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LIVE UPDATES: Warren Buffett discussed coronavirus, the economy, and stocks at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting. Here are the highlights.

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warren buffettKevin Lamarque/Reuters

  • Warren Buffett discussed a range of topics at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting on Saturday, often touted as “Woodstock for capitalists.”
  • The billionaire investor and Berkshire CEO joined Greg Abel, vice chairman of non-insurance operations, to host the virtual event and answer questions.
  • The pair discussed coronavirus, the economy, stocks, and other topics.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Warren Buffett discussed a range of topics at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting on Saturday, famously described as “Woodstock for capitalists.”

The famed investor and Berkshire CEO, along with Greg Abel, vice chairman of non-insurance operations, hosted the virtual event and answers questioned posed by journalists.

The pair spoke hours after Berkshire released its first-quarter earnings. The company posted a record quarterly loss of about $50 billion, largely due to $55 billion in investment losses. It also grew its cash pile from $128 billion to $137 billion in the period, and sold about $6.1 billion in stock on a net basis in April, upending expectations that it would capitalize on the coronavirus sell-off and buy stocks on the cheap.

Read more: ‘Brace for selling’: A Wall Street quant strategist warns that stock-market buying power could evaporate just one week from now — opening the floodgates for a ‘sell in May’ episode

Here are the highlights from the Berkshire annual meeting:

“Charlie is in fine shape”

Buffett opened the meeting by lamenting the absence of Charlie Munger, Berkshire’s vice chairman and his longtime partner.

“Charlie is in fine shape, his mind is as good as ever, his voice is as strong as ever,” he said. It “just didn’t seem like a good idea” for the 96-year-old to fly from his California home to attend the meeting in Omaha, Nebraska.

“He’s added Zoom to his repertoire,” Buffett continued, referring to the video-conferencing app. “He’s just skipped right by me technologically. Like stepping over a peanut.”

“It’s been a flip of the switch”

Buffett tackled the topic of coronavirus early on in the meeting.

“It’s been a flip of the switch in a huge way in terms of national behavior, the national psyche, it’s dramatic,” he said.

“There was an extraordinarily wide variety of possibilities on both the health side and the economic side,” he continued. A few months on, it’s become clear that “we’re not getting a best case and we know we’re not getting a worst case.”

“The range of possibilities is still extraordinarily wide,” Buffett continued. “We do not know what exactly happens when you shut down a substantial portion of your society.”

Whereas the economic train fell off the tracks in the 2008 financial crisis, Buffett said, “This time we just pulled the train off the tracks and put it on its siding.”

Read more: Quant megafund AQR explains why investors should be more worried about prolonged slumps than virus-style crashes — and details a 3-part process for protecting against them

“We are a very, very young country”

Buffett discussed America’s rapid progress since its creation.

“We are a very, very young country,” he said. “What we have accomplished is miraculous.”

Buffett shared some crude calculations of national wealth gain over the past 231 years. He estimated America’s wealth grew from about $1 billion in 1789 to well over $100 trillion in 2020, or at least $100,000 for each original dollar.

The investor highlighted the Civil War as an example of a massive disruption that the nation overcame.

“Nothing can stop America”

Buffett reflected on the Great Depression, pointing out that someone who invested on the day of his birth in August 1930 needed to wait more than 20 years to make back their money.

He also discussed the challenges that his father faced at that time, when he had no job and two children to fee and couldn’t access his savings as the bank was closed.

“Don’t worry about your groceries,” Buffett’s grandfather, who owned a grocery store, told his father. “I’ll let your bill run.”

“He cared about his family, but he wasn’t going to go crazy,” Buffett joked.

Read more: Famed economist David Rosenberg nailed the housing crash. Now he says this crisis won’t end as quickly as it began and shares an investing strategy for the next 3 years and beyond.

When the Dow Jones passed the 381 mark in the 1950s, he said, investors feared the market was overheated and it was going to be 1929 again. Buffett’s mentor and boss at the time, Benjamin Graham, was called to Washington along with a slew of other experts to assess whether the US economy was in trouble.

Now, the Dow is above 24,000. “You’re looking at a market today that has produced $100 for every $1,” he said. “Nothing can stop America when you get right down to it.”

Buffett put up a slide reading, “Never bet against America,” emphasizing that the country faces tough periods but always emerges stronger.

“We are now a better country as well as an incredibly more wealthy country than we were in 1789,” the next slide read. “We have gone dramatically in the right direction.”

“You never want to use borrowed money”

Buffett linked his optimism back to the current threat to the global economy. He also underlined his company’s commitment to funding its own operations, and warned against the dangers of debt.

“When something like the current pandemic happens it’s hard to factor that in and that’s why you never want to use borrowed money to buy into investments,” he said. “We run Berkshire that way.”

“There’s no reason to use borrowed money to participate in the American tailwind,” he added.

Buffett also trumpeted the merits of stocks.

Equities are an “enormously sound investment,” he said, that will outperform US Treasuries and the money people have stashed under their mattresses over time.

However, he sounded the familiar note that investors shouldn’t be constantly changing their minds about stocks.

“People bring the attitude to them too often,” he said, “that it’s important that you develop an opinion on them minute by minute. That’s really foolish.”

This story is still developing….

Source: https://markets.businessinsider.com/news/stocks/warren-buffett-berkshire-hathaway-2020-annual-meeting-highlights-2020-5-1029156864

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