Warren Buffett pens last letter
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Billionaire Warren Buffett warned shareholders Monday that many companies will fare better than his Berkshire Hathaway in the decades ahead as Father Time catches up with the 95-year-old icon, but he reassured them that he remains confident in his
Warren Buffett told Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, in a Thanksgiving letter, he plans to "step up" charitable giving from his $150 billion estate.
Warren Buffett, the 95-year-old chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, started his annual Thanksgiving letter by saying: "I'm 'going quiet.' Sort of." While he will continue writing his Thanksgiving message to his children and shareholders each year,
Buffett promised to keep in touch with shareholders through Thanksgiving letters in the future, but he confirmed that next year Greg Abel will take over Buffett's famous yearly letter and answer all the questions at the annual meeting after he becomes CEO in January. Buffett will remain chairman.
Warren Buffett said post-2008 rules requiring companies to disclose CEO pay ratios lead to more envy and greed — and longer proxy statements.
Warren Buffett says you should decide what you want your obituary to say and then live your life to deserve it.
Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett wrote that he will keep a “significant amount” of the company’s Class A stock until his fellow shareholders grow comfortable with his successor as CEO, Greg Abel.“That level of confidence shouldn’t take long,
He understands many of our businesses and personnel far better than I now do,” the Berkshire CEO said in a letter.