No apologies necessary from Buffett: Munger

The Oracle of Omaha doesn't owe shareholders an apology for falling short of a performance goal at his Berkshire Hathaway Inc., Vice Chairman Charles Munger said at the company's annual meeting.
MAR 10, 2014
Warren Buffett doesn't owe shareholders an apology for falling short of a performance goal at his Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A), Vice Chairman Charles Munger said at the company's annual meeting. Mr. Munger said Mr. Buffett set a high bar with a target of boosting Berkshire's net worth more than the advance of the Standard & Poor's 500 Index over a five-year period. Berkshire fell short in the stretch that ended Dec. 31, and Mr. Buffett said in a March report to shareholders that performance should instead be measured over the course of stock-market cycles. “Warren has set a ridiculously tough standard,” Mr. Munger said Saturday in Omaha, Neb. “If this is failure, I want more of it.” (See also: Buffett rakes in $123 million as firms boost dividends) Book value, the measure of assets minus liabilities that Mr. Buffett highlights, rose to $134,973 a share at the end of December, 91% more than where it stood five years earlier. The S&P 500 (SPX) returned about 128% during that period, including dividends, as stocks rallied from their financial-crisis lows. The Berkshire number is an after-tax figure, whereas the index results are before taxes. Book value at Berkshire rose 2.6% in the first quarter to $138,426 a share. The S&P 500 posted a total return of 1.8% in the period. While Mr. Buffett said Saturday that he didn't change the yardstick by which he measures Berkshire's performance, the shift away from a five-year target raises questions about transparency, Meyer Shields, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc., said in a note to clients. “In the years leading up to 2013, Mr. Buffett's letter focused only on five-year relative performance,” Mr. Shields wrote. “The words 'stock market cycle' didn't appear even once.” (Bloomberg News)

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