My Teacher: Charlie Munger
Author:Louis Li
May 21, 2010
Source: “Chinese Entrepreneurs”
【"China Entrepreneur" Magazine】Twenty years ago, as a young student coming to
the United States, I couldn’t have imagined having a career in investments and
would never have thought that I’d be fortunate enough to meet with the
contemporary investment guru, Mr. Charlie Munger. In 2004, Mr. Munger became my
investment partner and has since become my lifelong mentor and friend -- an
opportunity I would have never dared to dream about.
I graduated from Columbia University in 1996 and founded my investment company
in 1997, thus starting my professional investment career. Till this day, the
vast majority of individual investors and institutional investors still follow
investment philosophies that are based on "bad theories." For example, they
believe in the efficient market hypothesis, and therefore believe that the
volatility of stock prices is equivalent to real risk, and they place a strong
emphasis on volatility when they judge your performance. In my view, the biggest
investment risk is not the volatility of prices, but whether you will suffer a
permanent loss of capital. Not only is the mere drop in stock prices not risk,
but it is an opportunity. Where else do you look for cheap stocks? But I found
that while, on the surface, famous fund managers appear to accept the theories
of Buffett and Munger and show great respect for their performance, they are in
actual practice the exact opposite because their clients are also the exact
opposite to Buffett and Munger. They still accept the theories that say
"volatility is risk" and "the market is always right."
A serendipitous opportunity led me to meet my lifelong mentor and friend, Mr.
Charlie Munger.
Charlie and I first met at a mutual friend’s house while I was working on
investments in LA after graduating from college. The first impression he gave me
was “distant” -- he often appeared to be absent-minded to the presence of his
conversation partners and was, instead, very focused on his own topics. But this
old man spoke succinctly; his words full of wisdom for you to mull over.
Seven years after we’ve known each other, at a Thanksgiving gathering in 2003,
we had a long heart-to-heart conversation. I introduced every single company I
have invested in, or researched, or am interested in to Charlie and he commented
on each one of them. I also asked for his advice on the problems I’ve
encountered. Towards the end, he told me that the problems I’ve encountered were
practically all the problems of Wall Street. The problem is with the way the
Wall Street thinks. Even though Berkshire Hathaway has been such a success,
there isn’t any company on Wall Street that truly imitates it. If I continue on
this path, my worries will never be eliminated. But if I was willing to give up
this path right then, to take a path different from Wall Street, he was willing
to invest. This really flattered me.
With Charlie’s help, I completely reorganized the company I founded. The
structure was changed into that of the early investment partnerships of Buffett
and Munger (note: Buffett and Munger each had partnerships to manage their own
investment portfolios) and all the shortcomings of the typical hedge funds were
eliminated. Investors who stayed made long-term investment guarantees and we no
longer accepted new investors.
Thus I entered another golden period in my investment career. I was no longer
restricted by the various limitations of Wall Street. The numbers still
fluctuate as before, but eventual result is substantial growth. From the fourth
quarter of 2004 to the end of 2009, the new fund returned an annual compound
growth rate of 36% after deducting operating costs. From the inception of the
fund in January 1998, the fund returned an annual compound growth rate in excess
of 29%. In 12 years, the capital grew more than 20 folds.
Buffett said that, despite the countless people he has met in his life, he has
never encountered anyone else like Charlie. And in the years that I’ve known
Charlie, and was fortunate to be able to intimately understand him, I am also
deeply convinced that. Even from all the biographies of people from all ages, I
have yet to see anyone similar to him. Charlie is such a unique man -- his
uniqueness is in his thinking and, also, in his personality.
When Charlie thinks about things, he starts by inverting. To understand how to
be happy in life, Charlie will study how to make life miserable; to examine how
business become big and strong, Charlie first studies how businesses decline and
die; most people care more about how to succeed in the stock market, Charlie is
most concerned about why most have failed in the stock market. His way of
thinking comes from the saying in the farmer’s philosophy: I want to know is
where I’m going to die, so I will never go there.
