Does Warren Buffett have a Split Personality?
Buffett’s political convictions, at least as they are overtly expressed, more often than not contradict the investment principles with which made his fortune.
Warren Buffett became the world’s richest investor by following a very clear and straightforward investment philosophy.
Intriguingly though, his political convictions, at least as they are overtly expressed, more often than not contradict the investment principles with which made his fortune.
For example, he refused to invest in companies which can’t control their prices; he looks for what he calls “an economic franchise.” His definition, from his 1991 Letter to Shareholders:
“An economic franchise arises from a product or service that: (1) is needed or desired; (2) is thought by its customers to have no close substitute and; (3) is not subject to price regulation.” [Emphasis added]
This produces what he calls a “moat”—a barrier that hinders competitors who want to invade their turf.
Nebraska Furniture Mart—probably the world’s biggest furniture store located in, of all places, Omaha, Nebraska, and 100% owned by Buffett’s investing conglomerate, Berkshire Hathaway—keeps its costs and prices so low that national furniture chains simply avoid Omaha entirely. Coca-Cola, of which Berkshire Hathaway is the biggest shareholder, has such a powerful brand name that only Pepsi is in the race for second place.
By the same token, Buffett avoids “commodity businesses” like agricultural products, where producers are at the total mercy of the market. And, until 1999, he shunned businesses whose retail prices were regulated.
An Energy Czar for California
In 2000-2001, California suffered severe rolling blackouts across the state. Pacific Gas and Electric Company went bankrupt and Southern California Edison almost did as well.
The cause? The state had deregulated wholesale prices, but left retail prices fixed. When wholesale prices zoomed 800%, Californian utilities had to buy power out of state to resell in California at the lower, regulated prices. A recipe for financial disaster.
By rooting for an energy czar, obviously Buffett hadn’t connected the dots. Or had at least pretended not to.
Buffett’s reaction to the California energy crisis is an example of the dichotomy between his investment principles and his political views.
When asked for his solution, he replied: “California needs an energy czar.”
California already had one—that was the reason there was an energy crisis!
And . . . with an energy czar regulating and dictating every aspect of the energy business, how much money do you think Buffett would have (then) invested in utilities in California?
Quite clearly, none.
What’s more, in a world where every investor acted like Buffett, nobody would have invested in Californian utilities.
Logically then, it follows from Buffett’s investment principles that the solution to California’s energy crisis was the deregulation of retail prices as well (politically impossible at the time). Only then would Buffett and investors like him be willing to put up the money needed to resuscitate California’s ailing utilities.
By rooting for an energy czar, obviously Buffett hadn’t connected the dots. Or had at least pretended not to.
Interestingly, when Buffett made this “recommendation,” he’d recently added the gas and electric utility, MidAmerican (with zero exposure to California at the time), to Berkshire’s portfolio of “outstanding companies.”
Had he changed his spots? No, but he’d lowered his standards. He had to. With billions of dollars to invest, gone were the days when $25 million in a See’s Candies or $60 million in a Nebraska Furniture Mart could make a difference to Berkshire’s net worth. He now needed to find “elephants” where he could sink billions of dollars in one go. When he only had millions at his disposal, he’d never have looked twice at companies like MidAmerican or Burlington Northern.
To Tax or Not to Tax
Buffett calls taxes a “drag” that Berkshire must overcome to “justify its existence.”
This has been his attitude since he started his first investment partnership in 1956. Indeed, back then, one way he persuaded doctors and other professionals to invest with him was by stressing the tax benefits they’d get.
Today, he says he likes to hold his investments “forever” . . . thus, capital gains tax, payable only when an investment is sold, is also delayed “forever.” In his 1989 Letter to Shareholders, he gave an example showing how delaying capital gains could multiply Berkshire’s returns 27-fold, concluding that the government would gain in exactly the same ratio when capital gains taxes were ultimately paid, “though admittedly, it would have to wait for its money.”
Buffett calls taxes a “drag” that Berkshire must overcome to “justify its existence.”
He also prefers companies to distribute money to shareholders by buying back stock rather than paying dividends. In the United States, shareholders must pay taxes on dividends without a rebate for the tax paid by corporations; taxes which are paid from profits that have already been taxed at the corporate level. Stock buy-backs, by raising the value of the remaining shares, increase the shareholders’ wealth free of the dividend tax payable now; the capital gains tax payable on the sale of the stock is deferred to the time when it’s sold.
The double taxation in the U.S. is one reason Berkshire Hathaway doesn’t pay dividends. It’s also a reason why, when Buffett buys a company, he wants to own a minimum of 80%: Berkshire can then file a tax return which consolidates the 80%+ owned subsidiaries’ accounts into the holding company’s return, resulting in considerable tax advantages.
If taxes are a drag on Buffett’s investments, surely they’re a drag on everyone’s? If Buffett and Berkshire are better off with minimal tax rates, wouldn’t everyone else be too? So you’d expect Buffett to support pretty much any proposal to cut taxes, right?
