Buffett 2014 — The golden anniversary letter

Buffett 2014 — The golden anniversary letter

The 2014 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Report — the 50th anniversary letter — is the most self-revelatory document in the Berkshire corpus. Buffett lays out the full 1964–2014 performance record (1,826,163% cumulative return vs. 11,196% for the S&P), confesses his two largest capital-allocation mistakes by name and dollar amount, traces the Munger-inspired shift from cigar-butt investing to durable franchises, quantifies the 12-year $84 billion insurance float machine, and formally names Ajit Jain and Greg Abel as world-leading successors.

Shareholder Letter Excerpt
2026/6/3 · 20:49
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Published: February 27, 2015 — Warren Buffett & Charlie Munger, Berkshire Hathaway 2014 Annual Report

Most annual letters from Berkshire Hathaway follow a familiar architecture: performance table, operating review, acquisitions, insurance, a few observations on capital allocation. The 2014 letter — published simultaneously with Charlie Munger's Vice Chairman essay, forming a 42-page document — is structurally different. It is the only time in the Berkshire corpus where Buffett suspends the annual rhythm and writes explicitly as a historian of his own enterprise. The occasion was the 50th anniversary of his takeover of a failing New England textile mill. The result is, by some distance, the most self-revelatory document he has ever published.
The unusual candor appears in both directions. On the upside: 50 years of compound growth laid out without modesty, plus Munger's precise codification of the organizational architecture behind it. On the downside: a frank accounting of the two largest capital-allocation mistakes Buffett made — with dollar figures attached. No other Berkshire letter contains both the theory of why the system works and the named examples of where it failed.

Fifty years in a single table

The letter's performance summary — a tradition in Berkshire shareholder letters since 1965 — took on a different character in 2014 because Buffett added market price data alongside book value data for the first time. 1
The cumulative numbers across both measures are almost too large to absorb normally:
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The gap between 21.6% and 9.9% compounded annually over 50 years produces the 1,826,163% versus 11,196% divergence above. Buffett's view of the book-value series was explicit: it had become a "crude, but useful" proxy for intrinsic value, with the caveat that the gap between book value and intrinsic value had "materially widened" as Berkshire shifted from holding marketable securities to owning large operating businesses outright. 1 He wrote: "In our view, the increase in Berkshire's per-share intrinsic value over the past 50 years is roughly equal to the 1,826,163% gain in market price of the company's shares."
The Powerhouse Five — Berkshire Hathaway Energy (BHE), BNSF Railway, Iscar (IMC), Lubrizol, and Marmon — earned a combined $12.4 billion pre-tax in 2014, up $1.6 billion from 2013. 1 A decade earlier, only BHE was in the portfolio, earning $393 million. The path from $393 million to $12.4 billion in annual earnings from these five businesses alone, achieved with minimal equity dilution — three of the five were purchased entirely for cash, and BNSF's 30% stock component increased Berkshire's share count by only 6.1% — is the operating-earnings story of the letter.
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For the investor: the dilution denominator matters as much as the earnings numerator. A business that grows operating profit tenfold while quintupling its share count has done nothing on a per-share basis. Buffett's habit of paying cash where possible, and his willingness to use Berkshire shares only when the intrinsic value received is at least equal to what is given, is the mechanism that converts operating growth into compounding shareholder value.