Charlie constantly collects and researches the notable failures in each and
every type of people, business, government, and academia, and arranges the
causes of failures into a decision-making checklist for making the right
decisions. Because of this, he has avoided major mistakes in his decision making
in his life and in his career. The importance of this on the performance of
Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway over the past 50 years cannot be emphasized
enough.
Charlie's mind is original and creative, never subject to any restrictions,
shackles, or dogmas. He has the curiosity of children and possesses the
qualities of a top-notch scientists and their scientific research methods. He
has a strong thirst for knowledge throughout his life and is interested in
practically all areas. To him, with the right approach, any problem can be
understood through self-study, building innovations on the foundation laid by
those who came earlier. His thinking radiates out to every corner of business,
life, and [areas of] knowledge. In his view, everything in the universe is an
interactive whole, and all of human knowledge are just pieces to the study of
the comprehensive whole. Only by combining of these knowledge through a
latticework of mental models can they become useful in decision-making and in
developing the proper understanding of things. So he advocates studying all the
truly important theories in all disciplines, and building on this foundation the
so-called “worldly wisdom” as a tool for studying the important issues in
business and investments.
Charlie’s way of thinking is based on being honest about knowledge. He believes
that in this complex and changing world, there will always be limitations to
human cognition and understanding, so you must use all the tools at your
disposal. And, at the same time, you must constantly collect new verifiable
evidences, correcting and updating your knowledge, and knowing what you know and
what you don’t know.
But even so, the true insights a person can get in life is still very limited,
so correct decision-making must necessarily be confined to your "circle of
competence". A “competence” that has no defined borders cannot be called a true
competence. How do you define your own circle of competence? Charlie said, if I
want to hold a view, if I cannot refute or disprove this view better than the
smartest, most capable, most qualified person on Earth, then I’m not worthy of
holding that view. So when Charlie truly holds a certain point of view, his
thinking is not only original and unique, but also almost never wrong.
A beautiful lady once insisted that Charlie use one word to sum up the source of
his success, Charlie said it was being “rational.” However, he has a more
stringent definition of rationality. It is this kind of “rationality” that
grants him the sensitive and unique vision and insight. Even in a completely
unfamiliar territory, with just one look he could see through to the essence of
things. Buffett calls this characteristic of Charlie the “two-minute effect” --
he said Charlie can, in the shortest time possible, unravel the nature of a
complex business and understand it better than anyone else can. The process of
Berkshire’s investment in BYD Auto is an example. I remember in 2003, when I
first discussed about BYD with Charlie, despite having never met Wang Chuanfu
(Chairman of BYD Auto), visited BYD’s factory, and being relatively unfamiliar
with the Chinese market and culture, his questions and comments about BYD
remains, till this day, the most pertinent questions a BYD investor need to ask.
Everyone has blind spots, and even the brightest people are no exceptions.
Buffett said: “Benjamin Graham taught me to only buy cheap stocks, Charlie
allowed me to change my thinking. That’s the real impact Charlie had on me. I
needed a powerful force to walk out of the limitations imposed by Graham’s
theories. Charlie’s ideas were that source of power -- he expanded my horizons.”
I’ve also had this profound experience. Charlie pointed out the blind spots in
my thinking; if it weren’t for his help, I’ll still be still in process of
evolution, slowly crawling along.
Charlie spent a lifetime studying disastrous human mistakes and is particularly
fond of catastrophic errors caused by human psychological tendencies. The most
valuable contribution is that he predicted the disastrous consequence of the
spread of financial derivatives and the loopholes in the accounting and auditing
system. Back in the late 1990s, he and Mr. Buffett already raised the disastrous
potentials of financial derivative products. They escalated their warnings with
the proliferation of financial derivative products, calling financial derivative
products finance-based weapons of mass destruction; if they were not stopped in
a timely and effective manner, they would have a devastating impact on the
modern society. The financial tsunami and global economic recession in 2008 and
2009 unfortunately validated Charlie’s far reaching vision and insights.
