This Is How Warren Buffett Made $85 Billion - YouTube

Channel: The Infographics Show

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Warren Buffet: a name synonymous with capitalism, the American dream and financial success.
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But how did a poor boy growing up in the Great Depression go on to become one of the richest
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men in the world? Hello, and welcome to The Infographics Show- today we're taking a look
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at an American financial legend and how he made his fortune.
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Warren Buffet was born August 30th, 1930 in Omaha, Nebraska. Exposed to the brutal reality
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of the American Great Depression, Buffet learned to respect the value of money early in life.
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In the grip of one of the worst financial crisis in American history, his family lost
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all of their savings as the bank where they kept their money closed just before his first
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birthday. Living in poverty, Buffet would grow up watching his mother skip dinner so
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that his exhausted father, working any jobs he could find, could eat a full portion. He
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would also endure the shame of his family skipping church because of mandatory tithing
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they could not afford. Rather than languish in hardship however, a young Warren boldly
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declared one night at the dinner table that he would make his first million dollars by
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age 35, or he would throw himself off the tallest building in Omaha.
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From a young age Warren Buffet showed an incredible talent for math and numbers. He was specially
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interested in patterns, and would play games where he recorded the license plate numbers
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of passing cars and then that night would write them all down and figure out which number
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came up most often. This finely honed talent for pattern recognition eventually drew him
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to a new game that would foreshadow the life to come- one day as he watched men buying
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soda from a machine, he became curious and started gathering up the discarded bottle
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caps. That evening he returned home and counted up all the bottle caps he had collected, then
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repeated the process for an entire week, thus learning which brand of soda had the best
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sales and which flavors were preferred. His mind drawn to numbers, patterns and finances,
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Warren soon graduated to recording stock prices from his father's newspaper, repeating his
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soda pop diligence to figure out high-performing stocks. Feeling like he was watching the world
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of finance through a glass cage without being allowed to participate, a young Warren dreamed
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of that first million dollars and the opportunity to invest it.
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With the Great Depression ending, Warren watched as his father, leery of rising inflation following
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the financial boom of a post-WWII America, invested what little money he had into tangible
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assets such as gold coins, a crystal chandelier and sterling silver dinnerware. This would
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go on to influence Warren's preference of tangible over intangible assets, and an investment
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philosophy that preferred businesses with tangible assets and proven earning power.
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At age 13, he would go on to his first job as a paperboy where he realized he could maximize
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his earnings by diversifying his product line. To that effect he began to sell magazine subscriptions
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to his paper route customers, preferring to sell subscriptions just as they were about
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to expire to guarantee a quick second sale. His paper route would go on to earn him $175
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a month, or $3,000 in today's dollars.
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By the time he was 15, Warren used his earnings to buy a 40-acre farm in Nebraska and hired
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a laborer to work on the land. After graduating from high school, he used the profits from
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the farm to pay his way through earning a Bachelor of science degree from the University
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of Nebraska. Rejected by the prestigious Harvard Business School, Warren instead applied to
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and was accepted at Columbia Business School, where he would study under legendary value
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investor Benjamin Graham.
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As he left home to New York for business school, the ever-frugal Warren opted to stay at a
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local YMCA for free rather than pay for room and boarding elsewhere. He picked up a paper
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route again, but invested his money into pinball machines which he would place at local barbershops.
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Afraid that the mob owned the gaming industry though, Warren purposefully kept his operation
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small. It would be his pinball days that would teach Buffet more practical business lessons
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than school: convenience and service fetches higher prices, location is everything, efficiency
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determines profit margins, and the practical limitations of scalability for business.
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After graduating from Columbia Business School, Warren briefly returned to Omaha and studied
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public speaking while teaching investing at the University of Nebraska. In 1954, his old
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teacher and mentor, Benjamin Graham, offered him a job as an investment salesman and securities
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analyst. By 1956, Buffet had bought a home for his wife and young daughter, and had $174,000
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in savings- or just over one and a half million in today's dollars. Believing that he could
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live comfortably from his earnings on his investments alone, Warren decided to retire
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at age 26. The young Warren however quickly grew restless as his childhood dream of being
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a millionaire stirred in his head once more. Deciding he would have to be far more active
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to meet his goal, Warren came out of retirement in 1956 and started Buffet Partnership Limited.