The $100 billion structuring error — and the Guinness Book disaster

The 50th anniversary setting gave Buffett a specific kind of license: to go back to decisions made in 1964 and 1967 and name the costs. He did so with precision, and neither confession was comfortable.
The Berkshire-vs-BPL error (1967). In early 1967, Buffett had Berkshire pay $8.6 million to acquire National Indemnity Company (NICO), a small Omaha-based insurer. Jack Ringwalt, NICO's founder and owner, had wanted to sell to Buffett personally — not to Berkshire. Buffett chose to route the purchase through Berkshire instead of Buffett Partnership Ltd. 1
He has had, by his own count, 48 years to identify a good reason for this choice. He found none. Had BPL been the purchaser, his partners would have owned 100% of the business that became the foundation of Berkshire's insurance engine. Subsequent acquisitions — financed by NICO's float — would have been owned entirely by BPL partners rather than 39% by legacy Berkshire shareholders. Growth would not have been impeded for nearly two decades by capital trapped in the textile operation. Buffett's estimate of the cost: "a decision that eventually diverted $100 billion or so from BPL partners to a collection of strangers." 1 His summary: "I simply made a colossal mistake."
The Dexter Shoe disaster (1993). Berkshire purchased Dexter Shoe — a Maine-based manufacturer with what Buffett believed was a genuine competitive moat — for $433 million. The moat evaporated quickly under foreign competition. Dexter's value went to zero. The GAAP loss, though painful, wasn't the true cost. The true cost came from the method of payment: Buffett paid with Berkshire stock rather than cash. 1 Those shares, by the time of the 2014 letter, were worth approximately $5.7 billion. His verdict: "As a financial disaster, this one deserves a spot in the Guinness Book of World Records."
The principle he drew from Dexter applies directly to any stock-for-stock transaction: "Trading shares of a wonderful business — which Berkshire most certainly is — for ownership of a so-so business irreparably destroys value." 1 When Berkshire stock is used as acquisition currency, the buyer is selling a fractional interest in every asset Berkshire already owns — including BNSF, GEICO, and the insurance float — at whatever price the transaction implies. Buffett noted that he has never seen an investment banker present this math when proposing a stock-for-stock deal. The incentive structure explains why.
For the investor: both mistakes share a structural feature — the accounting treatment understated the true economic loss. GAAP recorded Dexter's write-down but not the opportunity cost of the shares given. GAAP was silent on the BPL routing error entirely. The lesson isn't about GAAP's limitations in the abstract; it is that the most consequential capital-allocation errors are the ones the income statement never fully captures.

The Munger blueprint: from cigar butts to wonderful businesses

The letter's most philosophically complete section is Buffett's extended account of Charlie Munger's influence on the architecture of Berkshire — an influence Buffett described as the single most important design decision in Berkshire's history.
Buffett met Munger in 1959. The intellectual framework Munger provided was direct: "Forget what you know about buying fair businesses at wonderful prices; instead, buy wonderful businesses at fair prices." 1 Buffett's description of why he resisted this advice is characteristically self-aware: "Altering my behavior is not an easy task (ask my family). I had enjoyed reasonable success without Charlie's input, so why should I listen to a lawyer who had never spent a day in business school (when — ahem — I had attended three)."
The conversion came through See's Candies. In 1972, the sellers wanted $30 million for a candy company earning roughly $4 million pre-tax on $8 million of net tangible assets. Buffett's ceiling was $25 million. The sellers accepted. 1 By 2014, See's had earned $1.9 billion pre-tax with only $40 million of additional investment beyond the original purchase price — a return that would not have been possible if the metric had been book value or tangible assets rather than pricing power and brand durability.
What Buffett took from See's was not just the specific economics but a generalizable lesson about goodwill: "I gained a business education about the value of powerful brands." The $25 million purchase also demonstrated the capital-reallocation logic that made the conglomerate structure work: See's generated earnings that could not be intelligently reinvested in candy expansion but could be deployed tax-free into acquiring other businesses. The excess cash from one wonderful business became the acquisition capital for the next.
Munger's role, in Buffett's account, was that of architect. Buffett described his own as "general contractor, with the CEOs of Berkshire's subsidiaries doing the real work as sub-contractors." The distinction matters: the architecture is the durable source of value; the operating execution depends on it but doesn't define it.
For the investor: the shift from "fair businesses at wonderful prices" to "wonderful businesses at fair prices" is the most consequential mental model in the letter. A cheap company with deteriorating competitive dynamics requires you to be right about when to sell. A wonderful company with durable pricing power requires you to be right mainly about the initial purchase decision; time and reinvestment do the rest. The Tesco confession in the same letter — Berkshire exited with a $444 million after-tax loss after Buffett delayed selling despite evidence of deteriorating management and accounting problems — is the counterfactual demonstration. 1 He labeled this "thumb-sucking," borrowing Munger's term. The cockroach theory he articulated applies here: "In the world of business, bad news often surfaces serially: You see a cockroach in your kitchen; as the days go by, you meet his relatives."