Compared with Buffett, Charlie has a far wider range of interests. For instance,
he has strong interests and has done extensive studies in almost all fields of
sciences and social sciences, integrating them to form the original and unique
Munger ideology. Compared to anything coming from within the ivory towers’
system of thinking, Munger’s doctrines are built to solve practical problems.
For example, as far as I know, Charlie was the first to propose and
systematically study human psychological tendencies and its huge impact on
decision-making processes in investments and business. Now, tens of years later,
behavioral finance has become a popular area of research in economics, with
behavioral economics winning the recognition of the Nobel Prize. The theoretical
framework Charlie describes in the final chapter of this book, “the Psychology
of Human Misjudgment," may become more widely understood and applied by people
in the future.
Charlie is naturally full of energy. Charlie was 72 years old when I first met
him in 1996. He is 86 years old this year. In the tens of years I’ve known
Charlie, his level of energy has never changed. He is always energetic and is an
early riser. Breakfast meetings always begin at 7:30 am. At the same time,
because of dinner events, his spends less time sleeping than the average people,
but that does not affect his exuberant energy. His memory is also amazing. He
still remembers BYD's operating figures I discussed with him many years ago
while my memories have already blurred.
The 86-year-old man has a better memory than this young man. These are his
innate advantages, but he acquired through hard work the unusual qualities that
contributed to his success. Once Charlie found one thing he wants to do, he can
do it for a lifetime.
To me, Charlie is not just a partner, he is also an elder, a teacher, a friend,
a role model for success and a role model in life. Not only did I learn from him
the principles of value investing, I also learned from him how to live life. He
made me understand that a person's success is not accidental. Timing and
opportunities are, of course, important, but the inherent qualities of people
are even more important.
Charlie likes to meet people for breakfasts, usually starting at 7:30 am. I
remember the first time I had breakfast with Charlie, I arrived on time, only to
find Charlie sitting there, finished with the day’s newspapers. While it was
only a few short minutes away from the 7:30, but I felt bad letting an elderly
man I respected wait for me. For our second date, I arrived about fifteen
minutes earlier and still found Charlie sitting there, reading the newspaper.
For our third meeting, I arrived half an hour earlier and Charlie was still
reading the newspaper, as if he had been waiting there all year round and had
never left the seat. For the fourth meeting, when I arrived an hour early at sat
there to begin waiting at 6:30 am, and at 6:45 am, Charlie leisurely walked in
with a pile of newspapers and sat down, not even looking up, completely unaware
of my existence. Afterwards, I came to understand that Charlie will always be
arrive early for meetings. But he doesn’t waste time either, he will take out
the newspaper he prepared to read.
In my interactions with Charlie, there was another thing that made a big impact
on me. One year, Charlie and I were attending an out-of-state meeting. After the
event, I was hurrying to get back to New York and unexpectedly met Charlie at
the airport terminal. When his huge body passed through the security detector,
for some unknown reason the detector kept being set off. Charlie returned to
again and again for the security check. He finally passed through the security
checkpoint after a long and laborious effort, but, by then, his plane had
already departed.
But Charlie was not in a hurry. He took out a book he carried with him and sat
down to read while he waited for the next plane. Incidentally, my flight was
also delayed so we waited for our flights together.
I asked Charlie: “You have your own private jet and so does Berkshire, why do
you bother going through the trouble of flying commercial?”
Charlie replied:”Firstly, it is a waste of fuel for me to fly in my private jet.
Secondly, I feel safer flying in a commercial aircraft.” However, the real
reason is Charlie’s third reason, “I want to live an engaged life. I don’t want
to be isolated.”
What Charlie can’t tolerate is to lose contact with the world because of money
and wealth. To isolate yourself in a single room behind a labyrinth of offices,
to require layers after layers of approvals to setup meetings, and to hide
behind a complicated bureaucracy so you become hard to reach for anyone - that
is how you lose touch with the realities of life.
"As long as I have a book in my hand, I don’t feel like I’m wasting time."
