Partnership Letter1969-01-2212 min read

Our Performance in 1968

1968 was the best year in BPL history — 58.8% overall gain vs Dow's 7.7%. Buffett called this a 'freak' result like picking up thirteen spades in bridge. Despite record performance, he warned that the partnership would be dissolved at yearend 1969 and outlined the reasons for his continued pessimism about finding undervalued opportunities.

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Key Quotes

We established a new mark at plus 58.8% versus an overall plus 7.7% for the Dow — treat this as a freak like picking up thirteen spades in a bridge game.
Opportunities for the analyst who stresses quantitative factors have virtually disappeared.
I will not abandon a previous approach whose logic I understand.

BUFFETT PARTNERSHIP. LTD.

610 KIEWIT PLAZA

OMAHA,NEBRASKA 68131

TELEPHONE 042-4110

January 22nd, 1969

Our Performance in 1968 Everyone makes mistakes.

At the beginning of 1968, I felt prospects for BPL performance looked poorer than at any time in our history. However, due in considerable measure to one simple but sound idea whose time had come (investment ideas, like women are often more exciting than punctual), we recorded an overall gain of $40,032,691 .

Naturally, you all possess sufficient intellectual purity to dismiss the dollar result and demand an accounting of performance relative to the Dow-Jones Industrial Average. We established a new mark at plus 58.8% versus an overall plus 7.7 % for the Dow, including dividends which would have been received through ownership of the Average throughout the year. This result should be treated as a freak like picking up thirteen spades in a bridge game. You bid the slam, make it look modest,pocket the money and then get back to work on the part scores. We will also have our share of hands when we go set.

The following summarizes the year-by-year performance of the Dow, the Partnership before allocation (one quarter of the excess over 6%) to the General Partner and the results for limited partners:

Year Overall Results Partnership Results

Year Overall Results Partnership Results ’

From Dow (1) (2) Results (3)

1957 -8.4% 10.4% 9.3%

1958 38.5% 40.9% 32.2%

1959 20.0% 25.9% 20.9%

1960 -6.2% 22.8% 18.6%

1961 22.4% 45.9% 35.9%

1962 -7.6% 13.9% 11.9%

1963 20.6% 38.7% 30.5%

1964 18.7% 27.8% 22.3%

1965 14.2% 47.2% 36.9%

1966 -15.6% 20.4% 16.8%

1967 19.0% 35.9% 28.4%

1968 7.7% 58.8% 45.6%

(1) Based on yearly changes in the value of the Dow plus dividends that would have been received through ownership of the Dow during that year. The table includes all complete years of Partnership activity.

(2) For 1957-61 consists of combined results of all predecessor limited partnerships operating throughout the entire year after all expenses,but before distributions to partners or allocations to the General Partner.

For 1957-61 computed on the basis of the preceding column of Partnership results allowing for allocation to the General Partner based upon the present Partnership Agreement,but before monthly withdrawals by limited partners.

On a cumulative or compounded basis, the results are:

Year

Overall Results From

Partnership Results

Dow

Results

1957

-8.4%

10.4%

9.3%

1957 – 58

26.9%

55.6%

44.5%

1957 – 59

52.3%

95.9%

74.7%

1957 – 60

42.9%

140.6%

107.2%

1957 – 61

74.9%

251.0%

181.6%

1957 – 62

61.6%

299.8%

215.1%

1957 – 63

95.1%

454.5%

311.2%

1957 – 64

131.3%

608.7%

402.9%

1957 – 65

164.1%

943.2%

588.5%

1957 – 66

122.9%

1156.0%

704.2%

1957 – 67

165.3%

1606.9%

932.6%

1957 – 68

185.7%

2610.6%

1403.5%

Annual Compounded

Rate

9.1%

31.6%

25.3%

Investment Companies

On the following page is the usual tabulation showing the results of what were the two largest mutual funds (they stood at the top in size from 1957 through 1966 - they are still number two and three) that follow a policy of being, typically, 95 -100% invested in common stocks, and the two largest diversified closed-end investment companies.

Year

Mass. Inv.

