are included in the foregoing 
table in the category, "" 'normal' net operating income of Wes-FIC and KBS insurance 
businesses.'' 

  KBS was chartered in 1909 to underwrite deposit insurance for Kansas banks. Its 
oCces are in Topeka, Kansas. Over the years its service has continued to adapt to the 
changing needs of the banking industry. Today its customer base, consisting mostly 
of small and medium-sized community banks, is spread throughout 25 mainly 
midwestern states. In addition to bank deposit guaranty bonds which insure deposits 
in excess of FDIC coverage, KBS also oAers directors and oCcers indemnity policies, 
bank employment practices policies, bank annuity and mutual funds indemnity 
policies and bank insurance agents professional errors and omissions indemnity 
policies. 

  The principal change in KBS's operations in 1998 was a large reduction in 
insurance premiums ceded to reinsurers, eAective January 1, 1998. The increased 
volume of business retained (94% in 1998 versus 58% in 1997) accompanied 
reduced underwriting income during 1998. However, KBS's combined ratio re- 
mained much better than average for insurers, at 62.2% for 1998, versus 37.2% for 
1997 and 29.3% for 1996, and we expect volatile but favorable long-term eAects 
from increased insurance retained. Part of KBS's continuing insurance volume is now 
ceded through reinsurance to other Berkshire subsidiaries under reinsurance arrange- 
ments whereunder such other Berkshire subsidiaries take 50% and unrelated reinsur- 
ers take the other 50%. 

  KBS is run by Donald Towle, President, assisted by 15 dedicated oCcers and 
employees. 

Precision Steel 

  The businesses of Wesco's Precision Steel subsidiary, headquartered in the 
outskirts of Chicago at Franklin Park, Illinois, contributed $3,154,000 to normal net 
operating income in 1998, compared with $3,622,000 in 1997. The decrease in proNt 
occurred as revenues decreased 2%, despite a 5% increase in pounds of product 
sold, and was attributable mainly to expenditures necessitated to upgrade computers 
and computer systems to ensure that Precision Steel's order-taking and other data 
processing systems continue to function accurately beyond December 31, 1999. 

  Under the skilled leadership of David Hillstrom, Precision Steel's businesses in 
1998 continued to provide an excellent return on resources employed. 

Tag Ends from Savings and Loan Days 

  All that now remains outside Wes-FIC but within Wesco as a consequence of 
Wesco's former involvement with Mutual Savings, Wesco's long-held savings and 
loan subsidiary, is a small real estate subsidiary, MS Property Company, that holds tag 
ends of assets and liabilities with a net book value of about $13 million. MS Property 
Company's results of operations, immaterial versus Wesco's present size, are in- 
cluded in the foregoing breakdown of earnings within ""all other 'normal' net 
operating income (loss).'' 

  Of course, the main tag end from Wesco's savings and loan days is 
28,800,000 shares of Freddie Mac, purchased by Mutual Savings for $72 million at a 
time when Freddie Mac shares could be lawfully owned only by a savings and loan 
association. This holding, with a market value of $1.9 billion at yearend 1998, now 
reposes in Wes-FIC. 

All Other ""Normal'' Net Operating Income or Loss 

  All other ""normal'' net operating income or loss, net of interest paid and general 
corporate expenses, decreased to an after-tax loss of $186,000 in 1998 from an after- 
tax proNt of $1,133,000 in 1997. Sources were (1) rents ($2,921,000 gross) from 
Wesco's Pasadena oCce property (leased almost entirely to outsiders, including 
California Federal Bank as the ground Ooor tenant), and (2) interest and dividends 
from cash equivalents and marketable securities held outside the insurance subsidi- 
aries, less (3) costs and expenses of liquidating tag-end foreclosed real estate. 
Income in 1998 was lower because (1) reversals of reserves for possible losses on 
sales of such tag end real estate, expensed in prior years, beneNted earnings by about 
$1.1 million in 1997, and (2) lower dividends were received in 1998 after forced 
conversion of preferred stock of Citigroup Inc. (""Citigroup'') into lower-dividend- 
paying common stock. The 1998 and 1997 ""other 'normal' net operating income or 
loss'' Ngures also include intercompany charges for interest expense ($102,000 and 
$172,000 after taxes, respectively) on borrowings from Wes-FIC. This intercompany 
interest expense does not aAect Wesco's consolidated net income inasmuch as the 
same amount is included as interest income in Wes-FIC's ""normal'' net operating 
income. 

Net Securities Gains and Losses 

  Wesco's earnings contained securities gains of $33,609,000, after income taxes, 
for 1998, versus $62,697,000, after taxes, for 1997. The entire 1998 Ngure resulted 
from sales of marketable securities. Of the 1997 Ngure, only $93,000 was realized 
through the sale of securities; the balance, $62,604,000, resulted from the exchange 
of the preferred and common shares of Salomon Inc (""Salomon'') owned by Wesco 
for preferred and common shares of The Travelers Group Inc. (""Travelers'') late in 
1997 in connection with the merger of Salomon with a subsidiary of Travelers. 
Accounting standards require that the fair (market) value of shares received in such 
an exchange be recorded as the new cost basis as of the date of the exchange, with 
the diAerence, after appropriate reserves for future income tax on the gain, recog- 
nized in the Nnancial statements as a realized after-tax gain. For income tax purposes 
the exchange is recorded at the original cost of the securities exchanged; no gain is 
reported on the tax return until the securities are sold. 

