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Transcript of Warren Buffett on America, Life and Money

Read the full transcript of a conversation between Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett and Charlie Rose on America, Life and Money. [Original Air Date: 10/1/2008)

Listen to the audio version here:

Introduction

CHARLIE ROSE: Warren Buffett is retiring as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway at the end of 2025. He is 94 years old. Most consider him the greatest investor of our time. Some say the greatest investor of all time. He built Berkshire Hathaway into a trillion dollar company and his net worth is over $160 billion. But there is much more to his story than his financial genius and the numbers.

This is not an obituary. It is simply a moment to look at a man and appreciate what he means to all of us. He views himself as an artist and his company as a painting. He has represented the best of capitalism and the best of America. He feels a profound obligation to his stockholders, whom he has also made very rich. He understands his credibility and uses it appropriately. If Warren believes in you, that is money in the bank. His gift is his intelligence, but also his common sense, his sense of history and his wit.

He is a man, as Hamlet said about his father, the King, we shall not see his like again. I consider it one of the great blessings of my life that Warren and I became friends. And I cherish his support and what I’ve learned from him about life.

Of our many interviews, his favorite is this one in 2008, at the height of the financial crisis, when his strength of character and belief in America helped many who were losing their confidence, their savings, and their faith in the future.

We are in San Diego, California this afternoon for a conversation with Warren Buffett. He is a man congressional leaders, the administration and the federal reserve want to talk to. He is the legendary chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway. Its success has made him the world’s richest man. He’s admired for his investment results over a long period of time. He is trusted for his common sense and the fact that he’s warned over the years in his annual letter to stockholders about some of the things that are contributing to the crisis facing America and the global economy.

For all those reasons, we have come to see him in San Diego, which is where he is attending the Fortune magazine’s most powerful women’s Summit. Later, he will be interviewed at that conference by the Fortune reporter and longtime friend, Carol Loomis. We come this evening from the studios of our public television affiliate in San Diego, KPBS. I thank my friend Warren Buffett for taking time in a busy schedule to talk to us.

WARREN BUFFETT: My pleasure, Charlie.

Investments During the Financial Crisis

CHARLIE ROSE: Let me talk with the news of today. You have announced an investment of $3 billion in General Electric along the same terms as the Goldman Sachs.

WARREN BUFFETT: Yeah, almost identical.

CHARLIE ROSE: Why? G.E.

WARREN BUFFETT: Well, I got a call this morning from a friend of mine at Goldman Sachs saying they might be interested in such an investment. I’m familiar with the company. I’ve known the management, the current management, Jack Welch before Jeff Immelt, I’ve known him for decades. And so I understand their businesses. We do a lot of business with them.

And, you know, GE is going to be around. I think it’s the longest running stock in the Dow Jones Industrial average. It’ll be 100 years now. It’ll be around. I hope I’m around then, too. And it was an attractive investment. And we’ve had a lot of money around over the last few years and we’re seeing some things that are attractive now.

CHARLIE ROSE: Are you looking at other things?

WARREN BUFFETT: I look at everything, Charlie. That’s my job. I really do. I mean, every day I think about everything.

CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah, I know, but. But cash is said to be king now. I mean, are you sitting on a lot of cash so that this is a time for Berkshire Hathaway and Warren Buffett to look carefully at a lot of opportunities?

WARREN BUFFETT: Yeah, we want to use cash. The reason we haven’t used our cash two years ago, we just didn’t find things that were that attractive. But when people talk about cash being king, it’s not king if it just sits there and never does anything. There are times when cash buys more than other times, and this is one of the times when it buys a fair amount more and so we use it.

CHARLIE ROSE: There’s a time to accumulate and a time to spend.

WARREN BUFFETT: Absolutely. Yeah. You want to be greedy when others are fearful, and you want to be fearful when others are greedy. It’s that simple.

CHARLIE ROSE: And where are they now?

WARREN BUFFETT: They’re pretty fearful. In fact, in my adult lifetime, I don’t think I’ve ever seen people as fearful economically as they are right now.

The Economic Crisis

CHARLIE ROSE: And why is that?

WARREN BUFFETT: Well, it’s because they have seen the credit market seize up. They’ve gotten worried about money market funds, although the latest proposition from government should take care of that. They’ve seen 8% of the bank deposits in the United States get moved very skillfully, I might say, within the last couple of weeks, from institutions that they thought were fine a few months ago to other institutions. I mean, they are not wrong to be worried.

CHARLIE ROSE: Is it being felt, as people often point out, on Main Street?

WARREN BUFFETT: Well, it’s been… You know, I read about auto sales today. I mean, if you’re an auto dealer, you’re feeling it. If you’re a furniture retailer, like we are, you’re feeling it. If you’re a jewelry retailer, you’re feeling it. I know some of these businesses, we’re in them. Yeah, it’s being felt, but it’ll be felt big time, more if we don’t do something about it.

CHARLIE ROSE: The Senate will vote sometime this evening.