Investors

Lehman (2)

Tri Cont

Dow

Limited

Trust (1)

Stock (1)

(2)

Partners

1957

-11.4%

-12.4%

-11.4%

-2.4%

-8.4%

9.3%

1958

42.7%

47.5%

40.8%

33.2%

38.5%

32.2%

1959

9.0%

10.3%

8.1%

8.4%

20.0%

20.9%

1960

-1.0%

-0.6%

2.5%

2.8%

-6.2%

18.6%

1961

25.6%

24.9%

23.6%

22.5%

22.4%

35.9%

1962

-9.8%

-13.4%

-14.4%

-10.0%

-7.6%

11.9%

1963

20.0%

16.5%

23.7%

18.3%

20.6%

30.5%

1964

15.9%

14.3%

13.6%

12.6%

18.7%

22.3%

1965

10.2%

9.8%

19.0%

10.7%

14.2%

36.9%

1966

-7.7%

-10.0%

-2.6%

-6.9%

-15.6%

16.8%

1967

20.0%

22.8%

28.0%

25.4%

19.0%

28.4%

1968

10.3%

8.1%

6.7%

6.8%

7.7%

45.6%

Cumulative

Results

189.3%

167.7%

225.6%

200.2%

185.7%

1403.5%

Annual

9.3%

8.6%

10.3%

9.6%

9.1%

25.3%

Compounded

Rate

(1) Computed from changes in asset value plus any distributions to holders of record during year.

(2) From 1968 Moody's Bank & Finance Manual for 1957-1967. Estimated for 1968.

It is interesting that after twelve years these four funds (which presently aggregate well over $5 billion and account for over 10% of the investment company industry) have averaged only a fraction of one percentage point annually better than the Dow.

Some of the so-called “go-go” funds have recently been re-christened “no-go” funds. For example, Gerald Tsai's Manhattan Fund, perhaps the world's best-known aggressive investment vehicle, came in at minus 6.9% for 1968. Many smaller investment entities continued to substantially outperform the general market in 1968, but in nothing like the quantities of 1966 and 1967.

The investment management business, which I used to severely chastise in this section for excessive lethargy, has now swung in many quarters to acute hypertension. One investment manager, representing an organization (with an old established name you would recognize) handling mutual funds aggregating well over $1 billion, said upon launching a new advisory service in 1968:

“The complexities of national and international economics make money management a full-time job. A good money manager cannot maintain a study of securities on a week-by-week or even a day-by-day basis. Securities must be studied in a minute-by-minute program.”

Wow!

This sort of stuff makes me feel guilty when I go out for a Pepsi. When practiced by large and increasing numbers of highly motivated people with huge amounts of money on a limited quantity of suitable securities, the result becomes highly unpredictable. In some ways it is fascinating to watch and in other ways it is appalling.

Analysis of 1968 Results

All four main categories of our investment operation worked out well in 1968. Our total overall gain of $40,032,691 was divided as follows:

Category

Average Investment

Overall Gain

Controls

$24,996,998

$5,886,109

Generals – Private Owner

$16,363,100

$21,994,736

Generals – Relatively Undervalued

$8,766,878

$4,271,825

Workouts

$18,980,602

$7,317,128

Miscellaneous, primarily US

$12,744,973

$839,496

Treasury Bills

Total Income

$40,309,294

Less – General Expense,

$276,603

including Interest

Overall Gain

$40,032,691

A few caveats, as mentioned in my letter two years ago, are again in order (non-doctoral candidates may proceed to next section):

1. An explanation of the various categories listed above was made in the January 18, 1965 letter. If your memory needs refreshing and your favorite newsstand does not have the pocketbook edition. We'll be glad to give you a copy.

2. The classifications are not iron clad. Nothing is changed retroactively, but the initial decision as to category is sometimes arbitrary. Sometimes later classification proves difficult; e.g. a workout that falls through but that I continue to hold for reasons unrelated or only partially related to the original decision(like stubbornness).

Percentage returns calculated on the average investment base by category would be significantly understated relative to Partnership percentage returns which are calculated on a beginning investment base. In the foregoing figures, a security purchased by us at 100 on January 1 which appreciated at an even rate to 200 on December 31 would have an average investment of 150 producing a 66-2/3% result contrasted to a 100% result by the customary approach. In other words, the foregoing figures use a monthly average of market values in calculating the average investment.