  Although the realized gains materially impacted Wesco's reported earnings for 
each year, they had a very minor impact on Wesco's shareholders' equity. Inasmuch as 
the greater portion of each year's realized gains had previously been reOected in the 
unrealized gain component of Wesco's shareholders' equity, those amounts were 
merely switched from unrealized gains to retained earnings, another component of 
shareholders' equity. 
Convertible Preferred Stockholdings 

  At the end of 1998, Wesco and its subsidiaries owned $20,000,000, at original 
cost, in convertible preferred stock which by merger of Travelers and Citicorp late in 
1998 became convertible preferred stock of Citigroup. The Travelers preferred stock, 
itself, was received in 1997 (see the preceding section) in exchange for the Wesco 
group's remaining shares of Salomon preferred stock, which originally cost 
$20,000,000, and whose cost was adjusted upwards to $45,000,000 as of the date of 
the exchange. The issue requires redemption at par value of $20,000,000 on 
October 31, 1999, if not converted to 892,105 shares of common stock before that 
date. The investment is carried on Wesco's consolidated balance sheet at fair value 
of $44,000,000 as of December 31, 1998, the approximate market value of the 
common shares at that date, with the $1,000,000 diAerence between its adjusted cost 
and market value deducted from shareholders' equity, net of income tax eAect, 
without aAecting reported net income, according to accounting convention. The 
convertible preferred stock was obtained at the same time Wesco's parent corpora- 
tion, Berkshire Hathaway, obtained additional amounts of the same stock at the same 
price per share. 

  Through yearend 1997, Wesco's consolidated Nnancial statements reOected an 
investment in 9.25% convertible preferred stock of US Airways Group, Inc., acquired 
by Wesco at par of $12,000,000 in 1989; that Ngure was adjusted down to 
$3,000,000 when we decided in 1994 that an other-than-temporary decline in the 
value of its stock had occurred. Early in 1998, US Airways called the preferred stock 
for redemption. Prior to the eAective date, Wesco converted its preferred stock 
investment to 309,718 shares of US Airways common stock and sold the latter for 
$21,738,000, realizing a gain of $18,738,000 for Nnancial statement purposes 
($12,180,000 after taxes). For tax return purposes, however, only $9,738,000 of gain 
($6,330,000 after taxes) will be realized, because the $9,000,000 writedown in 1994 
was not deductible. 

Consolidated Balance Sheet And Related Discussion 

  As indicated in the accompanying Nnancial statements, Wesco's net worth 
increased, as accountants compute it under their conventions, to $2.22 billion ($312 
per Wesco share) at yearend 1998 from $1.76 billion ($248 per Wesco share) at 
yearend 1997. 

  The $459.5 million increase in reported net worth in 1998 was the result of three 
factors: (1) $395.8 million resulting from continued net appreciation of investments 
after provision for future taxes on capital gains; plus (2) $71.8 million from 1998 net 
income; less (3) $8.1 million in dividends paid. 

  The foregoing $312-per-share book value approximates liquidation value assum- 
ing that all Wesco's non-security assets would liquidate, after taxes, at book value. 
Probably, this assumption is too conservative. But our computation of liquidation 
value is unlikely to be too low by more than two or three dollars per Wesco share, 
because (1) the liquidation value of Wesco's consolidated real estate holdings 
(where interesting potential now lies almost entirely in Wesco's equity in its oCce 
property in Pasadena) containing only 125,000 net rentable square feet, and 
(2) unrealized appreciation in other assets (primarily Precision Steel) cannot be 
large enough, in relation to Wesco's overall size, to change very much the overall 
computation of after-tax liquidating value. 

  Of course, so long as Wesco does not liquidate, and does not sell any 
appreciated assets, it has, in eAect, an interest-free ""loan'' from the government 
equal to its deferred income taxes on the unrealized gains, subtracted in determining 
its net worth. This interest-free ""loan'' from the government is at this moment 
working for Wesco shareholders and amounted to about $127 per Wesco share at 
yearend 1998. 

  However, some day, perhaps soon, major parts of the interest-free ""loan'' must 
be paid as assets are sold. Therefore, Wesco's shareholders have no perpetual 
advantage creating value for them of $127 per Wesco share. Instead, the present 
value of Wesco's shareholders' advantage must logically be much lower than $127 
per Wesco share. In the writer's judgment, the value of Wesco's advantage from its 
temporary, interest-free ""loan'' was probably about $30 per Wesco share at yearend 
1998. 

  After the value of the advantage inhering in the interest-free ""loan'' is estimated, 
a reasonable approximation can be made of Wesco's intrinsic value per share. This 
approximation is made by simply adding (1) the value of the advantage from the 
interest-free ""loan'' per Wesco share and (2) liquidating value per Wesco share. 
Others may think diAerently, but the foregoing approach seems reasonable to the 
writer as a way of estimating intrinsic value per Wesco share. 

  Thus, if the value of the advantage from the interest-free tax-deferral ""loan'' 
present was $30 per Wesco share at yearend 1998, and after-tax liquidating value 
was then about $312 per share (Ngures that seem rational to the writer), Wesco's 
intrinsic value per share would become about $342 per share at yearend 1998, up 
25% from intrinsic value as guessed in a similar calculation at the end of 1997. And, 
Nnally, this reasonable-to-this-writer, $342-per-share Ngure for intrinsic per share 
value of Wesco stock should be compared with the $354? per share price at which 
Wesco stock was selling on December 31, 1998. This comparison indicates that 
Wesco stock was then selling about 4% above intrinsic value. 

  As Wesco's unrealized appreciation has continued to grow in frothy markets for 
securities, it should be remembered that it is subject to market Ouctuation, possibly 
dramatic on the downside, with no guaranty as to its ultimate full realization. 
Unrealized after-tax appreciation represents 76% of Wesco's shareholders' equity at 
1998 yearend), versus 73% and 70% one and two years earlier. 