The insurance engine: 12 years, $84 billion

The quantitative core of the letter is the insurance section, which by 2014 had accumulated a run of figures that most insurers treat as theoretical ideals rather than achievable outcomes.
Berkshire's insurance operations produced an underwriting profit for 12 consecutive years, with a cumulative pre-tax gain of $24 billion over that stretch. 1 Year-end 2014 float reached $83.9 billion, up from $41 billion twelve years earlier. The composition:
  • BH Reinsurance (Ajit Jain): $42.5 billion float, $606 million underwriting profit
  • General Re (Tad Montross): $19.3 billion float, $277 million underwriting profit
  • GEICO (Tony Nicely): $13.6 billion float, $1.159 billion underwriting profit 1
The origin of this machine was the $8.6 million acquisition of National Indemnity Company in 1967 — the same transaction Buffett described as a colossal structuring error because he routed it through Berkshire rather than BPL. The error in structure did not prevent the business from performing: National Indemnity today carries a GAAP net worth of $111 billion, exceeding that of any other insurer in the world. 1 The original purchase agreement was 1½ pages, homemade; neither side used a lawyer. Buffett's observation: "Per page, this has to be Berkshire's best deal."
The float accounting reframe that Buffett has articulated over many letters reached its clearest expression here. GAAP records float as a liability — the full nominal obligation outstanding. Buffett's counterargument: if the float is both costless (underwriting at a profit, not a loss) and long-enduring (revolving rather than running off), "the true value of this liability is dramatically less than the accounting liability." 1 The insurance goodwill embedded in this gap — the structural capacity to generate persistent free-float — carries an economic value that does not appear on the balance sheet, and is one of the two main reasons Berkshire's intrinsic value substantially exceeds its book value.
On the culture that makes this possible: "The wish of all insurers is to earn underwriting profits, and that desire creates intense competition, so vigorous in fact that it sometimes causes the P/C industry as a whole to sustain large underwriting losses. That message is given at least lip service by all insurers; at Berkshire it is a religion." 1
For the investor: twelve consecutive years of underwriting profit is the analytic baseline, but the more durable insight is the cultural one. Insurance underwriting discipline is easy to declare and hard to maintain, because the incentive in competitive markets runs toward writing volume at inadequate price. The mechanism Berkshire uses to resist this is not a rule but an embedded identity: it is treated as a matter of institutional character rather than policy. That distinction is why Buffett attributes the streak to culture rather than to luck or pricing cycles.

The conglomerate advantage — and the case against spin-offs

The letter's most argumentative section defends a corporate structure that Wall Street has spent 30 years trying to break apart.
Conglomerates earned their bad reputation legitimately. Buffett's account of the 1960s playbook is blunt: promote a conglomerate to 20x earnings through dubious accounting and optimistic forecasting; acquire businesses at 10x earnings using inflated stock; use pooling accounting to make per-share earnings appear to automatically increase; repeat until the arithmetic breaks. Companies like ITT (conglomerate), Litton Industries, Gulf & Western, and LTV were lionized in that era. They are, as Buffett noted, "long gone." 1
Berkshire's structural advantages, by contrast, are specific and durable:
  • Capital can move between businesses without taxes or frictional costs
  • No historical single-industry bias constrains the analysis. Buffett's formulation: "If horses had controlled investment decisions, there would have been no auto industry." 1
  • The flexibility to own both operating businesses and large passive minority stakes in publicly traded companies ("It's better to have a partial interest in the Hope Diamond than to own all of a rhinestone") 1
  • The ability to offer sellers a permanent home — no private equity leverage, no synergy-driven workforce cuts, no three-to-five-year exit mandate
On investment bankers who push acquisitions and then push spin-offs of those same acquisitions: "Fees too often lead to transactions rather than transactions leading to fees." 1 On private equity: "In truth, 'equity' is a dirty word for many private-equity buyers; what they love is debt." 1
His conclusion: "If the conglomerate form is used judiciously, it is an ideal structure for maximizing long-term capital growth."

