Berkshire Hathaway Annual Letter – 1977

I am excited to begin this project of reviewing all of Warren Buffett’s annual Berkshire Hathaway shareholder letters, starting from 1977.

There are currently over 45 of these letters, and with the benefit of hindsight, it will be interesting to see how prescient his analysis was as well as how his strategies have changed over time.

The full text of the letter is reproduced below.

“we find nothing particularly noteworthy in a management performance combining, say, a 10% increase in equity capital and a 5% increase in earnings per share. After all, even a totally dormant savings account will produce steadily rising interest earnings each year because of compounding”

“A few shareholders have questioned the wisdom of remaining in the textile business………..Our reasons are several: (1) Our mills ……are among the largest employers in each town, utilizing a labor force of high average age possessing relatively non-transferable skills………our workers and unions have exhibited unusual understanding and effort in cooperating with management to achieve a cost structure and product mix which might allow us to maintain a viable operation……………(2) Management has also been energetic and straightforward in its approach to our textile problems……….(3) With hard work and some imagination regarding manufacturing and marketing configurations, it seems reasonable that at least modest profits in the textile division can be achieved in the future.”

“It is comforting to be in a business where some mistakes can be made and yet a quite satisfactory overall performance can be achieved. In a sense, this is the opposite case from our textile business where even very good management probably can average only modest results”

“One of the lessons your management has learned……is the importance of being in businesses where tailwinds prevail rather than headwinds.”

“Insurance companies offer standardized policies which can be copied by anyone. Their only products are promises. It is not difficult to be licensed, and rates are an open book. There are no important advantages from trademarks, patents, location, corporate longevity, raw material sources, etc., and very little consumer differentiation to produce insulation from competition.”

“There is no question that the nature of the insurance business magnifies the effect which individual managers have on company performance.”

“Just as it would be foolish to focus unduly on short-term prospects when acquiring an entire company, we think it equally unsound to become mesmerized by prospective near term earnings or recent trends in earnings when purchasing small pieces of a company”

“We select our marketable equity securities in much the same way we would evaluate a business for acquisition in its entirety.”

“(1) one we can understand, (2) with favorable long-term prospects, (3) operated by honest and competent people, and (4) available at a very attractive price”

“We ordinarily make no attempt to buy equities for anticipated favorable stock price behavior in the short term……..we welcome lower market prices of stocks we own as an opportunity to acquire even more of a good thing at a better price”

“Our experience has been that pro-rata portions of truly outstanding businesses sometimes sell in the securities markets at very large discounts from the prices they would command in negotiated transactions involving entire companies.”

“bargains in business ownership, which simply are not available directly through corporate acquisition, can be obtained indirectly through stock ownership. When prices are appropriate, we are willing to take very large positions in selected companies, not with any intention of taking control and not foreseeing sell-out or merger, but with the expectation that excellent business results by corporations will translate over the long term into correspondingly excellent market value and dividend results for owners”

“While control would give us the opportunity – and the responsibility – to manage operations and corporate resources, we would not be able to provide management in either of those respects equal to that now in place. In effect, we can obtain a better management result through non-control than control”

 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY INC.
  
 To the Stockholders of Berkshire Hathaway Inc.:
  
      Operating earnings in 1977 of $21,904,000, or $22.54 per 
 share, were moderately better than anticipated a year ago.  Of 
 these earnings, $1.43 per share resulted from substantial 
 realized capital gains by Blue Chip Stamps which, to the extent 
 of our proportional interest in that company, are included in our 
 operating earnings figure.  Capital gains or losses realized 
 directly by Berkshire Hathaway Inc. or its insurance subsidiaries 
 are not included in our calculation of operating earnings.  While 
 too much attention should not be paid to the figure for any 
 single year, over the longer term the record regarding aggregate 
 capital gains or losses obviously is of significance.
  
      Textile operations came in well below forecast, while the 
 results of the Illinois National Bank as well as the operating 
 earnings attributable to our equity interest in Blue Chip Stamps 
 were about as anticipated.  However, insurance operations, led 
 again by the truly outstanding results of Phil Liesche’s 
 managerial group at National Indemnity Company, were even better 
 than our optimistic expectations.
  