  Business and human quality in place at Wesco continues to be not nearly as 
good, all factors considered, as that in place at Berkshire Hathaway. Wesco is not an 
equally-good-but-smaller version of Berkshire Hathaway, better because its small 
size makes growth easier. Instead, each dollar of book value at Wesco continues 
plainly to provide much less intrinsic value than a similar dollar of book value at 
Berkshire Hathaway. Moreover, the quality disparity in book value's intrinsic merits 
has, in recent years, been widening in favor of Berkshire Hathaway. 

  All that said, we make no attempt to appraise relative attractiveness for invest- 
ment of Wesco versus Berkshire Hathaway stock at present stock-market quotations. 

  We are not now pessimists, on a long-term basis, about business expansion. 
Despite present super-ebullient markets for entire businesses, making it hard for 
Wesco to Nnd attractive opportunities, we do not believe that such opportunities will 
never come. 

  On January 13, 1999 Wesco increased its regular dividend from 28Y cents per 
share to 29Y cents per share, payable March 10, 1999, to shareholders of record as 
of the close of business on February 10, 1999. 

  This annual report contains Form 10-K, a report Nled with the Securities and 
Exchange Commission, and includes detailed information about Wesco and its 
subsidiaries as well as audited Nnancial statements bearing extensive footnotes. As 
usual, your careful attention is sought with respect to these items. 

  Charles T. Munger 
  Chairman of the Board 
March 8, 1999 
WESCO FINANCIAL CORPORATION 
  LETTER TO SHAREHOLDERS 

To Our Shareholders: 

  Consolidated ""normal'' net operating income (i.e., before irregularly occurring 
items shown in the table below) for the calendar year 1997 increased to $38,262,000 
 ($5.38 per share) from $30,720,000 ($4.32 per share) in the previous year. 

  Consolidated net income (i.e., after irregularly occurring items shown in the 
table below) increased to $101,809,000 ($14.30 per share) from $30,619,000 
 ($4.30 per share) in the previous year. 

  Wesco has three major subsidiaries: (1) Wesco-Financial Insurance Company 
 (""Wes-FIC''), headquartered in Omaha and engaged principally in the reinsurance 
business, (2) The Kansas Bankers Surety Company (""KBS''), purchased by Wes-FIC 
in July 1996 and specializing in insurance products tailored to midwestern banks, and 
 (3) Precision Steel, headquartered in Chicago and engaged in the steel warehousing 
and specialty metal products businesses. Consolidated net income for the two years 
  (1) 
just ended breaks down as follows (in 000s except for per-share amounts) : 

  Year Ended 
  December 31, 1997 December 31, 1996 
  Per Per 
  Wesco Wesco 
  Amount Share(2) Amount Share(2) 

""Normal'' net operating income of: 
  Wes-FIC and KBS insurance businessesIIIIIIIIIII $ 33,507 $ 4.71 $27,249 $3.83 
  Precision Steel businesses IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 3,622 .51 3,033 .43 
All other ""normal'' net operating income(3) IIIIIIIII 1,133 .16 438 .06 

  38,262 5.38 30,720 4.32 
Realized net securities gains (losses)IIIIIIIIIIIIIII 62,697 8.80 (115) (.02) 
Gain on sales of foreclosed propertiesIIIIIIIIIIIIII 850 .12 14 I 

Wesco consolidated net income IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII $101,809 $14.30 $30,619 $4.30 

(1) All Ngures are net of income taxes. 

(2) Per-share data is based on 7,119,807 shares outstanding. Wesco has had no dilutive capital stock equivalents. 

(3) After deduction of interest and other corporate expenses, and costs and expenses associated with delinquent loans and 
  foreclosed real estate previously charged against Wesco's former Mutual Savings and Loan Association subsidiary. Income 
  was from ownership of the Wesco headquarters oCce building, primarily leased to outside tenants, interest and dividend 
  income from cash equivalents and marketable securities owned outside the insurance subsidiaries, and, in 1997, the 
  reduction of loss reserves provided in prior years against possible losses on sales of foreclosed real estate. 

This supplementary breakdown of earnings diAers somewhat from that used in 
audited Nnancial statements which follow standard accounting convention. The 
supplementary breakdown is furnished because it is considered useful to 
shareholders. 

Wesco-Financial Insurance Company (""Wes-FIC'') 

  Wes-FIC's normal net income for 1997 was $33,507,000, versus $27,249,000 for 
1996. The Ngures include $6,044,000 in 1997 and $2,288,000 in 1996 contributed by 


The Kansas Bankers Surety Company (""KBS'') following its purchase by Wes-FIC 
early in the third quarter of 1996. The purchase of KBS is discussed in the section, 
""The Kansas Bankers Surety Company,'' below. 

  At the end of 1997 Wes-FIC retained about $27.5 million in invested assets, 
oAset by claims reserves, from its former reinsurance arrangement with Fireman's 
Fund Group. This arrangement was terminated August 31, 1989. However, it will 
take a long time before all claims are settled, and, meanwhile, Wes-FIC is being 
helped over many years by proceeds from investing ""Ooat.'' 

  We previously informed shareholders that Wes-FIC had entered into the busi- 
ness of super-cat reinsurance through retrocessions from the Insurance Group of 
Berkshire Hathaway, Wesco's ultimate parent. Wes-FIC's entry into the super-cat 
reinsurance business early in 1994 followed the large augmentation of its claims- 
paying capacity caused by its merger with Mutual Savings, the former savings and 
loan subsidiary of Wesco. In 1994, in recognition of Wes-FIC's sound Nnancial 
condition, Standard and Poor's Corporation assigned to Wes-FIC the highest possible 
claims-paying-ability rating: AAA. 