The next fifty years: naming names and drawing a cash floor

The forward-looking section of the letter is unusually specific on three fronts — succession, the minimum cash level, and the risk framework for shareholders.
Succession: Buffett confirmed that the board had identified a successor CEO who was "ready to assume the job the day after I die or step down." He did not name the person. But Munger, in his Vice Chairman essay, did. His language was precise: "Ajit Jain and Greg Abel are proven performers who would probably be under-described as 'world-class.' 'World-leading' would be the description I would choose. In some important ways, each is a better business executive than Buffett." 1 This was the first time either name had been publicly designated at this level of specificity. It was 2014; Abel became CEO in 2023.
The cash floor: Buffett formalized the liquidity standard. Berkshire would always hold at least $20 billion in Treasury bills or equivalents — a floor rather than a target. 1 His metaphor: "Cash... is to a business as oxygen is to an individual: never thought about when it is present, the only thing in mind when it is absent." The financial staying power thesis rests on three properties: a large and reliable earnings stream from diversified operating businesses, massive liquid assets, and no significant near-term cash requirements. Any two of the three would be insufficient.
Volatility vs. risk: Drawing on the 50-year dataset, Buffett made the inflation-adjusted case for equities with unusual directness. Between 1964 and 2014, the S&P 500 rose from 84 to 2,059, producing an 11,196% total return with dividends reinvested. Over the same period, the purchasing power of the dollar fell 87% — one 1965 dollar now buys what required $7.69 in 2014 prices. 1 The implication: "It has been far safer to invest in a diversified collection of American businesses than in securities tied to American currency."
His critique of academic risk theory was direct: business schools teach volatility as a proxy for risk, and "though this pedagogic assumption makes for easy teaching, it is dead wrong." 1 What actually makes stocks risky is not price fluctuation but the behavioral response to it — active trading, market timing, inadequate diversification, high fees, and borrowed money. Berkshire stock has fallen approximately 50% from its high three times over the past 50 years; the investors who treated those declines as risks to be avoided rather than prices to be assessed did not compound well.
For shareholders assessing Berkshire specifically, Buffett's eight-point prospectus for the next fifty years included one unconditional statement: "Your company is the Gibraltar of American business and will remain so." 1 He framed the candid qualifications directly alongside it: long-term percentage gains "cannot be dramatic and will not come close to those achieved in the past 50 years" — the numbers are simply too large — and buyers at significant premiums to book value may need to hold for many years before reaching a satisfactory return.
On what the future CEO must guard against: arrogance, bureaucracy, and complacency — the "ABCs of business decay." His examples of companies that were once strong and fell to these forces: General Motors, IBM, Sears Roebuck, U.S. Steel. None of the deterioration was inevitable; all of it was the predictable result of institutional drift when no one was keeping score against the original standard.
For the investor: the succession section read differently in 2014 than it does now. Munger naming Jain and Abel "world-leading" — not merely "capable" or "trusted" — was a statement designed to last. Buffett confirmed the CEO was ready to step in the next day. The cash floor of $20 billion was a commitment, not a suggestion. Together, these formalized what had previously been implicit: Berkshire after Buffett was not a question of whether the system would survive but whether whoever ran it would resist the organizational cancers Buffett identified by name.

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The 50th anniversary letter is, by construction, retrospective. But the passages that have aged best are the forward-looking ones. Munger's fifteen-element codification of the Berkshire system — written when he was 91 — functions as an operating manual for any organization trying to build durable institutional value without bureaucratic decay. The cost accounting of the NICO routing error and the Dexter Shoe stock swap reads now as a curriculum on what concentrated compounding can cost when the structural decision is wrong. The succession names landed in history: Abel became CEO in January 2023, and the transition bore out Munger's description — methodical, culturally continuous, and without drama.
Buffett closed with the line he has returned to across several letters: "It is madness to risk losing what you need in pursuing what you simply desire." 1 In a document that spans from a spite-driven 1964 textile-mill takeover to an $84 billion insurance float and 340,000 employees, that sentence is doing more than cautioning against leverage. It is the unifying philosophy of a system built on permanence, patience, and the willingness to keep score honestly against the same yardstick for fifty years.

Cover image: AI-generated illustration

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