How to Invest like Warren Buffett?

If you are asking yourself this question, you are asking yourself the wrong question. At the very least, I would propose you implement a minor tweak to it: How would Warren Buffett be investing if he were in your shoes? 

The thing is that the investing style of Warren Buffett has changed immensely over time. That’s just because he is extremely smart and extremely adaptable. And you wouldn’t want to mimic Buffett’s investments today, for the simple reason that he is severely disadvantaged compared to yourself. 

If Buffett were in your shoes, he most definitely wouldn’t be looking at Berkshire Hathaway for copycat ideas. You see, one of the things that is not talked enough about, when people are discussing Buffett is that he has been extremely adaptable. 

There are assets worth a total of $788 billion on the Berkshire Hathaway balance sheet. If the company would want to deploy 1% of its assets base to one investment, that investment would have to be valued at $7.8 billion. By comparison, the smallest company in the S&P 500 index has a market cap of $1.5 billion.

Therefore, if Buffett wants to make an investment that actually moves the needle today, his universe of available investment opportunities is actually tiny. 

The Buffett Partnership

So, how did Buffett invest early in his career, when he was a much smaller fish in a much bigger pond? This question brings you to the the Buffett Partnership, which Buffett managed from 1956 to 1969. When Buffett dissolved the Partnership in 1970, he kept his stake in Berkshire Hathaway, which the Partnership had had a controlling shareholder in. The rest is history, I guess.

First of all, during the Partnership years, Buffett invested in smaller, less liquid companies. Secondly, Buffett was a relatively concentrated investor, focusing on a few high conviction ideas. Nonetheless, this does not mean he didn’t try to diversify the Buffett Partnership Portfolio. The way he did it was not through quantity of exposure, but through the quality of exposure. 

By quality, I don’t mean that the stocks he chose were of higher quality than the stocks in the general market. But rather that he managed the stock portfolio by allocating its capital into three buckets that each had exposure to qualitatively different factors. 

The Three Arrows of Buffett’s Capital Allocation

His objective, as I understand it, was to be able to keep his options open and be flexible under different market conditions. For example, if the overall market went up, he would be able to allocate capital to the bucket of stocks that were not driven by the overall market, and vice versa if market sentiment was overly pessimistic. 

But you don’t have to take my word for it. Here is Buffett’s explanation of the three qualitative areas that he allocated capital to. The following is taken from the 1961 Buffet Partnership Letter Shareholders:


Our Method of Operation 

Our avenues of investment break down into three categories. These categories have different behavior characteristics, and the way our money is divided among them will have an important effect on our results, relative to the Dow in any given year. The actual percentage division among categories is to some degree planned, but to a great extent, accidental, based upon availability factors. 

The first section consists of generally undervalued securities (hereinafter called “generals”) where we have nothing to say about corporate policies and no timetable as to when the undervaluation may correct itself. Over the years, this has been our largest category of investment, and more money has been made here than in either of the other categories. We usually have fairly large positions (5% to 10% of our total assets) in each of five or six generals, with smaller positions in another ten or fifteen. 

Sometimes these work out very fast; many times they take years. It is difficult at the time of purchase to know any specific reason why they should appreciate in price. However, because of this lack of glamour or anything pending which might create immediate favorable market action, they are available at very cheap prices. A lot of value can be obtained for the price paid. This substantial excess of value creates a comfortable margin of safety in each transaction. This individual margin of safety, coupled with a diversity of commitments creates a most attractive package of safety and appreciation potential. Over the years our timing of purchases has been considerably better than our timing of sales. We do not go into these generals with the idea of getting the last nickel, but are usually quite content selling out at some intermediate level between our purchase price and what we regard as fair value to a private owner. 

The generals tend to behave market-wise very much in sympathy with the Dow. Just because something is cheap does not mean it is not going to go down. During abrupt downward movements in the market, this segment may very well go down percentage-wise just as much as the Dow. Over a period of years, I believe the generals will outperform the Dow, and during sharply advancing years like 1961, this is the section of our portfolio that turns in the best results. It is, of course, also the most vulnerable in a declining market. 

Our second category consists of “work-outs.” These are securities whose financial results depend on corporate action rather than supply and demand factors created by buyers and sellers of securities. In other words, they are securities with a timetable where we can predict, within reasonable error limits, when we will get how much and what might upset the applecart. Corporate events such as mergers, liquidations, reorganizations, spin-offs, etc., lead to work-outs. An important source in recent years has been sell-outs by oil producers to major integrated oil companies. 

This category will produce reasonably stable earnings from year to year, to a large extent irrespective of the course of the Dow. Obviously, if we operate throughout a year with a large portion of our portfolio in workouts, we will look extremely good if it turns out to be a declining year for the Dow or quite bad if it is a strongly advancing year. Over the years, work-outs have provided our second largest category. At any given time, we may be in ten to fifteen of these; some just beginning and others in the late stage of their development.

I believe in using borrowed money to offset a portion of our work-out portfolio since there is a high degree of safety in this category in terms of both eventual results and intermediate market behavior. Results, excluding the benefits derived from the use of borrowed money, usually fall in the 10% to 20% range. My self-imposed limit regarding borrowing is 25% of partnership net worth. Oftentimes we owe no money and when we do borrow, it is only as an offset against work-outs. 

The final category is “control” situations where we either control the company or take a very large position and attempt to influence policies of the company. Such operations should definitely be measured on the basis of several years. In a given year, they may produce nothing as it is usually to our advantage to have the stock be stagnant market-wise for a long period while we are acquiring it.

