Author: Warren Buffett
Period: 1965–present
Format: Free online at berkshirehathaway.com
Compiled Edition: Berkshire Hathaway Letters to Shareholders 1965–2012
Difficulty: Beginner to Intermediate
"What we learn from history is that people don't learn from history." — Warren Buffett
Why These Letters Matter
There is no comparable resource in the history of investing. For over 60 years, the most successful investor of all time has written a detailed, candid, and often entertaining letter explaining his decisions — what he bought, what he sold, what he got wrong, and why.
Unlike books, which capture thinking at a single point in time, the letters form a continuous record. You can watch Buffett's framework evolve in real time: from Graham-style cigar butts in the 1960s, to the Munger-influenced quality shift in the 1970s and 1980s, to the massive capital allocation decisions of the 2000s and beyond.
The letters are free. They require no special financial knowledge to understand. Buffett deliberately writes for an audience of intelligent laypeople, not Wall Street professionals. He uses analogies, humor, and plain English where other CEOs hide behind jargon and obfuscation.
About Warren Buffett
Warren Edward Buffett (born 1930) is the chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway and widely considered the greatest investor in history. His track record speaks for itself: from 1965 to 2024, Berkshire Hathaway's per-share market value has compounded at approximately 19.8% annually, turning every $1,000 invested into over $42 million.
Buffett discovered value investing at age 19 after reading The Intelligent Investor. He studied under Benjamin Graham at Columbia Business School, worked at Graham's investment firm, then started his own partnership in 1956 with $105,100. He took control of Berkshire Hathaway in 1965 and has been at the helm ever since.
What makes Buffett unique is not just his returns but his transparency. While most successful investors guard their methods, Buffett has spent his entire career teaching through his annual letters, annual meeting Q&As, and media appearances. He treats shareholders as partners and the letters as his primary communication channel.
How to Read the Letters
The archive can feel overwhelming. Here is a practical approach:
Phase 1 — The Foundation (4 letters) Start with 1977, 1986, 1992, and 2007. These cover Buffett's core philosophy, acquisition criteria, the distinction between accounting earnings and owner earnings, and his thoughts on derivatives and systemic risk.
Phase 2 — Crisis Letters Read the letters from crisis years: 2001 (dot-com crash), 2008 (financial crisis), 2020 (COVID). These reveal how a disciplined investor thinks and acts when everyone else is panicking. Buffett's calm in these letters is more instructive than a shelf of textbooks.
Phase 3 — Chronological Deep Dive Read from 1977 forward, one letter per week. Watch the evolution from a small investment partnership to a $900 billion conglomerate. Pay attention to the mistakes Buffett discusses — he is unusually candid about errors, and these sections are often the most valuable.
What to look for in each letter:
- The "owner earnings" calculation (free cash flow before Buffett made the term popular)
- Commentary on specific acquisitions and why they fit Berkshire's criteria
- Discussions of management quality and capital allocation decisions
- Warnings about financial engineering, leverage, and speculation
- Annual performance comparison against the S&P 500
Key Themes Across 60 Years
Certain ideas recur throughout the letters with remarkable consistency:
Owner mentality — Buffett thinks of stocks as fractional ownership of businesses, not ticker symbols. Every analysis starts with "would I buy the entire company if I could?" This perspective eliminates most bad investments immediately.
Circle of competence — Buffett only invests in businesses he understands. He famously avoided technology stocks for decades, not because they were bad investments, but because he couldn't predict their competitive dynamics 10 years out. He would rather miss opportunities than make mistakes.
Management integrity — Buffett insists on managers who are honest, hardworking, and think like owners. He has walked away from financially attractive deals because he didn't trust the people running the business.
Capital allocation as the CEO's most important job — A CEO who generates $1 billion in cash flow must decide: reinvest in the business, make acquisitions, pay dividends, or buy back stock. Buffett argues that most CEOs are terrible at this decision, and the letters are a 60-year tutorial on how to get it right.
Long-term orientation — "Our favorite holding period is forever." Buffett does not trade. He does not time the market. He buys businesses he wants to own for decades and then gets out of the way.
Greatest Hits — Must-Read Letters
| Year | Key Topic | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1977 | Core investment philosophy | The clearest statement of how Buffett evaluates businesses |
| 1979 | Inflation and investing | How inflation destroys returns — relevant in every era |
| 1986 | Acquisition criteria | The four tests Berkshire applies before buying any business |
| 1992 | Owner earnings explained | Buffett defines the cash flow concept he actually uses |
| 1999 | Market expectations vs. reality | Written at the peak of the dot-com bubble — prescient |
| 2001 | Post-crash wisdom | How value investors respond when markets collapse |
| 2007 | Derivatives as weapons of mass destruction | Written one year before the financial crisis proved him right |
| 2008 | During the crisis | Calm, rational, buying while others were selling |
| 2014 | Advice to his wife's trustee | The simplest investment advice Buffett has ever given |
| 2023 | Tribute to Charlie Munger | Buffett's farewell to his partner of 60 years |
How FairValueLabs Applies These Ideas
| Buffett's Teaching | FairValueLabs Tool | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Owner earnings | Fair Value Lab | Calculates intrinsic value from cash flows |
| Circle of competence | Value Investor Quiz | Tests your understanding before you invest |
| Management quality | Moat Ratings | ROIC consistency reflects management skill |
| Capital allocation | Dividend Safety | Evaluates how companies return cash to owners |
| Margin of safety | Strike Zone | Identifies when price is below intrinsic value |
The Berkshire letters are not just a reading recommendation — they are the curriculum. Everything FairValueLabs builds is an attempt to make Buffett's analytical framework accessible to investors who don't have 60 years to read annual reports.