      Most companies define “record” earnings as a new high in 
 earnings per share.  Since businesses customarily add from year 
 to year to their equity base, we find nothing particularly 
 noteworthy in a management performance combining, say, a 10% 
 increase in equity capital and a 5% increase in earnings per 
 share.  After all, even a totally dormant savings account will 
 produce steadily rising interest earnings each year because of 
 compounding.
  
      Except for special cases (for example, companies with 
 unusual debt-equity ratios or those with important assets carried 
 at unrealistic balance sheet values), we believe a more 
 appropriate measure of managerial economic performance to be 
 return on equity capital.  In 1977 our operating earnings on 
 beginning equity capital amounted to 19%, slightly better than 
 last year and above both our own long-term average and that of 
 American industry in aggregate.  But, while our operating 
 earnings per share were up 37% from the year before, our 
 beginning capital was up 24%, making the gain in earnings per 
 share considerably less impressive than it might appear at first 
 glance.
  
      We expect difficulty in matching our 1977 rate of return 
 during the forthcoming year.  Beginning equity capital is up 23% 
 from a year ago, and we expect the trend of insurance 
 underwriting profit margins to turn down well before the end of 
 the year.  Nevertheless, we expect a reasonably good year and our 
 present estimate, subject to the usual caveats regarding the 
 frailties of forecasts, is that operating earnings will improve 
 somewhat on a per share basis during 1978.
  
 Textile Operations
  
      The textile business again had a very poor year in 1977.  We 
 have mistakenly predicted better results in each of the last two 
 years.  This may say something about our forecasting abilities, 
 the nature of the textile industry, or both.  Despite strenuous 
 efforts, problems in marketing and manufacturing have persisted.  
 Many difficulties experienced in the marketing area are due 
 primarily to industry conditions, but some of the problems have 
 been of our own making.
  
      A few shareholders have questioned the wisdom of remaining 
 in the textile business which, over the longer term, is unlikely 
 to produce returns on capital comparable to those available in 
 many other businesses.  Our reasons are several: (1) Our mills in 
 both New Bedford and Manchester are among the largest employers 
 in each town, utilizing a labor force of high average age 
 possessing relatively non-transferable skills.  Our workers and 
 unions have exhibited unusual understanding and effort in 
 cooperating with management to achieve a cost structure and 
 product mix which might allow us to maintain a viable operation. 
 (2) Management also has been energetic and straightforward in its 
 approach to our textile problems.  In particular, Ken Chace’s 
 efforts after the change in corporate control took place in 1965 
 generated capital from the textile division needed to finance the 
 acquisition and expansion of our profitable insurance operation.  
 (3) With hard work and some imagination regarding manufacturing 
 and marketing configurations, it seems reasonable that at least 
 modest profits in the textile division can be achieved in the 
 future.
  
 Insurance Underwriting
  
      Our insurance operation continued to grow significantly in 
 1977.  It was early in 1967 that we made our entry into this 
 industry through the purchase of National Indemnity Company and 
 National Fire and Marine Insurance Company (sister companies) for 
 approximately $8.6 million.  In that year their premium volume 
 amounted to $22 million.  In 1977 our aggregate insurance premium 
 volume was $151 million.  No additional shares of Berkshire 
 Hathaway stock have been issued to achieve any of this growth.
  
      Rather, this almost 600% increase has been achieved through 
 large gains in National Indemnity’s traditional liability areas 
 plus the starting of new companies (Cornhusker Casualty Company 
 in 1970, Lakeland Fire and Casualty Company in 1971, Texas United 
 Insurance Company in 1972, The Insurance Company of Iowa in 1973, 
 and Kansas Fire and Casualty Company in late 1977), the purchase 
 for cash of other insurance companies (Home and Automobile 
 Insurance Company in 1971, Kerkling Reinsurance Corporation, now 
 named Central Fire and Casualty Company, in 1976, and Cypress 
 Insurance Company at yearend 1977), and finally through the 
 marketing of additional products, most significantly reinsurance, 
 within the National Indemnity Company corporate structure.
  
