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Inexplicable and Inexcusable

Monday, May 23, 2011

Better late than never.  Per my previous post pertaining to the Berkshire Hathway shareholder meeting, I wanted to touch on Buffett's comments regarding the Sokol scandal.  This topic was pretty much the only one being discussed in anticipation of the meeting, and it threatened to overwhelm the entire day.  Buffett did a good job of ensuring that didn't happen by addressing the issue head-on, early in the day.

As is the standard, the meeting kicked off with a movie that included commercials for products and services offered by Berkshire companies, as well as footage from various sources that are assumedly deemed relevant to the present day. Nothing was really more relevant than the discussion around Buffett's 1991 assumption of the chairmanship at Salomon Brothers, during which he was asked what had happened at Salomon.  At the time, he was new to what was going on at Salomon, and so he couldn't speak to a lot of details, but he offered the opinion that the rogue trading that had taken place was "inexplicable and inexcusable".  He then likened that activity to Sokol's actions.

The inexcusable piece of the discussion was fairly obvious.  Sokol violated Berkshire's code of ethics in grand fashion, and there's not much than can be said to defend his actions, unless there's a huge element of this that the public doesn't know.

The inexplicable was a bit more puzzling, which I guess pretty much defines the term.  In any case, Buffett cited two primary reasons.

The first was that Sokol made no attempt to hide his trades.  Schemers engaged in insider trading typically set up their "third cousin", or "trusts in Luxembourg" to disguise the fact that they are the players behind a trade.  Regulators routinely review trading activity in the weeks leading up to a merger to determine if anything untoward occurred.  Pretty odd behavior for somebody how is knowingly doing something illegal or unethical.  My take:  we obviously knew about Sokol's trades, although we have no way of knowing (so far) if there were additional disguised trades.  That seems unlikely to me.  More likely is the fact that he somehow thought what he was doing was acceptable.  However, we're talking about a smart, knowledgeable guy, and the idea that he didn't know is truly inexplicable.

The next inexplicable factor was that Sokol didn't need the money.  He made $24 million in Berkshire compensation last year.  Buffett hastens to add that we Berkshire shareholders got our money's worth.  Of course, greed comes in all shapes and sizes, and we've certainly seen egregious examples from wealthier people than David Sokol.  Lest we think that's the end of it, Buffett shared a story that makes the greed explanation less plausible.  In 1999, Berkshire Hathaway bought the majority of MidAmerican Energy, of which David Sokol was the largest shareholder.  A couple of years later, long-time Berkshire board member Walter Scott suggested to Buffett a special compensation plan for Sokol and his right-hand man Greg Abe, in case MidAmerican knocked it out of the park.  They designed a plan that would pay Sokol $50m and Abel $25m if MidAmerican hit some very ambitious growth numbers.  Buffett presented the plan to Sokol - behind closed doors - and Sokol stated that it was very generous, but he wanted to see one change.  That change was that he felt the $75m should be split evenly between he and Greg Abel.  In other words, he voluntarily gave up $12.5m in a manner that would receive no publicity at all.  Not the actions of an especially greedy individual.  Buffett had a hard time reconciling that with the $3m or so that Sokol gained from his Lubrizol trades.  My take:  inexplicable indeed.  Who knows, though...the bonus arrangement was 10 years ago, and people change.

Buffett summed up the entire situation by saying, more or less directly..."there we are with a situation, which is sad for Berkshire, sad for Dave, still inexplicable in my mind".  Charlie Munger displayed his typical economy of words when asked about his take, saying "I think it's generally a mistake to assume that rationality is going to be perfect even in very able people. We prove that pretty well regularly."

In perhaps the most logical explanation of all, when asked the reason for irrationality, Munger suggested that "...hubris contributes to it".  I think we can safely say that that has been proven very regularly.

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Berkshire Hathaway

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Thoughts on the Berkshire Hathaway shareholder meeting

Tuesday, May 03, 2011

 

I've just returned from my annual trek to Omaha and the Berkshire Hathaway shareholder meeting, and will share my thoughts and observations via this blog over the next week or so.  Although I pretty quickly hit my tolerance limit in the Exhibition Hall where a broad array of wares are peddled by Berkshire-owned  companies (and where I invariably drop a few bucks on gifts for my kids), I can't imagine ever tiring of the meeting itself or the opportunity to spend time with smart, successful people who share common interests.

The primary value of the weekend, of course, comes from the meeting itself.  Many of the themes - and even some of the anecdotal stories - are consistent year to year, but wisdom doesn't get old.  The thoughts Ishare will hit on topics that were of particular interest to me, and they won't necessarily be comprehensive, but feel free to ping me if youhave any specific questions that I don't cover.