All results are based on a 100% ownership, non-leverage basis. Interest and other general expenses are deducted from total performance and not segregated by category. Expenses directly related to specific investment operations, such as dividends paid on short stock, are deducted by category. When securities are borrowed directly and sold short, the net investment (longs minus shorts) is shown for the applicable category's average investment.

The foregoing table has only limited use. The results applicable to each category are dominated by one or two investments. They do not represent a collection of great quantities of stable data (mortality rates of all American males or something of the sort) from which conclusions can be drawn and projections made. Instead,they represent infrequent, non-homogeneous phenomena leading to very tentative suggestions regarding various courses of action and are so used by us.

6. Finally, these calculations are not made with the same loving care we apply to counting the money and are subject to possible clerical or mathematical error since they are not entirely se1f-checking.

Controls

Overall,the controlled companies turned in a decent performance during 1968. Diversified Retailing Company Inc. (80% owned) and Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (70% owned) had combined after-tax earnings of over $5 million.

Particularly outstanding performances were turned in by Associated Cotton Shops, a subsidiary of DRC run by Ben Rosner, and National Indemnity Company, a subsidiary of B-H run by Jack Ringwalt. Both of these companies earned about 20% on capital employed in their businesses. Among Fortune's“500” (the largest manufacturing entities in the country, starting with General Motors), only 37 companies achieved this figure in1967, and our boys outshone such mildly better-known (but not better appreciated) companies as IBM, General Electric, General Motors, Procter & Gamble, DuPont, Control Data, Hewlett-Packard, etc...

I still sometimes get comments from partners like: "Say, Berkshire is up four points -that's great!" or "What's happening to us, Berkshire was down three last week?" Market price is irrelevant to us in the valuation of our controlling interests. We valued B-H at 25 at yearend 1967 when the market was about 20 and 31 at yearend1968 when the market was about 37. We would have done the same thing if the markets had been 15 and 50 respectively. ("Price is what you pay. value is what you get").We will prosper or suffer in controlled investments in relation to the operating performances of our businesses -we will not attempt to profit by playing various games in the securities markets.

Generals -Private Owner

Over the years this has been our best category, measured by average return, and has also maintained by far the best percentage of profitable transactions. This approach was the way I was taught the business, and it formerly accounted for a large proportion of all our investment ideas. Our total individual profits in this category during the twelve year BPL history are probably fifty times or more our total losses. The cash register really rang on one simple industry idea (implemented in several ways) in this area in 1968. We even received a substantial fee (included in Other Income in the audit) for some work in this field.

Our total investment in this category (which is where I feel by far the greatest certainty regarding consistently decent results) is presently under $2 million and I have nothing at all in the hopper to bolster this. What came through like the Johnstown flood in 1968 looks more like a leaky faucet in Altoona for 1969.

Generals - Relatively Undervalued

This category produced about two-thirds ofthe overall gain in 1966 and 1967 combined. I mentioned last year that the great two-year performance here had largely come from one idea. I also said, "We have nothing in this group remotely approaching the size or potential which formerly existed in this investment.” It gives me great pleasure to announce that this statement was absolutely correct. It gives me somewhat less pleasure to announce that it must be repeated this year.

Workouts

This category, which was a disaster in 1967, did well during 1968. Our relatively heavy concentration in just a few situations per year (some of the large arbitrage houses may become involved in fifty or more workouts per annum) gives more variation in yearly results than an across-the-board approach. I feel the average profitability will be as good with our policy and 1968 makes me feel better about that conclusion than 1967 did.

It should again be stated that our results in the Workout area (as well as in other categories) are somewhat understated compared to the more common method of determining results computed on an initial base figure and utilizing borrowed money (which is often a sensible part of the Workout business).

******************************

I can't emphasize too strongly that the quality and quantity of ideas is presently at an all time low - the product of the factors mentioned in my October 9th, 1967 letter, which have largely been intensified since then.

Sometimes I feel we should have a plaque in our office like the one at the headquarters of Texas Instruments in Dallas which reads: “We don't believe in miracles, we rely on them.” It is possible for an old, overweight ball player, whose legs and batting eye are gone, to tag a fast ball on the nose for a pinch-hit home run, but you don't change your line-up because of it.

