15 Highlights Of The Daily Journal (Charlie Munger) Annual Meeting – February 15, 2023

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Dr. David Kass
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Charlie Munger

These are 15 highlights of the Daily Journal (Charlie Munger) annual meeting held on February 15, 2023.  Charlie Munger responded to questions submitted by shareholders and asked by Becky Quick of CNBC from 1:00 pm – 3:30 pm EST.

Highlights Of The 2023 Daily Journal Annual Meeting

(1) Even though Charlie Munger (CM) retired from being Chairman of the Daily Journal Corporation (DJ), he still runs its stock portfolio.

(2) BYD is way ahead of Tesla in China but it is currently selling at 50 times earnings. It is expected to grow at 50% this year. He sold part of DJ’s stake in BYD a year ago at a higher price.

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Charlie Munger

(3) Buying shares in Alibaba was a mistake since it is in retailing which is very competitive.

(4) He loves Costco and will never sell a share of it. But it is selling for 40 times earnings.

(5) He believes investing in China provides  better risk/reward as compared to the U.S. China is unlikely to invade Taiwan since it learned a lesson from the difficulty Russia is having with its invasion of Ukraine.

(6) Companies that make computer chips require investing everything to stay on top (the opposite of the situations he prefers where companies would require a minimum of investment).

(7) It is ridiculous for anyone to buy cryptocurrencies. National currencies are the greatest invention ever. The Chinese are correct in banning it. Governments should not allow them to exist. It should be avoided.

(8) He never bets. (He did bet a few thousand dollars many years ago.)

(9) He does not engage in short sales. 30 years ago he had 2 trades that were short sales. One was a currency trade which made him miserable because he had to keep adding margin to his account. Eventually he made a small profit.

(10) He opposes taxing stock buybacks (responding to a question I submitted).

(11) He has never exercised. (He is 99 years old.) He now uses a wheel chair.

(12) AI will not find a cure for cancer.

(13)The movie business is a terrible business because of unions, agents, and stars.

(14) Ben Graham got rich from one investment – Geico.

(15) The U.S. health care system is in terrible shape. Insurers pay providers a small percentage of what individuals pay. Singapore has a better health care system at 20% of the cost of the U.S. system.

Article by Dr. David Kass

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David I Kass Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Finance Ph.D., Harvard University Robert H. Smith School of Business 4412 Van Munching Hall University of Maryland College Park, MD 20742-1815 Phone: 301-405-9683 Email: dkass@rhsmith.umd.edu (link sends e-mail) Dr. David Kass has published articles in corporate finance, industrial organization, and health economics. He currently teaches Advanced Financial Management and Business Finance, and is the Faculty Champion for the Accelerated Finance Fellows. Prior to joining the faculty of the Smith School in 2004, he held senior positions with the Federal Government (Federal Trade Commission, General Accounting Office, Department of Defense, and the Bureau of Economic Analysis). Dr. Kass has recently appeared on Bloomberg TV, CNBC, PBS Nightly Business Report, Maryland Public Television, Business News Network TV (Canada), Fox TV, American Public Media's Marketplace Radio, and WYPR Radio (Baltimore), and has been quoted on numerous occasions by Bloomberg News and The Wall Street Journal, where he has primarily discussed Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway. He has also launched a Smith School “Warren Buffett” blog. Dr. Kass has accompanied MBA students on trips to Omaha for private meetings with Warren Buffett, and Finance Fellows to Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meetings. He is an officer of the Harvard Business School Club of Washington, DC, and is a member of the investment and budget committees of a local nonprofit organization. Dr. Kass received a Smith School “Top 15% Teaching Award” for the 2009-2010 academic year.