Charlie always carries a book on him. Even if he’s sitting in the middle seat in
economy class, as long as he has a book, he’ll have no complaint. Once he went
to Seattle to attend a board meeting, taking the economy class as usual, he sat
beside a Chinese girl who was doing her calculus homework throughout the flight.
He was impressed with this Chinese girl because he has difficulty imagining
American girls of the same age having such power of concentration to ignore
noise on the aircraft and concentrate on studying. If he was aboard a private
jet, he would have never had the opportunity to come into close contact with
these stories of ordinary people.
Though Charlie has very strict self-discipline, he is very generous with others
and treat people he cares and love really well. He is not stingy with money,
always hoping others will benefit more. For his own travels, whether for
business trips or for personal trips, he always flies economy class, but when
traveling with his wife and family, he would take his own private jet. He
explained: my wife brought up so many children in her lifetime and has given me
so much. Now that her health isn’t as good as it used to be, I must take good
care of her.
Charlie spent his lifetime studying the causes of human failures, so he has a
profound understanding of the weaknesses of human nature. Because of this, he
believes people must be strict and demanding on themselves, continuously
improving their discipline in life in order to overcome the innate weaknesses of
human nature. This way of life is, to Charlie, a moral requirement. To an
outsider, Charlie might seem like a monk; but to Charlie, this process is both
rational and pleasant and it allows people to having a successful and happy
life.
Charlie is such a unique person. But if you think about it, if Munger and
Buffett weren’t so so unique, how could they have built Berkshire’s performance
over 50 years into one that is unprecedented in the history of investments and
one that has yet to be replicated.
Over the years I’ve known Charlie, I often forget that he is an American. He is
closer to being the traditional Literati (scholar-officials) of Imperial China
that I knew.
After the Imperial examination system ended, over the past hundreds of years,
the spirit of the Literati has been lost to reality. Especially in the highly
developed commercial society of this time and age, the Chinese scholars who bear
the spirit of the Chinese Literati are often confused about the value and ideals
of their own existence. In a commercial society where tradition has been lost,
is the spirit of Literati still applicable or useful? In the late Ming Dynasty,
capitalism began to sprout in China, the merchants at that time raised the
ideals of "a business person with a Literati’s soul.” Today, the forces of the
commercial market has become the dominant power, and I think there are more
possibilities for this ideal to become a reality.
Charlie can be said to be the best example of "a businessman with a Literati’s
soul". First of all, Charlie is extremely successful in business. However, in
the deep intimate interactions I’ve had with Charlie, I found Charlie to be
essentially a moral philosopher and a scholar. He reads widely, is knowledgeable
over a broad range of topics, is truly concerned about his own moral
cultivation, and is ultimately concerned about the society. Charlie's value
system, from the inside out, promotes self-cultivation and self-development to
become the “saints” who help others.
After achieving business success and wealth, Charlie is still committed to
charity and to benefiting the people of the world. He was complete dependent on
his wisdom in achieving his success, and this is undoubtedly an exciting role
model for Chinese scholars. He made full use of his own wisdom and achieved
great success in business with the utmost integrity. Today, in the market
economy, can the Chinese scholars be filled with the spirit of the Literati and,
by improving themselves through learning and self-cultivation, achieve the
successes of the secular society while realizing the value of their own ideals?
Charlie very much appreciates Confucius. I sometimes think that if Confucius was
reborn in America today, Charlie will probably be the best incarnation. If
Confucius returned 2000 years later to the commercialized China, his teaching
will probably be: have your heart in the right place, cultivate your moral
character, fortify your family, acquire wealth, and help the world!
(This article was written for the foreword to "Poor
Charlie's Almanack - The Wit and Wisdom of Charles T. Munger” - published in
May 2010, some paragraphs were cut, the title was added by the editor.)
[Translator’s notes: Thanks to Ee Lin Sim for her assistance in translation.
Please send feedbacks to Enoch Ko: contact (at) enochko [dot] com]