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Monday, May 18, 2009
Kathy Kristof :: Townhall.com Columnist
Charlie Munger's Got a Billion Words of Wisdom
by Kathy Kristof
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About an hour before Charlie Munger, the Oracle of Pasadena, is set to speak, the pilgrims start filling a ballroom at the Pasadena Civic Center.

I am one of them. As I settle in, I meet Imelda McCarthy, retired and "a bit over 21," who is here from Dublin, Ireland, and attending with her 34-year-old son, Darrach, who lives in West Los Angeles. Bush Helzberg, an investment manager, flew in with his wife from Kansas City, Mo. Michael McGowan, author of "The Guide to Gold," comes every year from just down the street in Pasadena.

The 85-year-old Munger, round, balding, wearing a nondescript suit, is vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. of Omaha, the company chaired by Warren Buffett.

Technically, this is a shareholders meeting for Wesco Financial Corp., a Pasadena company that's chaired by Munger and 80 percent owned by Blue Chip Stamps, which is owned by Berkshire Hathaway. But that part of the event, held May 6, was adjourned in less than five minutes.

In reality, this is Munger-fest -- the one time of year when shareholders, investment managers and the press get to listen to Munger's musings and ask him questions. The Pasadena billionaire, who is Buffett's right-hand man, is considered one of the world's savviest investors -- someone who has helped guide Buffett's portfolio picks since 1959.

Like hundreds of people in the room, I clear my calendar to get an annual dose of Munger's down-home wisdom and uncommon sense. He calls us -- the people who come from every corner of the globe to listen to him -- "cultists." He gives us hope.

"I'm here to soak up more of his wisdom," Helzberg said. "It's priceless."

A lifetime of practicing what he preaches has made Munger a billionaire: Good businesses are ethical businesses, he tells us. A business model that relies on trickery is doomed to fail.

Munger starts the session with "Socratic solitaire," in which he asks himself a series of questions.

"How serious is the present economic mess?" Munger asks. "Deadly serious. The worst mess since the Great Depression. You can't tell what happens when people get discouraged enough."

He praised the government's aggressive response to the crisis. But he says it might not work -- and cites the example of Japan, where significant government intervention in a financial crash was ineffective.

Darrach McCarthy, who also has attended several Berkshire Hathaway annual meetings, said he preferred this one. At the Berkshire meetings, Munger usually passes the microphone to Buffett, who of course has devotees of his own. But fans at this meeting hang on to Munger's every word.

"You only hear from Charlie Munger here," Darrach McCarthy said. "He's got a very original take on things."

Munger sees little need to discuss Berkshire's sorry performance. Many of the people here were at Berkshire's annual meeting just a few days before. Berkshire lost 9.6 percent of its book value in 2008 -- the company's worst performance in 44 years. It's still considerably better than the Standard & Poor's 500 index, but not good enough.

Instead, Munger focuses on Wesco and its long-term outlook. He says Wesco is solid and well-financed, and predicts that the financial crisis will have no lasting effect. Continued...

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About The Author

Kathy Kristof is a personal finance writer.

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