What is the point of Berkshire Hathaway? - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 伯克希尔哈撒韦

What is the point of Berkshire Hathaway?

It can be bold — or become an index fund
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":5.65,"text":"Berkshire Hathaway is very important — for both its sheer size and its symbolic position in American business. It is worth over a trillion dollars, making it the 11th most valuable company in the US. The 10 larger companies are all in tech, and all of them (save, arguably, Apple) have been boosted recently by AI or Elon Musk mania. Berkshire stands for an older, more prudent and far-seeing form of corporate capitalism, based not on technological revolution but enduring economic truths. At a feverish moment like this, Berkshire’s example matters."}],[{"start":41.65,"text":"However, the idea that the Berkshire model has an edge in long-term value creation is increasingly difficult to maintain. If you compare its rolling 10-year total returns with the S&P 500, the period in which Berkshire consistently beat the index ended in mid-2012. Since then, the two pass the lead back and forth, with the S&P outperforming when animal spirits are strong, as they are now, and Berkshire doing a shade better when sentiment is weak, as in April of last year. Fundamentally, it’s been a 14-year draw, which is starting to be a long time, even by Berkshire’s standards. "}],[{"start":77.8,"text":"Warren Buffett, not only the greatest investor but the most charismatic corporate leader of our time, stepped down as CEO six months ago, replaced by Greg Abel. So it is time to ask an old question again: what — beyond symbolism — is the point of Berkshire? "}],[{"start":93.64999999999999,"text":"There is one straightforward if slightly dreary answer to this question. Berkshire is less volatile than the S&P, which is useful for some risk-sensitive investors (though, ironically, Buffett has railed against confusing volatility with risk, which he thinks means risk of loss). It also pays no dividends, making it more tax efficient for investors who don’t need income. So you might think of Berkshire as a no-fee, low-volatility, tax-efficient mutual fund that is very unlikely to out or underperform the S&P 500 over long periods of time."}],[{"start":128.75,"text":"That’s not a trivial recommendation. In fact it sounds like a product I would like to own. But is it enough, given what Berkshire means? Is matching a passive index, while keeping a few dollars from the tax man, the absolute best that fundamentally driven, patient and principled investing can do? This is depressing, if true."}],[{"start":149.15,"text":"And there is an even less flattering way to read Berkshire’s recent performance: that it trades like an insurer, which is what it is, despite its unusually large investment portfolio. Over the past five years, Berkshire has traded largely in step with the S&P 500 property-casualty index, slightly undershooting it. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"

Line chart of Rolling 10-year total returns, annualised (%) showing Berkshire has not consistently beaten the S&P since 2012
"}],[{"start":167.45000000000002,"text":"I hope Abel will aim higher. But based on the experience of the past decade and a half, that will require making substantive changes. "}],[{"start":175.65,"text":"The first and most important is to forget the idea that Berkshire has a meaningful advantage in putting capital to work in major market “dislocations”, as Abel recently put it. That didn’t turn out to be particularly true in the great financial crisis — Berkshire shares only outperformed by a little in the 10 years that started with the 2007 market collapse, and its equity value per share growth was historically average in that period, too. It is surely less true today. "}],[{"start":203.55,"text":"Large asset managers like Blackstone and Apollo have become conduits for global liquidity. They will be looking to put big money to work quickly in the next crisis, if the Fed does not open a liquidity window first. Berkshire’s days of providing “Friday night money” at exorbitant rates to good businesses in distress are probably over, just as its days of buying “dollars for 50 cents” (unpopular companies with value hidden on the balance sheet) ended many decades ago. Waiting for the next crisis to create opportunities is not the strategy for creating above-average long-term returns."}],[{"start":238.5,"text":"There may be other ways it can press its advantages, though. One is to lean into its identity as an active manager, especially in its portfolio of public equities. Berkshire is unique among insurers for the size of its equity holdings, which regulators tolerate because of its deep financial reserves. If the dominance of tracker funds can make it harder to outperform the index in the short term, they must also create long-term opportunities to take concentrated positions in misunderstood companies. In short, Berkshire should act more aggressively on its convictions. It has already proved that it can move quickly and at scale. The company added about a billion Apple shares to its portfolio between late 2016 and early 2018, a terrific, bold investment. More concentrated bets like this will make earnings more volatile but, to Buffett’s point, the whole point of being a long-term investor is looking past volatility. "}],[{"start":292.7,"text":"The second, related advantage has to do with Berkshire’s access to cheap capital, either sourced internally or from the markets. Its recent acquisition of the homebuilder Taylor Morrison for $8.5bn gives a hint at what is possible. America has a housing shortage but homebuilding is a fragmented industry that has to pay a lot for growth capital, in part because investors still remember the housing bubble. Berkshire has an opportunity to be a consolidator, rolling up smaller players and giving them an edge in cost of capital. In short, it can become a business-builder as well as a business buyer and manager — a private equity fund but with an infinite time horizon."}],[{"start":333.8,"text":"The world needs Berkshire’s leadership, so Berkshire must change. "}],[{"start":344.75000000000006,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1781784988_9864.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

伊朗科学家卡韦•马达尼:人们不会为一滴水而开战

这位流亡的前政府官员讲述物资短缺如何推升冲突,以及为何围绕他的阴谋论“已经不好笑了”。

如果SpaceX估值失准,不要怪罪被动型投资者

资本不会被指数基金错配——真正造成错配的是选股者。

伊朗拟对通过霍尔木兹海峡的船只收取“保险费”

政府机构表示,船只必须持有德黑兰批准的保险单,方可通行这一关键水道。

外交官:以色列袭击黎巴嫩后,伊朗推迟与美国的会谈

德黑兰在遭遇袭击后,推迟原定在瑞士举行的核谈判。

特朗普让伊朗股市“再次伟大”

这里说的“库存”可不是浓缩铀那种。

俄罗斯央行行长缺席引发继任猜测

近期多场高规格活动上都未见俄罗斯央行行长埃尔薇拉•纳比乌琳娜露面,引发外界对高层改组的猜测。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×