  The super-cat reinsurance business, in which Wes-FIC is engaged, continues to 
be a very logical business for Wes-FIC. Wes-FIC has a large net worth in relation to 
annual premiums being earned. And this is exactly the condition rationally required 
for any insurance company planning to be a ""stand alone'' reinsurer covering super- 
catastrophe risks it can't safely pass on to others sure to remain solvent if a large 
super-catastrophe comes. Such a ""stand alone'' reinsurer must be a kind of Fort 
Knox, prepared occasionally, without calling on any other reinsurers for help, to pay 
out in a single year many times more than premiums coming in, as it covers losses 
from some super catastrophe worse than Hurricane Andrew. In short, it needs a 
balance sheet a lot like Wes-FIC's. 

  In connection with the retrocessions of super-cat reinsurance to Wes-FIC from 
the Berkshire Hathaway Insurance Group, the nature of the situation as it has 
evolved is such that Berkshire Hathaway, owning 100% of its Insurance Group and 
only 80% of Wesco and Wes-FIC, does not, for some philanthropic reason, ordinarily 
retrocede to Wes-FIC any reinsurance business that Berkshire Hathaway considers 
desirable and that is available only in amounts below what Berkshire Hathaway 
wants for itself on the terms oAered. Instead, retrocessions occur only occasionally, 
under limited conditions and with some compensation to Berkshire Hathaway. Such 
retrocessions ordinarily happen only when (1) Berkshire Hathaway, for some reason 
(usually a policy of overall risk limitation), desires lower amounts of business than 
are available on the terms oAered and (2) Wes-FIC has adequate capacity to bear 
the risk assumed and (3) Wes-FIC pays a fair ceding commission designed to cover 
part of the cost of getting and managing insurance business. 

  Generally, Berkshire Hathaway, in dealing with partly owned subsidiaries, tries 
to lean over a little backward in an attempt to observe what Justice Cardozo called 
""the punctilio of an honor the most sensitive,'' but it cannot be expected to make 

large and plain giveaways of Berkshire Hathaway assets or business to a partially 
owned subsidiary like Wes-FIC. 

  Given Berkshire Hathaway's unwillingness to make plain giveaways to Wes-FIC 
and reductions in opportunities in the super-cat reinsurance market in recent years, 
prospects are often poor for Wes-FIC's acquisition of retroceded super-cat 
reinsurance. 

  Moreover, Wesco shareholders should continue to realize that super-cat rein- 
surance is not for the faint of heart. A huge variation in annual results, with some very 
unpleasant future years for Wes-FIC, is inevitable. 

  But it is precisely what must, in the nature of things, be associated with these bad 
possibilities, with their huge and embarrassing adverse consequences in occasional 
years, that makes Wes-FIC like its way of being in the super-cat business. Buyers 
(particularly wise buyers) of super-cat reinsurance often want to deal with Berkshire 
Hathaway subsidiaries (possessing as they do the highest possible credit ratings and a 
reliable corporate personality) instead of other reinsurers less cautious, straightforward 
and well endowed. And many competing sellers of super-cat reinsurance are looking 
for a liberal ""intermediary's'' proNt, hard to get because they must Nnd a ""layoA'' 
reinsurer both (1) so smart that it is sure to stay strong enough to pay possible losses yet 
(2) so casual about costs that it is not much bothered by a liberal proNt earned by some 
intermediary entity not willing to retain any major risk. Thus the forces in place can 
rationally be expected to cause acceptable long-term results for well-Nnanced, 
disciplined decision makers, despite horrible losses in some years and other years of 
restricted opportunity to write business. And, again, we wish to repeat that we expect 
only acceptable long-term results. We see no possibility for bonanza. 

  It should also be noted that Wes-FIC, in the arrangements with the Insurance 
Group of Berkshire Hathaway, receives a special business-acquisition advantage 
from using Berkshire Hathaway's general reputation. Under all the circumstances, 
the 3% ceding commission now being paid seems more than fair to Wes-FIC. 
Certainly and obviously, Berkshire Hathaway would not oAer terms so good to any 
other entity outside the Berkshire Hathaway aCliated group. 

  Finally, we repeat an important disclosure about Wes-FIC's super-cat-reinsur- 
ance-acquisition mechanics. It is impractical to have people in California make 
complex accept-or-reject decisions for Wes-FIC when retrocessions of reinsurance 
are oAered by the Berkshire Hathaway Insurance Group. But, happily, the Berkshire 
Hathaway Insurance Group executives making original business-acquisition deci- 
sions are greatly admired and trusted by the writer and will be ""eating their own 
cooking.'' Under such circumstances, Wesco's and Wes-FIC's boards of directors, on 
the writer's recommendation, have simply approved automatic retrocessions of 
reinsurance to Wes-FIC as oAered by one or more wholly owned Berkshire 
Hathaway subsidiaries. Each retrocession is to be accepted forthwith in writing in 
Nebraska by agents of Wes-FIC who are at the same time salaried employees of 
wholly owned subsidiaries of Berkshire Hathaway. Moreover, each retrocession will 
be made at a 3%-of-premiums ceding commission. Finally, two conditions must be 
satisNed: (1) Wes-FIC must get 20% or less of the risk (before taking into account 
eAects from the ceding commission) and (2) wholly owned Berkshire Hathaway 
subsidiaries must retain at least 80% of the identical risk (again, without taking into 
account eAects from the ceding commission). 

  We will not ordinarily describe individual super-cat reinsurance contracts in full 
detail to Wesco shareholders. That would be contrary to our competitive interest. 
Instead, we will try to summarize reasonably any items of very large importance. 

  Will more reinsurance be later available to Wes-FIC through Berkshire 
Hathaway subsidiaries on the basis and using the automatic procedure we have 
above described? Well, we have often proved poor prognosticators. We can only say 
that we hope so and that more reinsurance should come, albeit irregularly and with 
long intermissions. No new contracts became available to Wes-FIC in 1997, although 
one super-cat contract of three-years' duration, written in 1996, became eAective in 
January 1997, and another expired during the year. As of 1997 yearend, the one 
remaining super-cat contract, plus one other contract, not a super-cat contract, and 
renewed during the year, represented Wes-FIC's active reinsurance business. 