If you did, you’d be wrong.
“Voodoo Economics”
Buffett’s underlying political belief is that the rich should pay more tax than the poor, both absolutely and as a percentage of their income.
Indeed, in a 2011 op-ed for the New York Times, Buffett bitched that the previous year he’d paid only 17.4% of his income in tax, compared to an average of 36% for the 20 staff in his office in Omaha. He recommended the government raise his taxes, and those of the other super-rich.
He does not, however, put this belief into practice by voluntarily making up the difference between the tax he must pay and the amount which, according to his beliefs, he would deem “fair.” Indeed, his personal affairs are arranged the same way as Berkshire’s: to pay the least tax possible.
A case of “do as I say, not as I do.”
Shortly after becoming president, George W. Bush proposed slashing the tax on dividends. Buffett’s reaction? “[This is] Voodoo economics” that uses “Enron-style accounting,” adding ‘it further tilts the scales towards the rich’.
Maybe. But the widespread ownership of stocks in America today (through mutual funds and pension plans) means that the rich are not the only beneficiaries of a lower dividend tax.
And by opposing such a tax cut, he clearly contradicts his own practice of “Voodoo economics”: a significant element of his own investment philosophy being to minimize all transaction costs, including tax. His writing on the subject (see the Dividends section in his 2011 Letter to Shareholders for one example) imply it’s iniquitous to tax corporate profits again when they’re paid out to shareholders as dividends. He’d applaud if every company followed Berkshire’s lead and reinvested their profits or bought back shares instead of paying dividends—and then the government wouldn’t collect any taxes on dividends at all!
Buffett also opposes abolishing the estate tax: he believes that you shouldn’t get “a lifetime supply of food stamps just because you came out of the right womb.”
Buffett has arranged his personal affairs accordingly. When he dies, his children certainly won’t be poor. But they will only have enough money so that, as he puts it, they’ll “feel they could do anything, but not so much that they could do nothing.”
Most of his wealth is going to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. As it’s a non-profit organization the bequest will be—guess what?—tax-free!
It is clearly more important to Buffett that Berkshire Hathaway, his creation—his “baby”—survives his death, than remaining true to his political beliefs, no matter how sincerely they are held. After all, Berkshire Hathaway might not live on if a chunk of his controlling shareholding had to be sold off to pay estate tax.
However, by requiring the Gates Foundation to spend his annual donations immediately, he’s practicing what governments do so well: consuming capital, not investing in the future.
He recommended the government raise his taxes, and those of the other super-rich. He does not, however, put this belief into practice by voluntarily making up the difference between the tax he must pay and the amount which, according to his beliefs, he would deem “fair.”
And he often ignores the overall context, as he did when he was an advisor to Arnold Schwarzenegger during Arnie’s campaign to become Governor of California.
Buffett told the Wall Street Journal he thought California’s property taxes were “too low.” He compared the property tax he paid on his home in Laguna Beach, California with the tax on his home in Omaha. He paid twice as much property tax in Nebraska, even though his value of his home in Nebraska is one-eighth the value of his house in California.
Is that “unfair”? Not when—unlike Buffett—we look at the total context. When you add income tax, sales tax and all the other taxes Californians pay, they’re stung by the state for much more than Nebraskans. Californians get a break on property taxes—and absolutely nothing else.
An American Liberal
Politically, Buffett tends to support government action to correct what he sees as society’s inequities. And he believes that the rich should pay for it.
Yet, he arranges his own affairs to avoid government intervention wherever possible. Indeed, when price controls in New Jersey made it impossible to earn what Buffett considers a decent return of capital, one of his insurance subsidiaries turned in its license and shut down its operations there. With Buffett’s hearty approval.
His comments on business and investing draw on 66 years of proven and tested knowledge and experience. His political recommendations have no such pedigree. They are an expression of his beliefs unalloyed by experience.
Indeed, one would think that his experience in creating, from nothing, a highly successful, almost debt-free, Fortune 500 company with outstanding managers and, until recently, one of only eight corporate AAA credit ratings in the United States, would lead him to be skeptical of the ability of governments to solve any problem.
After all, in almost every respect governments exhibit qualities 180 degrees opposite to Berkshire Hathaway: they lose money every year; run up more debt every day; and hardly ever kill programs that are known failures. If governments have a higher credit rating than Berkshire Hathaway, it’s not from a gilt-edged reputation, but from the knowledge that they can always make repayments by collecting money at the point of a gun—or by printing it.
Something else often missing from government is a principle central to Buffett’s style of doing business: integrity. “In evaluating people [to hire or work with],” Buffett says, “you look for three qualities: integrity, intelligence, and energy. And if you don’t have the first, the other two will kill you.”
While Buffett might enjoy playing golf with politicians like Bill Clinton, he’d have to break one of his fundamental principles to ever put one of them on Berkshire’s payroll.