Berkshire Hathaway, under the leadership of Warren Buffett, again performed well in 2024.
Jonathan Stempel of Reuters reported that:
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-A, BRK-B) shares rose to a record on Monday after the conglomerate, run by Warren Buffett, posted its highest-ever quarterly profit, driven by improvement in insurance operations.
The price of Berkshire’s Class A shares rose as much as 4.3% to $749,611 by early afternoon, NYSE data show.
That surpassed even the $741,971 recorded by some stock price services last June 3 following a trading glitch.
It boosted the Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate’s market value to about $1.08 trillion. Multiple analysts raised their price targets and earnings forecasts. Buffett’s own net worth surpassed $155 billion, according to Forbes magazine. (In comparison, CEO of JP Morgan Chase, Jamie Dimon’s net worth is estimated at $2.6 billion, Elon Musk’s net worth at $384 billion and Mark Zuckerberg at $236 billion.)
Buffett issued his highly anticipated annual letter on February 22. He makes the case for capitalism as wealth creation, not “moneyism,” using the financial success of Berkshire Hathaway.
He reports the annual percentage change per year in the per-share market value of Berkshire from 1965 through 2024 as 19.9% and the corresponding annual percentage change per year for companies in the S&P 500 (including dividends paid) as 10.4%.
The overall gain in value from 1964 through 2014 of Berkshire Hathaway stock was 5,502,284%, but only 39,054% for stocks in the S&P 500 companies.
For Buffett, capitalism is the alchemy of creating wealth as assets. He looks at balance sheets to measure the results of capitalism, not P&L statements.
He wrote:
In 1965, the company did not pay a dime of income tax, an embarrassment that had generally prevailed at the company for a decade. That sort of economic behavior may be understandable for glamorous start-ups, but it’s a blinking yellow light when it happens at a venerable pillar of American industry. Berkshire was headed for the ash can.
Fast forward 60 years and imagine the surprise at the U.S. Treasury when that same company – still operating under the name of Berkshire Hathaway – paid far more in corporate income tax than the U.S. government had ever received from any company – even the American tech titans that commanded market values in the trillions.
To be precise, Berkshire last year made four payments to the IRS that totaled $26.8 billion. That’s about 5% of what all of corporate America paid.
(In addition, we paid sizable amounts for income taxes to foreign governments and to 44 states.)
Note one crucial factor allowing this record-shattering payment: Berkshire shareholders during the same 1965-2024 period received only one cash dividend. … For sixty years, Berkshire shareholders endorsed continuous reinvestment and that enabled the company to build its taxable income. Cash income-tax payments to the U.S. Treasury, miniscule in the first decade, now aggregate more than $101 billion . . . and counting.
Huge numbers can be hard to visualize. Let me recast the $26.8 billion that we paid last year. If Berkshire had sent the Treasury a $1 million check every 20 minutes throughout all of 2024 – visualize 366 days and nights because 2024 was a leap year – we still would have owed the federal government a significant sum at year end. Indeed, it would be well into January before the Treasury would tell us that we could take a short breather, get some sleep and prepare for our 2025 tax payments.
Berkshire shareholders can rest assured that we will forever deploy a substantial majority of their money in equities – mostly American equities, although many of these will have international operations of significance. Berkshire will never prefer ownership of cash-equivalent assets over the ownership of good businesses, whether controlled or only partially owned.
Paper money can see its value evaporate if fiscal folly prevails. In some countries, this reckless practice has become habitual and in our country’s short history, the U.S. has come close to the edge. Fixed-coupon bonds provide no protection against runaway currency.
Businesses, as well as individuals with desired talents, however, will usually find a way to cope with monetary instability as long as their goods or services are desired by the country’s citizenry.
So, too, with personal skills. Lacking such assets as athletic excellence, a wonderful voice, medical or legal skills or, for that matter, any special talents, I have had to rely on equities throughout my life. In effect, I have depended on the success of American businesses and I will continue to do so.
One way or another, the sensible – better yet, imaginative – deployment of savings by citizens is required to propel an ever-growing societal output of desired goods and services. This system is called capitalism. It has its faults and abuses – in certain respects, more egregious now than ever – but it also can work wonders unmatched by other economic systems. America is Exhibit A. Our country’s progress over its mere 235 years of existence could not have been imagined by even the most optimistic colonists in 1789, when the Constitution was adopted and the country’s energies were unleashed.
True, our country, in its infancy, sometimes borrowed abroad to supplement our own savings. But concurrently, we needed many Americans to consistently save and then needed those savers or other Americans to wisely deploy the capital thus made available. If America had consumed all that it produced, the country would have been spinning its wheels.
The American process has not always been pretty – our country has forever had many scoundrels and promoters who seek to take advantage of those who mistakenly trust them with their savings. But even with such malfeasance – which remains in full force today – and also much deployment of capital that eventually floundered because of brutal competition or disruptive innovation, the savings of Americans has delivered a quantity and quality of output beyond the dreams of any colonist.
From a base of only four million people – and despite a brutal internal war early on, pitting one American against another – America changed the world in the blink of a celestial eye. In a very minor way, Berkshire shareholders have participated in the American miracle by foregoing dividends, thereby electing to reinvest rather than consume. Originally, this reinvestment was tiny, almost meaningless, but over time, it mushroomed, reflecting the mixture of a sustained culture of savings, combined with the magic of long-term compounding.
So, thank you, Uncle Sam. Someday, your nieces and nephews at Berkshire hope to send you even larger payments than we did in 2024. Spend it wisely. Take care of the many who, for no fault of their own, get the short straws in life. They deserve better. And never forget that we need you to maintain a stable currency and that result requires both wisdom and vigilance on your part.
Thank you, Warren, for your efforts. May others do as well so that governments can benefit, customers can be satisfied, employees paid and investors enjoy asset appreciation.
Berkshire Hathaway owners do not extract cash from the company. The liquidity of their assets must come from their future sale to others. Thus, they must gamble that there will always be buyers seeking to buy shares of Berkshire Hathaway at ever rising prices.