  We continue to examine other possible insurance-writing opportunities, and 
also insurance company acquisitions, like and unlike the purchase of KBS. 

  Wes-FIC is now a very strong insurance company, with very low costs, and, one 
way or another, in the future as in the past, we expect to continue to Nnd and seize at 
least a few sensible insurance opportunities. 

  On super-cat reinsurance accepted by Wes-FIC to date (March 9, 1998) there 
has been no loss whatsoever that we know of, but some ""no-claims'' contingent 
commissions have been paid to original cessors of business (i.e., cessors not 
including Berkshire Hathaway). Super-cat underwriting proNt of $2.3 million, before 
taxes, beneNted 1997 earnings, versus $3.9 million in 1996. The balance of pre-tax 
underwriting proNt, amounting to $2.8 million for 1997, came mostly from favorable 
revision of loss reserves on the old Fireman's Fund contract. Our accounting policy 
requires contract expiration before super-cat underwriting proNt is recognized. 
Needless to say, we would not have similar reluctance to report losses before 
contract expirations. 

The Kansas Bankers Surety Company (""KBS'') 

  KBS, purchased by Wes-FIC early in the third quarter of 1996 for approximately 
$80 million in cash, contributed $6,044,000 to the normal net operating income of 
the insurance businesses in 1997 and $2,288,000 in 1996, after reductions for 
goodwill amortization under consolidated accounting convention of $508,000, after 
taxes, in 1997 and $275,000 in 1996. The results of KBS have been combined with 
those of Wes-FIC, and are included in the foregoing table in the category, "" 'normal' 
net operating income of Wes-FIC and KBS insurance businesses.'' 

 KBS was chartered in 1909 to underwrite deposit insurance for Kansas banks. Its 
oCces are in Topeka, Kansas. Over the years its service has continued to adapt to the 
changing needs of the banking industry. Today its customer base, consisting mostly 
of small and medium-sized community banks, is spread throughout 25 mainly 
midwestern states. In addition to bank deposit guaranty bonds which insure deposits 
in excess of FDIC coverage, KBS also oAers directors and oCcers indemnity policies, 
bank employment practices policies, bank annuity and mutual funds indemnity 
policies and bank insurance agents professional errors and omissions indemnity 
policies. 

  KBS is run by Donald Towle, President, assisted by 13 dedicated oCcers and 
employees. 

Precision Steel 

  The businesses of Wesco's Precision Steel subsidiary, headquartered in the 
outskirts of Chicago at Franklin Park, Illinois, contributed $3,622,000 to normal net 
operating income in 1996, up 19% compared with $3,033,000 in 1996. The improve- 
ment in 1997 earnings was attributable mainly to a 15% increase in pounds of 
product sold. Revenues were up only 6.3%. 

  Under the skilled leadership of David Hillstrom, Precision Steel's businesses in 
1997 continued to provide an excellent return on resources employed. 

Tag Ends from Savings and Loan Days 

  All that now remains outside Wes-FIC but within Wesco as a consequence of 
Wesco's former involvement with Mutual Savings, Wesco's long-held savings and loan 
subsidiary, is a small real estate subsidiary, MS Property Company, that holds tag ends of 
assets and liabilities with a net book value of about $13 million. In 1997, MS Property 
Company shrunk by approximately half after sales of several foreclosed properties and 
contribution of $12,750,000 in cash to Wesco. MS Property Company's results of 
operations, immaterial versus Wesco's present size, are included in the foregoing 
breakdown of earnings within ""all other 'normal' net operating income.'' 

  Of course, the main tag end from Wesco's savings and loan days is 28,800,000 
shares of Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (""Freddie Mac''), purchased by 
Mutual Savings for $72 million at a time when Freddie Mac shares could be lawfully 
owned only by a savings and loan association. This holding, with a market value of 
$1.2 billion at yearend 1997, now reposes in Wes-FIC. 

All Other ""Normal'' Net Operating Income 

  All other ""normal'' net operating income, net of interest paid and general 
corporate expenses, increased to $1,133,000 in 1997 from $438,000 in 1996. 
Sources were (1) rents ($2,885,000 gross) from Wesco's Pasadena oCce property 
 (leased almost entirely to outsiders, including CenFed Bank as the ground Ooor 
tenant), and (2) interest and dividends from cash equivalents and marketable 
securities held outside the insurance subsidiaries, less (3) costs and expenses of 

liquidating tag-end foreclosed real estate. In 1997, reversals of reserves for possible 
losses on sales of such tag-end real estate, expensed in prior years, beneNted this 
category of earnings by about $1.1 million, after income tax eAect. The 1997 and 
1996 ""other 'normal' net operating income'' Ngures also include intercompany 
charges for interest expense ($172,000 and $298,000 after taxes, respectively) on 
borrowings from Wes-FIC principally made late in 1993 to facilitate the transfer of 
loans and foreclosed properties to MS Property Company. This intercompany interest 
expense does not aAect Wesco's consolidated net income inasmuch as the same 
amount is included as interest income in Wes-FIC's ""normal'' net operating income. 

Net Securities Gains and Losses 

  Wesco's earnings for 1997 contained securities gains of $62,697,000, after 
income taxes, versus losses of $115,000, after income taxes, in 1996. Of the 1997 
Ngure, only $93,000 was realized through the sale of securities; the balance, 
$62,604,000, resulted from the exchange of the preferred and common shares of 
Salomon Inc (""Salomon'') owned by Wesco for preferred and common shares of 
Travelers Group Inc. (""Travelers'') late in 1997 in connection with the merger of 
Salomon with a subsidiary of Travelers. Accounting standards promulgated by the 
Financial Accounting Standards Board require that the fair (market) value of shares 
received in such an exchange be recorded as the new cost basis as of the date of the 
exchange, with the diAerence, after appropriate reserves for future income tax on the 
gain, recognized in the Nnancial statements as a realized after-tax gain. For income 
tax purposes the exchange is recorded at the original cost of the securities ex- 
changed; no gain is reported on the tax return, and no taxes are yet due. 