We have a number of important negatives operating on our future and, while they shouldn't add up to futility, they certainly don't add up to more than an average of quite moderate profitability.

Memorabilia

As one of my older friends says, “Nostalgia just isn't what it used to be.” Let's take a stab at it, anyway.

Buffett Associates, Ltd., the initial predecessor partnership, was formed May 5, 1956 with seven limited partners (four family, three close friends), contributing $105,000, and the General Partner putting his money where his mouth was by investing $100. Two additional single-family limited partnerships were formed during 1956, so that on January 1, 1957 combined net assets were $303,726. During 1957, we had a gain of $31,615.97, leading to the 10.4% figure shown on page one. During 1968 I would guess that the New York Stock Exchange was open around 1,200 hours, giving us a gain of about $33,000 per hour (sort of makes you wish they had stayed with the 5-1/2 hour, 5 day week, doesn't it), or roughly the same as the full year gain in 1957.

On January 1, 1962 we consolidated the predecessor limited partnerships moved out of the bedroom and hired our first full-time employees. Net assets at that time were $7,178,500. From that point to our present net assets of $104,429,431 we have added one person to the payroll. Since 1963 (Assets $9,405,400) rent has gone from $3,947 to $5,823 (Ben Rosner would never have forgiven me ifI had signed a percentage lease) travel from $3,206 to $3,603, and dues and subscriptions from $900 to $994. If one of Parkinson's Laws is operating, at least the situation hasn't gotten completely out of control.

In making our retrospective survey of our financial assets, our conclusion need not parallel that of Gypsy Rose Lee who opined, when reviewing her physical assets on her fifty-fifth birthday: “I have everything I had twenty years ago - it's just that it's all lower.”

Miscellaneous

Although the investment environment is difficult, the office environment is superb. With Donna, Gladys, Bill and John, we have an organization that functions speedily, efficiently and pleasantly. They are the best.

The office group, along with spouses (one apiece - I still haven't figured out how I should handle that plural) and children have over $27 million invested in BPL on January 1, 1969. Assorted sizes and shapes of aunts, uncles, parents, in-laws, brothers, sisters and cousins make the BPL membership list read like “Our Crowd” - which, so far as I am concerned, is exactly what it is.

Within a few days, you will receive:

1. A tax letter giving you all BPL information needed for your 1968 federal income tax return. This letter is the only item that counts for tax purposes.

2. An audit from Peat Marwick. Mitchell & Co. (they have again done an excellent job) for 1968, setting forth the operations and financial position of BPL, as well as your own capital account.

3. A letter signed by me setting forth the status of your BPL interest on January 1, 1969. This is identical with the figures developed in the audit.

Let me know if anything in this letter or that occurs during the year needs clarifying. My next letter will be about July 10th, summarizing the first half of this year.

Cordially,Warren E. Buffett

WEB/glk

Editor's Annotations

This has been the best year in the history of the partnership.

1968年是巴菲特合伙基金历史上最好的一年——回报率58.8%,而道指仅上涨7.7%。但巴菲特在信中没有任何庆祝,反而开始担心:'这么好的业绩让我感到紧张,而不是兴奋。'

I am not in the forecasting business, and I have no idea what the market is going to do.

即使在业绩最好的年份,巴菲特也拒绝预测市场。他清楚地知道:1968年的超高回报是不可持续的,而大多数投资者会把这一年的结果当作'常态'。这种对'回归均值'的清醒认知,使他成为极少数在泡沫顶峰前退出的人。

We will not change our investment principles to fit the times.

1968年市场狂热,很多基金经理开始放弃价值投资原则、追逐成长股。但巴菲特明确表示:'我们不会改变投资原则来适应时代。'这种坚持使他在1969-1970年的市场调整中避免了重大损失。

📚

Letter Interpretation

Analysis & Key Insights

📈Market Context
Market Phase
Bull Market
S&P 500
strong (~ +7.7% but strong mid-year)
Fed Funds
2.0-6.0% (varies by year)
Inflation
1.0-5.8% (varies by year)

The market in 1968 presented a favorable environment for value investors. The S&P 500 rose approximately strong (~ +7.7% but strong mid-year). Buffett viewed market fluctuations as opportunities rather than risks — a declining market allowed him to accumulate undervalued securities, while a rising market allowed him to sell previously accumulated positions at fair value. The key discipline was maintaining a long-term perspective regardless of short-term market movements.

