• Thought of the Day

    Thought of the Day

    2000: Neither we nor most business managers would dream of feverishly trading highly-profitable subsidiaries because a small move in the Federal Reserve's discount rate was predicted or because some Wall Street pundit had reversed his views on the market. Why, then, should we behave differently with our minority positions in wonderful businesses? The art of investing in public companies successfully is little different from the art of successfully acquiring subsidiaries. In each case you simply want to acquire, at a sensible price, a business with excellent economics and able, honest management. Thereafter, you need only monitor whether these qualities are being preserved.

    –Warren Buffett, chairmans letter, Berkshire Hathaway annual report, 1996,

Today in Financial History

1968: In an emergency move, the New York Stock Exchange closes 90 minutes early, at 2 p.m. The early close, reports The Wall Street Journal, is meant to help inundated trading clerks catch up on a "deluge of paper work that has resulted from a recent sustained period of unusually heavy trading." The day's total volume: 10,630,000 shares. Each side of each trade — both the buy and the sell — must be recorded by hand on a separate piece of paper, and at any given time up to $1 billion worth of trades are going unmatched because of missing paperwork.

The Wall Street Journal, January 23, 1968, p. 31;John Brooks, The Go-Go Years (Weybright and Talley, New York, 1973), pp. 184-185, 191-195