      In aggregate, the insurance business has worked out very 
 well.  But it hasn’t been a one-way street.  Some major mistakes 
 have been made during the decade, both in products and personnel.  
 We experienced significant problems from (1) a surety operation 
 initiated in 1969, (2) the 1973 expansion of Home and 
 Automobile’s urban auto marketing into the Miami, Florida area, 
 (3) a still unresolved aviation “fronting” arrangement, and (4) 
 our Worker’s Compensation operation in California, which we 
 believe retains an interesting potential upon completion of a 
 reorganization now in progress.  It is comforting to be in a 
 business where some mistakes can be made and yet a quite 
 satisfactory overall performance can be achieved.  In a sense, 
 this is the opposite case from our textile business where even 
 very good management probably can average only modest results.  
 One of the lessons your management has learned - and, 
 unfortunately, sometimes re-learned - is the importance of being 
 in businesses where tailwinds prevail rather than headwinds.
  
      In 1977 the winds in insurance underwriting were squarely 
 behind us.  Very large rate increases were effected throughout 
 the industry in 1976 to offset the disastrous underwriting 
 results of 1974 and 1975.  But, because insurance policies 
 typically are written for one-year periods, with pricing mistakes 
 capable of correction only upon renewal, it was 1977 before the 
 full impact was felt upon earnings of those earlier rate 
 increases.
  
      The pendulum now is beginning to swing the other way.  We 
 estimate that costs involved in the insurance areas in which we 
 operate rise at close to 1% per month.  This is due to continuous 
 monetary inflation affecting the cost of repairing humans and 
 property, as well as “social inflation”, a broadening definition 
 by society and juries of what is covered by insurance policies.  
 Unless rates rise at a comparable 1% per month, underwriting 
 profits must shrink.  Recently the pace of rate increases has 
 slowed dramatically, and it is our expectation that underwriting 
 margins generally will be declining by the second half of the 
 year.
  
      We must again give credit to Phil Liesche, greatly assisted 
 by Roland Miller in Underwriting and Bill Lyons in Claims, for an 
 extraordinary underwriting achievement in National Indemnity’s 
 traditional auto and general liability business during 1977.  
 Large volume gains have been accompanied by excellent 
 underwriting margins following contraction or withdrawal by many 
 competitors in the wake of the 1974-75 crisis period.  These 
 conditions will reverse before long.  In the meantime, National 
 Indemnity’s underwriting profitability has increased dramatically 
 and, in addition, large sums have been made available for 
 investment.  As markets loosen and rates become inadequate, we 
 again will face the challenge of philosophically accepting 
 reduced volume.  Unusual managerial discipline will be required, 
 as it runs counter to normal institutional behavior to let the 
 other fellow take away business - even at foolish prices.
  
      Our reinsurance department, managed by George Young, 
 improved its underwriting performance during 1977.  Although the 
 combined ratio (see definition on page 12) of 107.1 was 
 unsatisfactory, its trend was downward throughout the year.  In 
 addition, reinsurance generates unusually high funds for 
 investment as a percentage of premium volume.
  
      At Home and Auto, John Seward continued to make progress on 
 all fronts.  John was a battlefield promotion several years ago 
 when Home and Auto’s underwriting was awash in red ink and the 
 company faced possible extinction.  Under his management it 
 currently is sound, profitable, and growing.
  
      John Ringwalt’s homestate operation now consists of five 
 companies, with Kansas Fire and Casualty Company becoming 
 operational late in 1977 under the direction of Floyd Taylor.  
 The homestate companies had net premium volume of $23 million, up 
 from $5.5 million just three years ago.  All four companies that 
 operated throughout the year achieved combined ratios below 100, 
 with Cornhusker Casualty Company, at 93.8, the leader.  In 
 addition to actively supervising the other four homestate 
 operations, John Ringwalt manages the operations of Cornhusker 
 which has recorded combined ratios below 100 in six of its seven 
 full years of existence and, from a standing start in 1970, has 
 grown to be one of the leading insurance companies operating in 
 Nebraska utilizing the conventional independent agency system.  
 Lakeland Fire and Casualty Company, managed by Jim Stodolka, was 
 the winner of the Chairman’s Cup in 1977 for achieving the lowest 
 loss ratio among the homestate companies.  All in all, the 
 homestate operation continues to make excellent progress.
  
      The newest addition to our insurance group is Cypress 
 Insurance Company of South Pasadena, California.  This Worker’s 
 Compensation insurer was purchased for cash in the final days of 
 1977 and, therefore, its approximate $12.5 million of volume for 
 that year was not included in our results.  Cypress and National 
 Indemnity’s present California Worker’s Compensation operation 
 will not be combined, but will operate independently utilizing 
 somewhat different marketing strategies.  Milt Thornton, 
 President of Cypress since 1968, runs a first-class operation for 
 policyholders, agents, employees and owners alike.  We look 
 forward to working with him.
  
