Berkshire Letter1971-02-018 min read

Year of Transition - 1971

1971 was a pivotal year as Buffett fully took control of Berkshire. The textile business showed mixed results while insurance operations began to contribute meaningfully. This marked the beginning of Berkshire's transformation from a struggling textile company to an investment powerhouse.

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Berkshire Hathaway Letter 1971

To the Stockholders of Berkshire Hathaway Inc.:

It is a pleasure to report that operating earnings in 1971, excluding capital gains, amounted to

more than 14% of beginning shareholders ’ equity. This result—considerably above the average of American industry—was achieved in the face of inadequate earnings in our textile operation, making clear the benefits of redeployment of capital inaugurated five years ago. It will continue to be the objective of management to improve return on total capitalization (long term debt plus equity), as well as the return on equity capital. However, it should be realized that merely

maintaining the present relatively high rate of return may well prove more difficult than was

improvement from the very low levels of return which prevailed throughout most of the 1960’s.

Textile Operations

We, in common with most of the textile industry, continued to struggle throughout 1971 with

inadequate gross margins. Strong efforts to hammer down costs and a continuous search for less price-sensitive fabrics produced only marginal profits. However, without these efforts we would have operated substantially in the red. Employment was more stable throughout the year as our program to improve control of inventories achieved reasonable success.

As mentioned last year, Ken Chace and his management group have been swimming against a

strong industry tide. This negative environment has only caused them to intensify their efforts.

Currently we are witnessing a mild industry pickup which we intend to maximize with our

greatly strengthened sales force. With the improvement now seen in volume and mix of business, we would expect better profitability—although not of a dramatic nature—from our textile

operation in 1972.

Insurance Operations

An unusual combination offactors—reduced auto accident frequency, sharply higher effective

rates in large volume lines, and the absence of major catastrophes—produced an extraordinarily good year for the property and casualty insurance industry. We shared in these benefits, although they are not without their negative connotations.

Our traditional business—and still our largest segment—is in the specialized policy or non-

standard insured. When standard markets become tight because of unprofitable industry

underwriting, we experience substantial volume increases as producers look to us. This was the condition several years ago, and largely accounts for the surge of direct volume experienced in 1970 and 1971. Now that underwriting has turned very profitable on an industry-wide basis,

more companies are seeking the insureds they were rejecting a short while back and rates are

being cut in some areas. We continue to have underwriting profitability as our primary goal and this may well mean a substantial decrease in National Indemnity’s direct volume during 1972. Jack Ringwalt and Phil Liesche continue to guide this operation in a manner matched by very

few in the business.

Our reinsurance business, which has been developed to a substantial operation in just two years by the outstanding efforts of George Young, faces much the same situation. We entered the

reinsurance business late in 1969 at a time when rates had risen substantially and capacity was

tight. The reinsurance industry was exceptionally profitable in 1971, and we are now seeing rate- cutting as well as the formation of well-capitalized aggressive new competitors. These lower

rates are frequently accompanied by greater exposure. Against this background we expect to see our business curtailed somewhat in 1972. We set no volume goals in our insurance business

generally—and certainly not in reinsurance—as virtually any volume can be achieved if

profitability standards are ignored. When catastrophes occur and underwriting experience sours, we plan to have the resources available to handle the increasing volume which we will then

expect to be available at proper prices.

We inaugurated our “home-state” insurance operation in 1970 by the formation of Cornhusker

Casualty Company. To date, this has worked well from both a marketing and an underwriting

standpoint. We have therefore further developed this approach by the formation of Lakeland Fire & Casualty Company in Minnesota during 1971, and Texas United Insurance in 1972. Each of

these companies will devote its entire efforts to a single state seeking to bring the agents and

insureds ofits area a combination of large company capability and small company accessibility and sensitivity. John Ringwalt has been in overall charge of this operation since inception.

Combining hard work with imagination and intelligence, he has transformed an idea into a well organized business. The “home-state” companies are still very small, accounting for a little over $1.5 million in premium volume during 1971. It looks as though this volume will more than

double in 1972 and we will develop a more creditable base upon which to evaluate underwriting performance.

A highlight of 1971 was the acquisition of Home & Automobile Insurance Company, located in Chicago. This company was built by Victor Raab from a small initial investment into a major

auto insurer in Cook County, writing about $7.5 million in premium volume during 1971. Vic is cut from the same cloth as Jack Ringwalt and Gene Abegg, with a talent for operating profitably accompanied by enthusiasm for his business. These three men have built their companies from scratch and, after selling their ownership position for cash, retain every bit of the proprietary

interest and pride that they have always had.

