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The Essays of Warren Buffett : Lessons for Corporate America by Warren E. Buffett
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The Essays of Warren Buffett : Lessons for Corporate America

by Warren E. Buffett

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The Cunningham Group (2001), Edition: 1st rev. ed, Paperback, 256 pages

Member:jordan.willms
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Tags:investing, management, business
Recently added byprivate library, afekz, boschertjd18, Flit, scottlneedham, tonylarkin, jrwyant, harryzone, oscaput
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The essays in this volume are actually Buffett’s 'Letters to the Shareholders' of Berkshire Hathaway that have appeared in that company’s annual reports over the years. In any given letter, Buffett expounds on what must have been on his mind at the time; the list of topics ranges from ruminations on fundamental investing to discussions of the intricacies of accounting and tax policy to his take on the role of money managers in corporate governance.

I imagine that, reading them separately over the years, Berkshire shareholders were highly amused and educated in a “one off” sort of way. Reading them collectively, however, you get a great insight into the mind of one of the great investors of our time. Although I enjoyed Robert Hagstrom’s 'The Warren Buffett Way,' the advantage of this book is that you get the man's philosophy directly from Buffett himself without any editorial filters. ( )
  browner56 | Sep 15, 2009 |
Great perspective. Not awed by what he has to say (a lot of which is simply common sense), but amazed by how convincingly and easily he put it. ( )
  gq2000 | Jun 30, 2006 |
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0966446119, Paperback)

Buffett, the Bard of Omaha, is a genuine American folk hero, if folk heroes are allowed to build fortunes worth upward of $15 billion. He's great at homespun metaphor, but behind those catchy phrases is a reservoir of financial acumen that's generally considered the best of his generation. For example, in an essay on CEO stock options, he writes, "Negotiating with one's self seldom produces a barroom brawl." This is his way of saying that an executive who can give himself compensation totally disproportionate to his performance surely will. There are uncountable gems of financial wisdom to be harvested from these essays, taken from the annual reports he writes for Berkshire Hathaway, his holding company. Just to pick one more, here's a now-famous line about those he competes with when making stock-market investments: "What could be more advantageous in an intellectual contest--whether it be chess, bridge, or stock selection--than to have opponents who have been taught that thinking is a waste of energy?"

While Buffett has a policy of seldom commenting on stocks he owns--he feels public pronouncements will only lead to the public's expectation of more public pronouncements, and he likes to keep his cards close to his vest--he loves to discuss the principles behind his investments. These come primarily from Ben Graham, under whom Buffett studied at Columbia University and for whom he worked in the 1950s. First among them is the idea that price is what you pay and value is what you get--and if you're a smart investor, the first will always be less than the second. In that sense, the value of the lessons learned from Buffett's Essays could be far greater than the book's price. --Lou Schuler

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:18 -0400)

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