I'll start with the fact that I was interviewed several days beforethe meeting about what I was looking to hear from Warren and Charlie Munger, and my broad response was that I was anxious to hear more about corporate governance in light of the David Sokol affair.  As with most interviews, we had a lengthly discussion and a very small part made it through, but I'll make no apologies for things I've said.  Shortly after the interview, Berkshire Hathaway's audit committee came out with their scathing report on the actions of David Sokol. That was effectively the first thing we had heard from Berkshire since Sokol's resignation, and I was extrememely pleased to read it.  In 1991, Buffett  famously said "lose money for the firm and I will be understanding; lose a shred of reputation for the firm and I will be ruthless".  That type of ruthlessness is way lacking in corporate America, and Berkshire Hathaway has been a beacon for all of industry interms of corporate governance.  I was concerned that legalities or simply loyalty for past performance could get in the way of ruthlessly and publicly enforcing good governance.  That was important for shareholders and important for American capitalism.

Here's a link to a quote from that interview - Kevin O'Reilly's expectations for Berkshire Hathaway meeting.
 
My next post will cover what Buffett had to say about the issue. 

 

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Berkshire Hathaway

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Charlie Munger on leadership defects on Wall Street

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

You just never know how Charlie Munger feels about things.

This is worth a couple minutes of your time: http://money.cnn.com/video/news/2010/05/04/n_munger_lehman_fuld.cnnmoney/.

Tags: wesco, charlie munger

Berkshire Hathaway

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Buffett's view of SEC complaint against Goldman Sachs

Saturday, May 08, 2010

By virtue of alphabetic superiority, Carol Loomis asked the first question of the meeting, and it pertained to the SEC's recent complaint against Goldman Sachs.  Every year the Berkshire meeting begins with a movie that is a kind of Berkshire collage, featuring unpaid cameos by famous people from all walks of life.  For instance, there was a Desperate Housewives skit this year that featured the stars of that show.  Loomis pointe out that every year the movie includes a clip from a 1991 Congressional hearing into Salomon Brothers (which Buffett was temporarily leading in the wake of a crisis) in which Buffett states that he admonished Salomon employees that if they "lose money...I will be understanding; lose one shred of our reputation and I will be ruthless".  Given that, and the fact that Goldman's reputation clearly has been tarnished, what advice would Buffett give Goldman management?

The paraphrased, summarized response:

The nature of the transaction has been generally misreported.  There were four losers in the Abacus transaction, and Buffett focused on two of them.  Goldman Sachs was an unintentional loser.  The main loser in terms of cash was ABN-AMRO.  They lost money because they guaranteed the credit of ACA - they fronted the transaction.  Berkshire does this alot, and lost money in the 70s in a case where they ran into dishonest people.  ABN guaranteed $900m of ACA at a price of $1.6m.  It's hard for Buffett to be sympathetic because ABN-AMRO made a dumb deal.

ACA was a bond insurer.  They started out as municipal bond insurer, but margins got squeezed in that space.  Instead of sticking to their knitting, they moved outside their realm of understanding.  As Mae West once stated, they started out "like Snow White, but drifted".  Not long ago, Berkshire entered the business of muni bond insurance, but always stayed away from things they didn't understand.

Buffett then went into an example of a portfolio of state bonds that Berkshire insured.  He showed a chart of the states involved.  Berkshire was paid $160m to insure $8.25b for ten years.  The deal was presented to them by Lehman Brothers.  Berkshire did not select the bonds...more specifically they did not "dream up this list".  In fact, Lehman Brothers did.  Buffett and his chief insurance guru Ajit Jain analyzed them and proposed the $160m price.  If any of the bonds defaulted, Berkshire was on the hook to make good on the commitments on behalf of the defaulting state.  They didn't know if the ultimate counterparty was Lehman, and what the counterparty's interest in proposing the trade was.  The counterparty could have owned the bonds and merely wanted some protection, or they could have been betting that there would be defaults.  Berkshire didn't care.  They did what ACA should have done: they evaluated the bonds and determined the proper premium.  ACA initially agreed to 50 bonds of 120 that were presented to them.  Through additional negotiation, they agreed to insure 30 more.  In the Berkshire/Lehman case, it was totally Lehman's list - they didn't throw any out.  It was Berkshire's problem to determine creditworthiness.  If they lose money, they're not going after the counterparty due to superior knowledge or anything.  The fact that John Paulson apparently selected specific bonds and asked Goldman to propose the deal (and probably knew more about those bonds) is irrelevant.

The central point of the SEC's complaint seems to be that Paulson had superior knowledge of the overall deal, and Goldman worked with him to structure it and sell it to counterparties, and the counterparties may or may not have known about Paulson's involvement.  The bonds underlying the deal blew up, and the counterparties lost a lot of money while Paulson got rich.