      Insurance companies offer standardized policies which can be 
 copied by anyone.  Their only products are promises.  It is not 
 difficult to be licensed, and rates are an open book.  There are 
 no important advantages from trademarks, patents, location, 
 corporate longevity, raw material sources, etc., and very little 
 consumer differentiation to produce insulation from competition.  
 It is commonplace, in corporate annual reports, to stress the 
 difference that people make.  Sometimes this is true and 
 sometimes it isn’t.  But there is no question that the nature of 
 the insurance business magnifies the effect which individual 
 managers have on company performance.  We are very fortunate to 
 have the group of managers that are associated with us.
  
 Insurance Investments
  
      During the past two years insurance investments at cost 
 (excluding the investment in our affiliate, Blue Chip Stamps) 
 have grown from $134.6 million to $252.8 million.  Growth in 
 insurance reserves, produced by our large gain in premium volume, 
 plus retained earnings, have accounted for this increase in 
 marketable securities.  In turn, net investment income of the 
 Insurance Group has improved from $8.4 million pre-tax in 1975 to 
 $12.3 million pre-tax in 1977.
  
      In addition to this income from dividends and interest, we 
 realized capital gains of $6.9 million before tax, about one-
 quarter from bonds and the balance from stocks.  Our unrealized 
 gain in stocks at yearend 1977 was approximately $74 million but 
 this figure, like any other figure of a single date (we had an 
 unrealized loss of $17 million at the end of 1974), should not be 
 taken too seriously.  Most of our large stock positions are going 
 to be held for many years and the scorecard on our investment 
 decisions will be provided by business results over that period, 
 and not by prices on any given day.  Just as it would be foolish 
 to focus unduly on short-term prospects when acquiring an entire 
 company, we think it equally unsound to become mesmerized by 
 prospective near term earnings or recent trends in earnings when 
 purchasing small pieces of a company; i.e., marketable common 
 stocks.
  
      A little digression illustrating this point may be 
 interesting.  Berkshire Fine Spinning Associates and Hathaway 
 Manufacturing were merged in 1955 to form Berkshire Hathaway Inc.  
 In 1948, on a pro forma combined basis, they had earnings after 
 tax of almost $18 million and employed 10,000 people at a dozen 
 large mills throughout New England.  In the business world of 
 that period they were an economic powerhouse.  For example, in 
 that same year earnings of IBM were $28 million (now $2.7 
 billion), Safeway Stores, $10 million, Minnesota Mining, $13 
 million, and Time, Inc., $9 million.  But, in the decade 
 following the 1955 merger aggregate sales of $595 million 
 produced an aggregate loss for Berkshire Hathaway of $10 million.  
 By 1964 the operation had been reduced to two mills and net worth 
 had shrunk to $22 million, from $53 million at the time of the 
 merger.  So much for single year snapshots as adequate portrayals 
 of a business.
  
      Equity holdings of our insurance companies with a market 
 value of over $5 million on December 31, 1977 were as follows:
  
 No. of Shares  Company                                     Cost      Market
 -------------  -------                                   --------   --------
                                                            (000’s omitted)
     220,000    Capital Cities Communications, Inc. ..... $ 10,909   $ 13,228  
   1,986,953    Government Employees Insurance 
                   Company Convertible Preferred ........   19,417     33,033  
   1,294,308    Government Employees Insurance 
                   Company Common Stock .................    4,116     10,516
     592,650    The Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc.     4,531     17,187  
     324,580    Kaiser Aluminum& Chemical Corporation ...   11,218      9,981
   1,305,800    Kaiser Industries, Inc. .................      778      6,039
     226,900    Knight-Ridder Newspapers, Inc. ..........    7,534      8,736
     170,800    Ogilvy & Mather International, Inc. .....    2,762      6,960
     934,300    The Washington Post Company Class B .....   10,628     33,401
                                                          --------   --------
                Total ................................... $ 71,893   $139,081
                All Other Holdings ......................   34,996     41,992
                                                          --------   --------
                Total Equities .......................... $106,889   $181,073
                                                          ========   ========
  
      We select our marketable equity securities in much the same 
 way we would evaluate a business for acquisition in its entirety.  
 We want the business to be (1) one that we can understand, (2) 
 with favorable long-term prospects, (3) operated by honest and 
 competent people, and (4) available at a very attractive price.  
 We ordinarily make no attempt to buy equities for anticipated 
 favorable stock price behavior in the short term.  In fact, if 
 their business experience continues to satisfy us, we welcome 
 lower market prices of stocks we own as an opportunity to acquire 
 even more of a good thing at a better price.
  