  Although the realized gain had a material impact on Wesco's reported earnings, 
it had a very minor impact on Wesco's shareholders' equity. Inasmuch as $48,504,000 
of the after-tax gain had previously been reOected in the unrealized gain component 
of Wesco's shareholders' equity as of September 30, 1997, that amount was merely 
switched from unrealized gains to retained earnings, another component of share- 
holders' equity. 

Convertible Preferred Stockholdings 

  At the end of 1997, Wesco and its subsidiaries owned $52 million, at original 
cost, in convertible preferred stocks of Travelers Group Inc. (""Travelers'') and US 
Airways Group, Inc. (""US Air''). The Travelers preferred stock was received in late 
1997 (see the preceding section) in exchange for the Wesco group's remaining 
shares of Salomon Inc preferred stock, which originally cost $40 million, and whose 
cost was adjusted upwards to $90 million as of the date of the exchange. The US Air 
preferred stock originally cost $12 million; that Ngure was adjusted down to $3 mil- 
lion when we decided in 1994 that an other-than-temporary decline in the value of 
its stock had occurred. Both issues require redemption at par value or conversion to 
common stock within the next two years. 

  The investments are carried on Wesco's consolidated balance sheet at fair value, 
with any diAerence between adjusted cost and market value included in sharehold- 
ers' equity, net of income tax eAect, without aAecting reported net income, accord- 
ing to accounting convention. Following is a summary of these investments in 
convertible preferred stocks at yearend 1997: 

  Conversion Price 12/31/97 
  at Which Par Market Price Yearend 
  Preferred Par Value Value May Be of Common Carrying 
  Dividend of Exchanged for Stock on Value of 
  Security Rate Holding Common Stock 12/31/97 Holding 

  Travelers Group Inc. III 9.00% $40 Million $22.42 $53.875 $ 96 Million 
  US Airways Group, Inc. 9.25% 12 Million 38.74 62.50 19.2 Million 

  These convertible preferred stocks were obtained at the same time Wesco's 
parent corporation, Berkshire Hathaway, obtained additional amounts of the same 
stocks at the same price per share. The preferred stock of Travelers was obtained in 
exchange for the remaining shares of preferred stock of Salomon Inc which Wesco 
and its subsidiaries had acquired in 1987. On October 31, 1995, in accordance with 
the terms of its convertible preferred stock, Salomon redeemed $20 million par value 
of its preferred shares owned by Wesco at cost plus accrued dividends. On 
October 31, 1996 and October 31, 1997, Wesco converted an aggregate of $40 mil- 
lion par value of its remaining preferred shares of Salomon to 1,052,628 shares of 
Salomon common stock, with Wesco continuing to hold par value of $40 million of 
Salomon preferred stock. On November 28, 1997, Wesco and its subsidiaries 
received $40 million par value of Travelers 9% preferred stock plus 1,784,204 shares 
of Travelers common stock, in exchange for the Salomon holdings, in connection 
with a merger of Salomon into Travelers. Fair value of the Travelers preferred and 
common shares, carried on Wesco's consolidated balance sheet in the categories 
""securities with Nxed maturities'' and ""marketable equity securities,'' were 
$96.0 million and $96.1 million, respectively, at yearend 1997, versus the adjusted 
costs of $90.0 and $90.8 million, respectively, at which they were carried. 

  US Air has called its convertible preferred stock for redemption on March 15, 
1998. On March 13, 1998, Wesco converted its shares, acquired for $12 million in 
1989 and written down to an adjusted cost of $3 million in 1994, to 309,718 shares of 
US Air common. 

  In previous years we noted that ""few, if any, investors have ever prospered 
mightily from investing in convertible preferred stocks of leading corporations.'' Our 
experience proves, yet again, what poor prognosticators we are. We estimate that 
 (1) our investment in preferred and common stock of Travelers, acquired in 1997 
through its merger with Salomon, in which we originally invested $80 million, net, was 
worth about $112.1 million more than we paid, and (2) our $12 million US Air holding 
was at yearend 1997 worth about $7.2 million more than we paid. These Ngures when 
combined created $119.3 million more than actual cost. In addition, Wesco's 
investment in convertible preferred stock of The Gillette Company, made in 1989 at 
cost of $40 million, and converted into Gillette common stock in 1991 is carried at a 
$321.4 million yearend market value in Wesco's consolidated 1997 balance sheet. This 
is $281.4 million more than the investment cost. Also, in 1995, Wesco realized a gain 
of $6.9 million, before taxes ($4.2 million after taxes), on sale of its $23 million 
investment in preferred stock of Champion International Corporation. 

Consolidated Balance Sheet And Related Discussion 

  As indicated in the accompanying Nnancial statements, Wesco's net worth 
increased, as accountants compute it under their conventions, to $1.76 billion ($248 
per Wesco share) at yearend 1997 from $1.25 billion ($176 per Wesco share) at 
yearend 1996. 

  The $513 million increase in reported net worth in 1997 was the result of three 
factors: (1) $419 million resulting from continued net appreciation of investments 
after provision for future taxes on capital gains; plus (2) $94 million from retention of 
1997 net income, including $63 million realized on the exchange of Salomon stock 
for Travelers stock, discussed above; less (3) dividends paid. 

