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Warren Buffet calls a buy but won’t define bottom

19 October 2008

Mr Warren Buffett – known as the "Sage of Omaha" or the "Oracle of Omaha" for his ability to pick the right time to invest in situations – admitted that he has begun to use some of his $62bn fortune to invest in the shares of American companies.

"Buy America, I am!" was his bold call last week.  Not as boldly arrogant as Jim Cramer, he does not attempt to call a market bottom, and freely admits that he does not know in which direction the markets are headed in the short-term.  He is a humble person that states that he cannot predict these things with precision.

In 1974, during an interview in Forbes magazine, he made a very stark public prediction, calling the bottom of the bear market and the markets rallied 15% before his interview even hit the press.

His record for picking winners is well documented, and Berkshire has averaged an annual return to shareholders of more than of 21pc for each of the last 42 years.

Recently, he invested $10bn of Berkshire's money into Goldman Sachs' preferred stock, for which his company will receive a healthy dividend payment and very little downside. 

Buffett's optimism is based primarily on the following:

A few caveats to Buffett's dramatic call:

SOME OF HIS PAST CALLS AND HISTORY
 
1941: At eleven years old, Warren buys his first stock. He purchases 6 shares of Cities Service preferred stock [3 shares for himself, 3 for his sister, Doris], at a cost of $38 per share. The company falls to $27 but shortly climbs back to $40. Warren & Doris sell their stock. Almost immediately, it shoots up to over $200 per share. 

Late in 1969, when he was 39, he called it quits on the market. He liquidated his money management pool, Buffett Partnership, Ltd., and gave his clients their money back. Before that, in good years and bad, he had been beating the averages, making the partnership grow at a compounded annual rate of 30% before fees between 1957 and 1969. (That works out to a $10,000 investment growing to $300,000 and change.)

He quit essentially because he found the game no longer worth playing. Multiples on good stocks were sky-high, the go-go boys were "performing" and the list was so picked over that the kind of solid bargains that Buffett likes were not to be had. He told his clients that they might do better in tax-exempt bonds than in playing the market. "When I got started," he says, "the bargains were flowing like the Johnstown flood; by 1969 it was like a leaky toilet in Altoona." Pretty cagey, this Buffett. When all the sharp MBAs were crowding into the investment business, Buffett was quietly walking away. 
 
Nov 1 1974 "now is the time to invest and get rich," he says in a Forbes interview.
 
Aug 6 1979 "those awaiting for a better time in equity investing are highly likely to maintain that posture until well into the next bull market," again stated in a Forbes piece.
 
Nov 22 1999 "investors in stocks these days are expecting way too much," talking about the Tech Bubble in Fortune Magazine.
 
CNBC's Fast Money Reader Poll asks if Buffett's decision to buy stock in American companies makes you more interested in them.  As of mid-evening and 1716 responses, 68 percent said, "Yes, it's like giving them a seal of approval."  Thirty-two percent went with, "No, Buffett only ever does what's best for Buffett."
 
 

 

 

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