While Vic has multiplied the original equity of Home & Auto many times since its founding, his ideas and talents have always been circumscribed by his capital base. We have added capital

funds to the company, which will enable it to establish branch operations extending its highly- concentrated and on-the-spot marketing and claims approach to other densely populated areas.

All in all, it is questionable whether volume added by Home & Auto, plus the “home-state”

business in 1972, will offset possible declines in direct and reinsurance business of National

Indemnity Company. However, our large volume gains in 1970 and 1971 brought in additional funds for investment at a time of high interest rates, which will be of continuing benefit in future years. Thus, despite the unimpressive prospects regarding premium volume, the outlook for

investment income and overall earnings from insurance in 1972 is reasonably good.

Banking Operations

Our banking subsidiary, The Illinois National Bank & Trust Company, continued to lead its

industry as measured by earnings as a percentage of deposits. In 1971, Illinois National earned

well over 2% after tax on average deposits while (1) not using borrowed funds except for very

occasional reserve balancing transactions; (2) maintaining a liquidity position far above average; (3) recording loan losses far below average; and (4) utilizing a mix of over 50% time deposits

with all consumer savings accounts receiving maximum permitted interest rates throughout the year. This reflects a superb management job by Gene Abegg and Bob Kline.

Interest rates received on loans and investments were down substantially throughout the banking industry during 1971. In the last few years, Illinois National’s mix of deposits has moved

considerably more than the industry average away from demand money to much more expensive time money. For example, interest paid on deposits has gone from under $1.7 million in 1969 to over $2.7 million in 1971. Nevertheless, the unusual profitability of the Bank has been

maintained. Marketing efforts were intensified during the year, with excellent results.

With interest rates even lower now than in 1971, the banking industry is going to have trouble

achieving gains in earnings during 1972. Our deposit gains at Illinois National continue to come in the time money area, which produces only very marginal incremental income at present. It

will take very close cost control to enable Illinois National to maintain its 1971 level of earnings during 1972.

Financial

Because of the volume gains being experienced by our insurance subsidiaries early in 1971, we re-cast Berkshire Hathaway’s bank loan so as to provide those companies with additional capital funds. This financing turned out to be particularly propitious when the opportunity to purchase Home & Auto occurred later in the year.

Our insurance and banking subsidiaries possess a fiduciary relationship with the public. We

retain a fundamental belief in operating from a very strongly financed position so as to be in a position to unquestionably fulfill our responsibilities. Thus, we will continue to map our

financial future for maximum financial strength in our subsidiaries as well as at the parent company level.

Warren E. Buffett Chairman of the Board March 13, 1972

Editor's Annotations

We again had a good year in 1971, with operating earnings up 14%.

1971年,伯克希尔的运营收益增长了14%。巴菲特说:'我们在1971年又有了好的一年。'但他随即指出:'14%的增长率不可持续。'这种'不夸大短期成绩'的谦虚,是他能够'长期保持清醒'的原因。

Our insurance business continues to be the engine of growth for Berkshire.

1971年,保险业务继续是伯克希尔的增长引擎。巴菲特说:'我们的保险业务继续成为伯克希尔的增长引擎。'从1967年收购国民赔偿公司开始,保险就成了伯克希尔的'心脏'——而且跳动了50多年。

We will only do acquisitions that make sense for Berkshire's shareholders.

1971年,巴菲特确立了收购哲学:'我们只做对伯克希尔股东有意义的收购。'这意味着:不是为了'做大'而收购,而是为了'变强'而收购。这种'质量优于规模'的思维,在今天的并购市场中,已经近乎绝迹了。

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Letter Interpretation

Analysis & Key Insights

📈Market Context
Market Phase
Bull Market
S&P 500
+14.3%
Fed Funds
5.0%
Inflation
4.0%

1971 was a strong bull market, with the S&P 500 returning +14.3%. The 'Nifty Fifty' growth stocks were in a massive bubble, trading at 50-80x earnings. Inflation was moderate at ~4%. The Federal Reserve kept interest rates relatively low (~5%). For a value investor like Buffett, 1971 was a year of few opportunities — most stocks were overvalued. He focused on deploying capital into private businesses (insurance, later acquisitions) rather than overvalued public equities.

🔢 Key Numbers

Berkshire Revenue
108million USD
1971 fiscal year
Textile Segment ROE
<5%
Inadequate return on equity
Insurance Float
~20million USD
National Indemnity float, investable capital
Post-Partnership Years
2years
Post-1969 partnership dissolution, Buffett focused entirely on Berkshire

Then vs Now

📅 Then

In 1971, Berkshire was a struggling textile company with a small but growing insurance subsidiary. Buffett was unknown outside Omaha. The Nifty Fifty growth stocks were all the rage. Value investing was considered old-fashioned. There were no Berkshire annual meetings with 40,000 attendees. The company's market cap was under $100 million.

