Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street. Upgrade Now
3 Can't-Miss Takeaways From Warren Buffett's Letter to Berkshire Hathaway Shareholders

In This Article:

Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) published its 2024 shareholder letter on Saturday.

In the letter, Chief Executive Officer Warren Buffett shared valuable insights into markets, Berkshire's annual results, investment wisdom, and timeless lessons.

Here are three takeaways from the letter that you can use to help guide your investment journey.

A person sitting at a table in front of a computer.
Image source: Getty Images.

1. Mistakes happen

Buffett opened the 2024 letter by being candid about Berkshire's mistakes, essentially saying they are par for the course. By accepting that mistakes happen, Berkshire can focus more on its "batting average" by being right more often than it is wrong. But what Berkshire seems to care the most about is slugging.

In baseball, batting average is simply hits divided by the number of at bats. Slugging is total bases divided by at bats. In other words, slugging says a double is worth more than a single, and a home run is worth four times a single. Meanwhile, with batting average, all hits are weighted equally.

If Berkshire were a figurative baseball player, it would have a good batting average, but what would really stand out is its slugging. Berkshire has made some brilliant decisions that have resulted in outsize gains spanning decades. GEICO was an early success. Berkshire has made a fortune by holding Coca-Cola and American Express for more than 30 years. The growth in its insurance businesses has been outstanding. And more recently, its investment in Apple has increased several-fold.

These investments are so sifnificant that they erase many mistakes. Or in other words, Berkshire can strike out a few times and still win because of these grand slams.

As Buffett wrote in the shareholder letter, "Mistakes fade away; winners can forever blossom."

Investors can apply this same mentality to their own investment journeys. It's not about being perfect, but being consistent and having a few exceptional ideas every once in a while.

2. Investing in your wheelhouse

Berkshire has always marched to the beat of its own drum, preferring to trust its judgment processes rather than getting caught up in market noise.

Berkshire's main business remains property and casualty (P&C) insurance -- an area where it has flourished. In 2024, insurance underwriting and investment income totaled $22.69 billion in operating earnings, much higher than Berkshire's other controlled and non-controlled businesses. Berkshire knows P&C well and continues to expand its book of business while steering clear of areas outside its wheelhouse.

Buffett and his team have stayed away from investing directly in cryptocurrency and haven't dived headfirst into artificial intelligence (AI) either. Going back to the baseball metaphor, Berkshire prefers to swing at pitches it can hit rather than take gambles on concepts it doesn't understand.