巴菲特

Buffett on sale

Value is in the eye of the beholder, even when valuing value investors. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway can now be had for 1.18 times book value, which – depending on how one looks at it – is cheap or expensive.

Closed-end funds typically trade at a discount to book of 5 to 15 per cent. Even well-run conglomerates sell at a discount to break-up value. Loews, with similar holdings to Berkshire, is at a 10 per cent discount.

But Berkshire is, of course, no ordinary conglomerate, so a mere 18 per cent premium to book is among the cheapest entry-points in decades. Over the past 18 years investors have paid 1.7 times book on average. Anyone who balked at paying 1.3 times in 1991, as the US was exiting a recession, missed out on a tenfold return. Since 1964, Berkshire's book value has grown more than 400,000 per cent versus 5,000 per cent for US stocks overall.

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