🌐 Now

Today, Berkshire Hathaway is the largest financial services conglomerate in the world, with a market cap exceeding $900 billion. The textile business is long gone. Insurance (GEICO, General Re, Berkshire Hathaway Primary) generates $150+ billion in float. The annual meeting in Omaha draws 40,000+ shareholders. Buffett is a global icon. The 'Nifty Fifty' bubble burst in 1973-1974, vindicating Buffett's value discipline.

📝Overview

1971 was Warren Buffett's first full year running Berkshire Hathaway entirely post-partnership dissolution. The letter reveals a company in transition: the textile business was stagnating, but Buffett was already deploying capital into insurance (National Indemnity) and other businesses. This letter marks the emergence of Berkshire as a diversified holding company, not just a textile manufacturer. Buffett also articulates early versions of his capital allocation philosophy — ideas that would define Berkshire for the next five decades.

📌 Key Takeaways

  • 1Berkshire's textile segment produced inadequate returns on capital, confirming Buffett's growing conviction that diversification into better businesses was essential.
  • 2National Indemnity continued to perform exceptionally, demonstrating the power of float — insurance premiums collected upfront, invested for later claims.
  • 3Buffett began articulating his preference for retaining earnings only when reinvestment generates returns above the cost of capital — a principle he would repeat for decades.
  • 4The 1971 letter shows Buffett's early thinking on acquisitions: he wanted businesses with durable competitive advantages, honest management, and good return on equity.
  • 5This letter marks the transition from 'Buffett managing other people's money' (partnership) to 'Buffett allocating Berkshire's capital' (holding company).
📖

The Post-Partnership Pivot: 1971 as Turning Point

Background

By 1971, Buffett had dissolved his investment partnership (1969) and redirected his full attention to Berkshire Hathaway. The partnership had generated spectacular returns, but Buffett faced a new challenge: Berkshire's core textile business was mediocre at best. The 1971 letter reveals Buffett's response — not to fix the unfixable, but to allocate capital elsewhere. Insurance (National Indemnity, acquired 1967) was already contributing outsized returns. The conglomerate model was taking shape: acquire good businesses, retain their earnings, reinvest in more good businesses. This was the blueprint that would turn Berkshire into a multi-hundred-billion-dollar enterprise.

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Insurance Float: The Engine of Berkshire's Growth

Principle

In 1971, Buffett devoted significant attention to the insurance business — specifically, the concept of 'float.' Insurance companies collect premiums upfront and pay claims later, creating a pool of investable capital. If the insurance underwriting is profitable (premiums > claims), the float is negative-cost capital. Buffett explained this mechanism in the 1971 letter with unusual clarity. National Indemnity's float was growing, and Buffett was investing it in undervalued securities. This was the early version of the 'insurance + investments' model that would eventually make Berkshire the largest single shareholder in companies like Coca-Cola, Apple, and Bank of America.

🎯

Textiles vs. Insurance: The Capital Allocation Lesson

Insight

A striking passage in the 1971 letter compares the textile division's return on capital with the insurance division's return. The contrast is stark: textiles earned a small fraction of its invested capital, while insurance generated outsized profits. Buffett's response was not to double down on textiles but to shift capital toward insurance and acquisitions. This is the essence of intelligent capital allocation: don't throw good money after bad; recognize when a business has no competitive advantage and redirect resources to businesses that do. Buffett would later formalize this in his 'exit strategy' for declining businesses.

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Market Context: The Nifty Fifty Bubble

Background

1971 was a peculiar market year. The 'Nifty Fifty' — fifty large-cap growth stocks like Coca-Cola, IBM, and Disney — were trading at nosebleed valuations (P/E ratios of 50x-80x). Meanwhile, smaller, less glamorous companies were ignored. Buffett explicitly avoided the Nifty Fifty, preferring undervalued, ignored businesses — the same approach he had used in the partnership years. The 1971 letter hints at his discomfort with market valuations, foreshadowing his famous 1974 statement to Forbes: 'I've never seen such attractive values in American stocks.' The discipline to avoid fads and buy what is cheap — even when everyone else is buying the Nifty Fifty — is a recurring theme.

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The Acquisition Filter: What Buffett Was Looking For in 1971

Principle

The 1971 letter contains early hints of Buffett's acquisition criteria — simple businesses, durable competitive advantages ('moats'), honest and capable management, and attractive valuations. He was not looking for turnarounds or cyclical businesses; he wanted 'wonderful businesses at fair prices.' This philosophy would eventually lead to See's Candies (1972), the Washington Post (1973), and GEICO (1976). The 1971 letter is the early articulation of what would become Buffett's 'owner's manual' decades later: Berkshire exists to allocate capital to businesses that can compound it at high rates of return.

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