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Building on the lessons of his youth, Warren grew his wealth by sticking to investing in
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businesses with proven earning potential and tangible assets. His most influential deal
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however would be the acquisition of Berkshire Hathaway in 1964. Originally established in
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1839 as the Valley Falls Company, Berkshire Hathaway would go on to become a highly successful
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textile manufacturer. However with declining sales following a drop in global textile sales
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after World War I, the financial future of the company looked to be on the decline. Ever
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savvy, Warren Buffet noticed that its stock prices would improve dramatically after closing
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down a mill, and thus in 1962 he invested heavily hoping for short-term gain. In 1964,
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CEO Seabury Stanton offered to buy back Warren's shares at $11.50 per share, to which Warren
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agreed. However when he received the offer in writing he saw that the price had been
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surreptitiously dropped to $11.37. Furious at this undercutting, Warren instead decided
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to buy more of the stock and took control of the company, immediately firing Stanton.
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This however put him in a situation where he owned a failing textile manufacturer, so
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while he initially maintained the core business of textiles, by 1967 he began to invest company
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money into insurance and media. Eventually, he would shut down the entire manufacturing
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side of the new Berkshire Hathaway, focusing mainly on investments, insurance, utilities
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and energy. In just a few short years, Warren Buffet had turned a failing business around
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and by the age of 30 had achieved his goal of earning one million dollars- five years
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earlier than planned.
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Berkshire Hathaway would go on to become his flagship for all business investments, and
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despite it being very successful, Warren decided to dissolve his firm, Buffet Partnership,
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in order to focus all his efforts on developing Berkshire Hathaway. After phasing out the
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textile business, Warren focused on buying assets in media such as The Washington Post,
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oil and energy company Exxon, and the insurance giant Geico. In 1979 Berkshire Hathaway began
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trading at $775 a share, reaching $1310 by year's end- this would skyrocket Warren Buffet's
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net worth to a whopping $620 million.
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Not content to rest on his laurels however, Warren had a new goal: $1 billion dollars.
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The same year his personal worth reached over $600 million, he directed Berkshire Hathaway
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to acquire stock in the television network ABC. Partnering with Capital Cities, a media
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company worth approximately 录 of ABC's net worth, Buffet helped finance a $3.5 billion
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dollar deal in exchange for a 25% stake in the combined company. This deal would rock
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the media industry as the substantially smaller Capital Cities purchased and then merged with
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the juggernaut ABC.
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Edging ever closer to his billion-dollar-goal, Warren began buying Coca-Cola stock in 1988,
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eventually amassing 7% ownership in the company- one of Berkshire Hathaway's longest and still-held
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investments. With Berkshire Hathaway's share of Coca-Cola stock alone worth $1.02 billion,
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Warren Buffet at last reached his goal of becoming a billionaire as Berkshire Hathaway
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stocks closed at $7,175 a share on May 29th, 1990.
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With careful investments built on his lessons learned as a child: preference for businesses
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with tangible assets and proven earning power, Berkshire Hathaway would go on to become one
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of the most powerful and profitable companies in the world. With Warren Buffet at its head,
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he would grow his personal fortune 17 times over just six years after earning his first
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billion, earning $17 billion by age 66. Reaching an astonishing $84. 7 billion at age 87, his
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real value would be exponentially higher today had he not given away more than $27 billion
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to charitable causes in the last decade alone, and although he is one of the world's richest
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men, he remains an astonishingly frugal man who prefers a mid-2000s style flip phone over
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a smart phone and often has McDonalds for breakfast.
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From dirt-poor to one of the wealthiest men on earth, Warren Buffet is a true capitalism
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success story and hero of the free market. Yet with today's widening wealth gap, skyrocketing
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health care costs, and the difficulty for lower-income families to find credit at affordable
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rates, is Warren Buffet's incredible success story still possible today? Let us know your
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thoughts in the comments section below, and as always if you enjoyed this video don't
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