  The foregoing $248-per-share book value approximates liquidation value assum- 
ing that all Wesco's non-security assets would liquidate, after taxes, at book value. 
Probably, this assumption is too conservative. But our computation of liquidation 
value is unlikely to be too low by more than two or three dollars per Wesco share, 
because (1) the liquidation value of Wesco's consolidated real estate holdings 
(where interesting potential now lies almost entirely in Wesco's equity in its oCce 
property in Pasadena) containing only 125,000 net rentable square feet, and 
(2) unrealized appreciation in other assets (primarily Precision Steel) cannot be 
large enough, in relation to Wesco's overall size, to change very much the overall 
computation of after-tax liquidating value. 

  Of course, so long as Wesco does not liquidate, and does not sell any 
appreciated assets, it has, in eAect, an interest-free ""loan'' from the government 
equal to its deferred income taxes on both the unrealized gains and gains deferred 
from the merger of Salomon into Travelers in 1997, subtracted in determining its net 
worth. This interest-free ""loan'' from the government is at this moment working for 
Wesco shareholders and amounted to about $102 per Wesco share at yearend 1997. 

  However, some day, perhaps soon, major parts of the interest-free ""loan'' must be 
paid as assets are sold. Therefore, Wesco's shareholders have no perpetual advantage 
creating value for them of $102 per Wesco share. Instead, the present value of Wesco's 
shareholders' advantage must logically be much lower than $102 per Wesco share. In 
the writer's judgment, the value of Wesco's advantage from its temporary, interest-free 
""loan'' was probably about $25 per Wesco share at yearend 1997. 

  After the value of the advantage inhering in the interest-free ""loan'' is estimated, 
a reasonable approximation can be made of Wesco's intrinsic value per share. This 
approximation is made by simply adding (1) the value of the advantage from the 
interest-free ""loan'' per Wesco share and (2) liquidating value per Wesco share. 
Others may think diAerently, but the foregoing approach seems reasonable to the 
writer as a way of estimating intrinsic value per Wesco share. 

  Thus, if the value of the advantage from the interest-free tax-deferral ""loan'' 
present was $25 per Wesco share at yearend 1997, and after-tax liquidating value 
was then about $248 per share (Ngures that seem rational to the writer), Wesco's 
intrinsic value per share would become about $273 per share at yearend 1997, up 
39% from intrinsic value as guessed in a similar calculation at the end of 1996. And, 
Nnally, this reasonable-to-this-writer, $273-per-share Ngure for intrinsic per share 
value of Wesco stock should be compared with the $300 per share price at which 
Wesco stock was selling on December 31, 1997. This comparison indicates that 
Wesco stock was then selling about 10% above intrinsic value. 

  As Wesco's unrealized appreciation has continued to grow in frothy markets for 
securities, it should be remembered that it is subject to market Ouctuation, possibly 
dramatic on the downside, with no guaranty as to its ultimate full realization. 
Unrealized after-tax appreciation represents 73% of Wesco's shareholders' equity at 
1997 yearend), versus 70% and 63% one and two years earlier. 

  Business and human quality in place at Wesco continues to be not nearly as 
good, all factors considered, as that in place at Berkshire Hathaway. Wesco is not an 
equally-good-but-smaller version of Berkshire Hathaway, better because its small 
size makes growth easier. Instead, each dollar of book value at Wesco continues 
plainly to provide much less intrinsic value than a similar dollar of book value at 
Berkshire Hathaway. Moreover, the quality disparity in book value's intrinsic merits 
has, in recent years, been widening in favor of Berkshire Hathaway. 

  All that said, we make no attempt to appraise relative attractiveness for invest- 
ment of Wesco versus Berkshire Hathaway stock at present stock-market quotations. 

  We are not now pessimists, on a long-term basis, about business expansion. 
Despite present super-ebullient markets for entire businesses, making it hard for 
Wesco to Nnd attractive opportunities, we do not believe that such opportunities will 
never come. 

  On January 28, 1998 Wesco increased its regular dividend from 27Y cents per 
share to 28Y cents per share, payable March 11, 1998, to shareholders of record as 
of the close of business on February 11, 1998. 

  This annual report contains Form 10-K, a report Nled with the Securities and 
Exchange Commission, and includes detailed information about Wesco and its 
subsidiaries as well as audited Nnancial statements bearing extensive footnotes. As 
usual, your careful attention is sought with respect to these items. 

  Charles T. Munger 
  Chairman of the Board 
March 13, 1998 

warren buffett profit.bg
Бъфет продължава да продава акции на Moody's

23 Декември 2009 | 09:53 
 

Компанията на милиардера Уорън Бъфет Berkshire Hathaway Inc намали дела си в Moody's Corp. за шести път от юли насам, след като рейтинговата компанията пострада от спад в печалбата, съдебни дела и понесе критики от регулаторните органи.

Berkshire е продала 87 992 акции на 18 декември на цена от 26.77 долара за брой, но остава най-големият акционер в Moody's. Делът на Berkshire е намалял с около 34% в сравнение с 48-те млн. акции притежавани към края на юни. 

Бъфет купува акции на компании, които според него имат дълготрайни конкурентни предимства и добро управление. Неговият дял в Moody's, чиито основател Джон Мууди създава кредитния рейтинг преди около век, датира от 2000 г., а най-високата му стойност е била повече от 3.5 млрд. долара през 2007 г. Акциите на Moody's оттогава са загубили повече от половината от стойността си на фона на критиките, че завишените кредитни рейтинг по време на бума на жилищния пазар са задълбочили рецесията.

Акциите на Moody's поскъпнаха с 20 цента до 27.36 долара за брой вчера и са добавили 36% към стойността си през тази година.

Moody's, Standard & Poor's и Fitch Ratings са критикувани за това, че погрешно са присъдили най-високия рейтинг на щатските високорискови ипотечни облигации, които причиниха финансовата криза.