When Warren asked Charlie about his view on the matter, he pointed out that the SEC commissioners were split 3-2 on whether or not to sue, and it's very unusual to take action of this magnitude without a unanimous vote.  He seemed to feel that was unfortunate, and said he would have voted with the minority.

My view

I view this transaction from two angles, and I think it is helpful to have a tiny bit of background on one of the legal issues in question.  This point is central to my business, and I view it as the point on which the whole Goldman transaction turns.  It speaks to the fiduciary duty that Goldman held, in this case.  There is a significant difference between brokers and advisors, and Goldman was a broker in this case.

In layman's terms, I view a broker as being similar to a car salesman who sells cars "As Is - No Warranty".  The buyer in this case has the responsibility to evaluate the vehicle and determine if it is worthy of the price being asked.  The seller undoubtedly has more knowledge of the car than the buyer, and that gap must be bridged to make the deal worthwhile.  If the buyer doesn't have the requisite knowledge to evaluate the car, a mechanic should be hired to provide a recommendation.

An advisor, on the other hand, has a legal, fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of his client.  The advisor would be more like the mechanic.  If he advises the buyer that the car is in great shape, and the car breaks down three days after being purchased, they buyer has a legitimate complaint with the mechanic.

Given that background, the moment I heard about the SEC suit I was skeptical that there was a legitimate legal case there, and I remain skeptical.  To the general public, it likely sounds like Goldman hoodwinked their customer.  To Warren Buffett and to others that are more familiar with these types of transactions, I think it sounds like ACA, ABN-AMRO and others who ended up on the short end of this deal just didn't do their homework.

That's the legal view.  It is now sounding like Goldman Sachs is discussing a settlement, and I think that's unfortunate from the standpoint of proper administration of our legal process, but it's probably a smart move for them.

The ethical angle is far less clear to me.  A follow on to the initial question asked about Buffett's thoughts on the impact to Goldman's reputation.  He feels that the allegation and related press alone cause Goldman to hurt and it hurts morale, but he doesn't really see it as a loss of reputation.  He does believe that the approach now should be to "get it right, get it fast, get it out, get it over."  Standard reputation management in a crisis.  Charlie, on the other hand, added that the standard should be higher than what's legal and convenient.  He feels they shouldn't have dealt with "scuzzy securities", and that plenty has been wrong with Wall Street.  The bottom line is that Berkshire has had a 44 year relationship with Goldman Sachs, and they have bought more companies through them than anybody else.  They trade with them, and Goldman doesn't tell them what their position is, i.e. shorting or trading from own inventory.  They act in a non-fiduciary capacity when they trade with Berkshire.

<soapbox>I think there are a lot of distasteful things that take place on Wall Street every day.  However, the SEC is making a show of attacking Goldman Sachs on points of dubious legality when they were trading with institutions that are very sophisticated investors.  At the same time, individual investors are being duped on a daily basis because they are not even aware that a distinction exists between brokers and advisors, and that their "advisor" is actually acting in his or her own best interest.  I'd like to see the SEC let the professionals make their own mistakes, and spend a bit more energy on protecting the rights of individual investors from people like Bernie Madoff as well as the Wall Street firms.</soapbox>

Tags: berkshire hathaway, warren buffett, wesco, charlie munger, fiduciary

Fiduciary Standard | Berkshire Hathaway

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Notes from the Berkshire Hathaway and Wesco meetings

Saturday, May 08, 2010

This past week has been pretty busy for me, as I attended the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting last weekend, and the Wesco annual meeting on Wednesday.  Wesco is run by Warren Buffett's partner Charlie Munger.  Whereas the Berkshire meeting has the atmosphere of a very popular circus, the Wesco meeting features about 1% of the attendees of the Berkshire meeting, and it allows for more unfiltered Mungerisms, which makes it well worth the effort.

Last year I took voluminous notes at the Berkshire meeting, and barely shared any of them.  The process felt daunting and I was very busy.  That's no different this year, but I think there is a lot of value in what was communicated, and that value is definitely worth sharing.  Nonetheless, I plan to do this in digestible pieces, which should make it more readable and more feasible for me.

One point about the logistics of the meeting:  beginning last year, the Q&A process alternated between those being asked by three journalists, and those being asked by members of the audience.  The journalists were Carol Loomis, Becky Quick and Andrew Ross Sorkin.  They each receive thousands of questions from the investing public, and whittle them down into broad themes and form specific questions accordingly.  I took notes on most questions asked by the journalists, but not on all questions asked by the audience.  Some just didn't hold much interest for me.  Other questions didn't strike me as worthy of particulary insightful responses.  Consequently, my sharing will be selective.

First up (next post):  Warren Buffet's view of the recent troubles at Goldman Sachs.

Tags: berkshire hathaway, warren buffett, wesco, charlie munger

General | Berkshire Hathaway

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