      Our experience has been that pro-rata portions of truly 
 outstanding businesses sometimes sell in the securities markets 
 at very large discounts from the prices they would command in 
 negotiated transactions involving entire companies.  
 Consequently, bargains in business ownership, which simply are 
 not available directly through corporate acquisition, can be 
 obtained indirectly through stock ownership.  When prices are 
 appropriate, we are willing to take very large positions in 
 selected companies, not with any intention of taking control and 
 not foreseeing sell-out or merger, but with the expectation that 
 excellent business results by corporations will translate over 
 the long term into correspondingly excellent market value and 
 dividend results for owners, minority as well as majority.
  
      Such investments initially may have negligible impact on our 
 operating earnings.  For example, we invested $10.9 million in 
 Capital Cities Communications during 1977.  Earnings attributable 
 to the shares we purchased totaled about $1.3 million last year.  
 But only the cash dividend, which currently provides $40,000 
 annually, is reflected in our operating earnings figure.
  
      Capital Cities possesses both extraordinary properties and 
 extraordinary management.  And these management skills extend 
 equally to operations and employment of corporate capital.  To 
 purchase, directly, properties such as Capital Cities owns would 
 cost in the area of twice our cost of purchase via the stock 
 market, and direct ownership would offer no important advantages 
 to us.  While control would give us the opportunity - and the 
 responsibility - to manage operations and corporate resources, we 
 would not be able to provide management in either of those 
 respects equal to that now in place.  In effect, we can obtain a 
 better management result through non-control than control.  This 
 is an unorthodox view, but one we believe to be sound.
  
 Banking
  
      In 1977 the Illinois National Bank continued to achieve a 
 rate of earnings on assets about three times that of most large 
 banks.  As usual, this record was achieved while the bank paid 
 maximum rates to savers and maintained an asset position 
 combining low risk and exceptional liquidity.  Gene Abegg formed 
 the bank in 1931 with $250,000.  In its first full year of 
 operation, earnings amounted to $8,782.  Since that time, no new 
 capital has been contributed to the bank; on the contrary, since 
 our purchase in 1969, dividends of $20 million have been paid.  
 Earnings in 1977 amounted to $3.6 million, more than achieved by 
 many banks two or three times its size.
  
      Late last year Gene, now 80 and still running a banking 
 operation without peer, asked that a successor be brought in.  
 Accordingly, Peter Jeffrey, formerly President and Chief 
 Executive Officer of American National Bank of Omaha, has joined 
 the Illinois National Bank effective March 1st as President and 
 Chief Executive Officer.
  
      Gene continues in good health as Chairman.  We expect a 
 continued successful operation at Rockford’s leading bank.
  
 Blue Chip Stamps
  
      We again increased our equity interest in Blue Chip Stamps, 
 and owned approximately 36 1/2% at the end of 1977.  Blue Chip 
 had a fine year, earning approximately $12.9 million from 
 operations and, in addition, had realized securities gains of 
 $4.1 million.
  
      Both Wesco Financial Corp., an 80% owned subsidiary of Blue 
 Chip Stamps, managed by Louis Vincenti, and See’s Candies, a 99% 
 owned subsidiary, managed by Chuck Huggins, made good progress in 
 1977.  Since See’s was purchased by Blue Chip Stamps at the 
 beginning of 1972, pre-tax operating earnings have grown from 
 $4.2 million to $12.6 million with little additional capital 
 investment.  See’s achieved this record while operating in an 
 industry experiencing practically no unit growth.  Shareholders 
 of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. may obtain the annual report of Blue 
 Chip Stamps by requesting it from Mr. Robert H. Bird, Blue Chip 
 Stamps, 5801 South Eastern Avenue, Los Angeles, California 90040.
  
  
                                     Warren E. Buffett, Chairman
  
 March 14,1978
   


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