Berkshire преди това продаваше акции на Moody's в 12 дена в периода между 20 юли и 14 декември. Компанията на Бъфет получи цени между 28.73 и 24.81 долара на акция в тези сделки. В този период средната цена на книжата на Moody's е била 24.15 долара.

вторник, 22 декември 2009 г.

Уорън Бъфет : Криза, каква криза ? 

18:45 | 26.10.2009 



Най-великият инвеститор в света, Уорън Бъфет, устоява на кризата като практикува това, което винаги е проповядвал, разказва историята му BBC. 
Един от любимите съвети на Бъфет, свързан с пазара е: Бъди алчен, когато другите се страхуват, и се страхувай, когато другите са алчни. И той постъпи точно така. Когато миналия септември всички се страхуваха да инвестират на пазара, Бъфет беше алчен. Той инвестира $5 млрд. в акции на Goldman Sachs, и то на изключително благоприятна цена. Инвестиционният гуру обяснява, че само той е можел да преговаря за цената на акциите, защото в онзи момент не всеки е имал на разположение $5 млрд. 

Възвращаемостта

Сделката изглежда добра за Бъфет, като има потенциал да му донесе милиарди долари печалба. Той винаги се е радвал на падащия пазар, защото той му е осигурявал най-добрите възможности за инвестиции. 
И сякаш, за да докаже, че е инвеститор номер едно в света, той изважда наяве огромния ръст на инвестициите си от 1965 г. насам в годишния доклад на своята компания Berkshire Hathaway. Отчетът показва, че той е достигнал изключителен среден годишен ръст от 20.3% и възвращаемост от 336 000% през годините. 


Животът в Небраска

Като основен акционер в Berkshire Hathaway Бъфет е и най-богатият човек в света за миналата година, а тази година зае второто място, заради спада на акциите на компанията му. Бъфет обаче никога не е отдавал значение на подобни класации и винаги е игнорирал краткосрочните движения в цените на акциите, независимо дали са нагоре или надолу. 
Е, как обаче успява да натрупа $40 млрд.? 
Той никога не е стартирал собствен бизнес - Berkshire Hathaway е стара текстилна фабрика, която купува и която все още носи името на своя създател. Никога не е изобретявал нищо. Той все още си живее в Омаха на 1 200 мили от Wall Street.
Бъфет все още работи в офиса си на 14-я етаж в сграда, която е наел преди повече от 50 години. Там той извършва своите магии с финансовите сделки, четейки вестниците и отчетите на компаниите, като търси най-добрата инвестиция, както и най-подходящия момент за влагане на пари. През годините числата, с които той борави нарастват - от милиони на стотици милиони до милиарди. Но офисът му остава все така скромен и слабо оборудван с нова техника. 
„Никога не съм имал компютър или калкулатор в офиса”, заявява Бъфет. Той вярва, че ако една сделка изисква прекалено много калкулации, за да решиш дали тя е печеливша, то тя със сигурност няма да бъде. Противно на очакванията, т.нар. Йода на инвестициите, има само един помощник и мрази срещите или натоварената програма. Обожава да работи от вкъщи, което е на няколко мили по-надолу от офиса му. 

Управление на конгломерат

Тези, които работят за него, казват, че често, когато го търсят по телефона, той самият отговаря, а ако случайно не вдигне лично, връща обаждането в най-кратки срокове. 
Изглежда така сякаш има безкрайно свободно време, заявява Тони Никели, изпълнителен директор на застрахователна му компания Geico.
Той притежава имиджа на инвеститор, който залага в подходящи акции, но всъщност е много над това. Както пише неговият биограф, представяте си Бъфет да стои в една стая и да купува или продава акции, а той всъщност търгува с цели компании. За него разликата между това да купиш акции и да купиш бизнес е само една крачка. Той приема своите инвестиции като дългосрочни и затова като акционер се смята и като човек, който купува част от този бизнес. 
На това учи и своите подчинени. За него на купените акции трябва да се гледа като на купуването на ферма - не се тревожиш за цената на самата ферма всеки ден, а се фокусираш върху нейната продуктивност. Така е и с акциите, не трябва да се мисли за техните данни тримесечие за тримесечие. Не случайно мениджърите на неговите компании получават от него писмо на всеки две години. В страничка и половина той ги учи да мислят дългосрочно - гледайте на компанията, която управлявате, като на семеен бизнес, не можете да я продадете, тя остава в семейството с хилядолетия, затова трябва да мислите за това как да печели в бъдеще. Той общува и с акционерите в неговите компании, чрез всеизвестните акционерни писма, които изпраща всяка година.

Нерационални пазари

Кризата не подмина Бъфет. Акциите на компанията му се сринаха с 255% през миналата година, а някои от инвестициите му бяха силно засегнати от спада. На годишната среща на акционерите на Berkshire Hathaway в Омаха, 35 хиляди акционери дойдоха да чуят лично инвестиционния гуру. Той излезе с усмивка и заяви крахът на пазара е именно това, което трябва да очаквате да се случва веднъж през определен период от време. Вземете 19-ти и 20-ти век. В тях имаме 15 лоши години, е и през следващите векове ще има поне 15 лоши за икономиката години. 
Капитализмът взе връх, хората станаха ирационални що се отнася до пазара, но нали това е смисъла на нещата. Искате динамична система, и искате пазар, който е свободен да прави грешки в някаква степен. 

Тайният приемник

Другата година Бъфет ще навърши 80 години, но дори не намеква за оттегляне или пенсиониране. 
Той не смята да последва примера на своя приятел Бил Гейтс и да се отдаде на благотворителност, като се откаже от бизнеса си. Това, което планира е да раздели бизнеса си между човек, който да отговаря за инвестициите и такъв, който да ръководи Berkshire Hathaway, но няма да посочи имена, докато не реши, че е време да се оттегли.