These situations, too, have relatively little in common with the behavior of the Dow. Sometimes, of course, we buy into a general with the thought in mind that it might develop into a control situation. If the price remains low enough for a long period, this might very well happen. If it moves up before we have a substantial percentage of the company’s stock, we sell at higher levels and complete a successful general operation. We are presently acquiring stock in what may turn out to be control situations several years hence.

Investing in Crypto from a Portfolio Perspective

The appeal of cryptocurrencies and digital tokens is for many the possibility of a home run. But betting on one outcome will make your outcome binary. You are either right or you are wrong. In an investing subject that has such high uncertainty of outcome, as blockchain and cryptocurrencies undoubtedly have, trying to determine who the most likely winner is, might not be the optimal investment strategy.

An investor in the blockchain space, even if that investor would be 100% convinced that distributed ledgers will disrupt the finance industry, will face three major problems:

  1. We don’t know who the winners will be
  2. We don’t know what the winner will be
  3. The last mover advantage

We don’t know who the winners will be

Industries tend to consolidate over time. This has been as true with banking and auto manufacturing as it has been true with breweries and paint manufacturing. Online, the power laws of industry consolidation have been even stronger. In the online world, the winner takes it all. The network effects of digital products such as search engines and social networks are so strong that they tend to create natural monopolies. 

There have been thousands of cryptocurrencies and altcoins created so far in the relatively short history of blockchain. If the network effects of cryptocurrencies are anything like in industries that the internet brought us, most of these currencies are destined to die.

We don’t know what the winners will be

One of the biggest allures of blockchain disruption is that distributed ledgers will significantly alter the way humans organize themselves and their endeavours. Some will even go so far as to say that the concept of the company as a way for people to organize their efforts will become obsolete. 

Yet, even though the formation of Bitcoin and other cryptos, such as Ravencoin, have been without the ownership and organization structure of a company, most organizations that are developing products and services on blockchain technology are formed through a corporation. 

Some are a combination of both. An example of this is the combination of the XRP cryptocurrency by the company Ripple. Ripple does not own or control XRP, but it owns a significant amount of XRP which it received when the company facilitated the creation of the XRP cryptocurrency. 

So, where will the value capture be? Will it be on a cryptocurrency level or on a company level? Is it better to have exposure to XRP or Ripple? Currently, this is extremely hard to tell. 

Last Mover Advantage

Bear in mind that Google was not the first search engine. Neither Chrome nor Explorer was the first internet browser and Windows was not the first operating system. Facebook was not the first social network. 

In the words of Peter Thiel, “you don’t want to be the first mover into a market, you want to be the last mover.” It is possible that none of the cryptocurrencies and none of the biggest blockchain-focused innovators currently out there are the last movers in the space. Maybe we are yet to see the equivalent of Microsoft, Google and Facebook of crypto and blockchain yet. 

Portfolio Approach

In an essay called Diversification and the Active Manager, Horizon Kinetics’ Murray Stahl and Steven Bregman bring up a thought exercise whereby an asset manager starts out with a diversified portfolio that includes one overperforming stock and simply holds it over a long period of time.

They take Intel and Microsoft as examples:

“From October 1987 to December 1999, the stock appreciated about 173x. Thus, if a 3% position in 1987 were held in a portfolio and not traded away, it would have become a dominant portfolio position by 1999. In truth, the position would have become so disproportionately large that no active manager would have been permitted to maintain it.  

In fact, Intel would be a much better example. Between October 1987 and December 1999, Intel shares appreciated approximately 2,680x. Obviously, a 3% position in 1987 would, as a practical matter, become the entire portfolio by December 1999, irrespective of what performance the other portfolio elements accomplished.  

If one contemplates these facts, the implications can be interesting. It should be self-evident that any portfolio manager who simply held Microsoft and Intel shares would have dramatically outperformed the S&P 500. Again, of course, this would not have been permissible. Nevertheless, in hindsight, this would have been the correct action.”

Building a diversified blockchain portfolio

Aside from basically buying a basket of cryptocurrencies, an investor would also like to have exposure to companies that are building blockchain-related products and services or investing in such projects.

Currently, the number of public companies that have that exposure is limited and many often simply seem fraudulent once you look under the hood. There are however a few stocks that are worth considering to gain exposure to blockchain and cryptocurrencies:

  • Galaxy Digital Holdings (aim to become a merchant bank in crypto and blockchain)
  • Overstock (through its subsidiaries tZero and Medici Ventures) 
  • Hut 8 (cryptocurrency mining) 
  • FRMO Corp (shareholder in Digital Currency Group and a number of mining ventures)

More Thoughts on Crypto

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Longevity as an Investment Criteria

In the world of startups and new ventures, the central theme seems to gravitate towards growth and scaling. 

When it comes to growth and scaling, learning how to manage an organization that is constantly getting bigger becomes the biggest challenge. 

However, when you look at the oldest companies in the world, these are all small operations in industries that have hardly changed much throughout the lifetime of those companies. 

Build to Last

Two of the oldest companies in the world are a:

  • Japanese Ryokan 
  • German Brewery

When founders start new companies, most of the time their vision is to disrupt an industry. 

But what if the objective would be to create something that was built to last? If you want to build an impenetrable fortress, you don’t want it to be ever-expanding, would you?

So, here’s a question: What if you were asked to build a company and there would only be one constraint: The total size of the organization would not be allowed to exceed 8 people.

What would you build?