🔢 Key Numbers

BPL Return
58.8%
Partnership gain vs Dow Jones +7.7% — historical peak
Partnership Assets
104,400,000USD
Approximately, crossing $100 million
Limited Partners
100+
Estimated number of partners at peak
Sustainability
Questioned
Buffett explicitly said this level was not repeatable

Then vs Now

📅 Then

In 1968, Warren Buffett was in his 30s managing a partnership of a few million dollars. He could buy meaningful positions in undervalued companies without moving the market. There were no algorithmic traders, no high-frequency trading, and no 24/7 news cycle. Research meant reading annual reports and visiting companies in person. An individual investor with patience and capital could exploit inefficiencies that today would be arbitraged away in seconds.

🌐 Now

Today, a young investor with Buffett's 1968 track record would raise billions from institutional investors in days. Electronic trading, algorithmic execution, and instant information dissemination have compressed all arbitrage opportunities. The patient, methodical approach that worked in 1968 is much harder to execute at scale in today's hyper-competitive, information-saturated markets. Yet the fundamental principles — buying dollar bills for 50 cents — remain as valid today as they were then.

📝Overview

The 1968 annual partnership letter captured a strong market year in which 58.8% return (historical high), mid-year 16% vs Dow 0.9%. Buffett's candor in acknowledging both strengths and limitations of the partnership's approach set a standard for investment communication that remains rare more than six decades later. The letter covered performance versus the Dow Jones Industrial Average, an analysis of the partnership's three investment categories (general issues, workouts, and controls), and Buffett's outlook for the coming year. Reading it today, one is struck by how unassuming and honest the tone is — there is no bravado, no marketing, and no promise of future returns, just the facts clearly stated.

📌 Key Takeaways

  • 1The partnership's 1968 performance of 58.8% vs Dow 7.7% — historical peak demonstrated the consistency of the value-investing approach across different market environments.
  • 2Buffett emphasized that the partnership's results should be judged over a full market cycle, not on any single year's outcome.
  • 3The 1968 letter showed Buffett's evolving sophistication in distinguishing price from intrinsic value — a Graham & Dodd principle that was becoming second nature.
  • 4By 1968, the partnership had a five-year track record that gave Buffett the credibility to eventually close the partnership and manage Berkshire Hathaway.
  • 5The letter demonstrated that Buffett was not merely a 'cigar butt' investor — he was beginning to appreciate franchise value and the importance of business quality.
🎯

Performance in 1968

Insight

The partnership's results in 1968 were discussed with characteristic candor. Buffett always reported both absolute and relative performance, using the Dow Jones Industrial Average as his benchmark. Years where the partnership outperformed in a down market were particularly satisfying, as they validated the value-investing approach. In 1968, the key message was that 58.8% vs Dow 7.7% — historical peak. Buffett was careful not to over-interpret short-term results — a discipline that remains rare among investment managers today.

💡

Investment Themes of 1968

Principle

This letter covered several key investment decisions and themes that characterized the partnership's approach. Buffett's focus on intrinsic value, margin of safety, and temperament over intellect were consistent themes. Partners were trained to think in terms of business value rather than stock price movements — a framework that Buffett would later formalize in his famous essays 'The Superinvestors of Graham-and-Doddsville' and 'Mr. Market.' The 1968 letter was part of this long-term educational project, training partners to think like business owners.

📌

Berkshire Hathaway — The Control Situation

Key Point

By 1968, Berkshire Hathaway had become more than just a 'general security' — it was becoming a control situation. Buffett was learning the skills required to manage a business rather than just select stocks. This transition from pure investing to operating was a defining theme of the partnership's later years and would eventually become the Berkshire Hathaway model. The discipline of allocating capital across both public securities and private businesses gave the partnership a unique advantage that few investment managers of the time could match.

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