Monday, May 18, 2026

Crises & Bailouts

We started the year bullish. It seemed to us that it would be difficult to have a recession with wholesale gasoline below $2 per gallon and interest rate cuts along the way. We did note one caveat at the end:

Stagflation is the big concern that we see. If the economy is weak and inflation is high, things can get very ugly. The Fed can't come to the rescue by printing. Perhaps that is what Warren Buffett is thinking about, the 1970s stagflation parallels. But it is hard to have stagflation with a plummeting oil price! 

We now have the opposite of a plummeting oil price, and interest rate cuts are no longer in the cards. In fact, we are on the verge of stagflation.

Trump is begging Iran for a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and Iran is refusing. They have him cornered. By closing the strait they are forcing the world to burn through several million barrels per day of reserves. Trump threatens but doesn't dare attack Iran any further because of the damage Iran can do by retaliating against the Gulf states' energy infrastructure. 

We have not had a credit cycle or financial crisis since 2008. It seems to be the case that you can prevent something like 2008 if you are willing and able to do bailouts.

In 2008 the government was caught off guard by the real estate speculation and how that interacted with opaque mortgage securitizations. There was also a false sense of security because real estate prices had never declined on a nationwide basis. (We had a variant view because we had a front row seat to the excesses of the sunbelt real estate bubble.) So, the government was "unwilling" to bailout, but mainly because they did not realize how bad it was at first. Ultimately they nationalized the problem with the Fed balance sheet.

Now the government is certainly willing; look at Powell's bailout of the economy in 2020. Trump & Co. would happily run the printing press even to prevent a 5% market decline. But you can reach a point where the bailout that is needed cannot be delivered because of its size in relation to GDP. The U.S. debt/GDP has doubled since the GFC (60% -> 120%).

One of the things that stays with us from Trillion Dollar Triage was the head of the NY Fed's market desk saying that what was "most frightening" during Covid was that "Treasury yields were spiking higher at the same time that equity markets were plummeting."

The warning sign for another financial crisis would be if bad things happening (whether geopolitical or equity market declines) made bonds go down.

We are seeing some of that with the Iran war. The ten year bond yield (TNX) had fallen below 4% prior to the Iran war, and is now 4.62%. On Friday (May 15th), the S&P was down 1.2% and the ten year yield was up 8.5 bps. (Bond price down almost 1%.)

Our guess of Buffett's thinking is that he has been predicting stagflation. Inflation-beneficiary "croupier" businesses at 30x earnings will not work if higher interest rates cause their valuation multiples to get cut in half. 

Monday Morning Links

  • A cyclical business that produces average returns over a full cycle will give investors worse total returns, because at the peak it won't return quite enough capital, and because the equity slice of the capital structure can't always survive the worst part of the cycle. The equity in some high-cost miner might 100x during a good cycle, but that 100x return may be enjoyed mostly by former bondholders who got most or all of the equity when it reorganized: shareholders in Warrior Met Coal have seen their holdings compound at 33% since it went public in 2017. But "Warrior Met" was a new holding company formed by the first lien debtholders of Walter Energy, whose shareholders were zeroed in 2016. Another issue, related to the cycle, is Engineering Ego: people who go into the business of solving complex technical challenges around getting ore out of the ground are going to be excited if there's a uniquely extreme way to do it. [The Diff
  • Recent leaked US intelligence assessments, as reported by Western media, estimate that Iran has regained access to 90 percent of its underground missile storage and launch facilities, many of which remain at least partially operational, that were buried due to US-Israeli airstrikes. Iranian forces have likely also reestablished communications between units and commanders and begun restoring force morale—both of which were disrupted during the war due to US-Israeli airstrikes and had significantly degraded Iran’s ability to conduct operations to achieve its objectives. Recent US intelligence assessments also estimate that Iran still has about 70 percent of its mobile launchers and 70 percent of its prewar missile stockpile, including both ballistic and cruise missiles. US forces buried some of these assets during combat operations, which rendered the buried assets combat ineffective. Any military force, including the Iranians, would use the time and space granted by the ceasefire to reconstitute itself. The restoration of underground missile storage and launch facilities means that Iran was degraded operationally and then prepared itself for a new round of fighting. US forces have surely also prepared for a new round of fighting. [Institute for the Study of War]
  • Sodium ion batteriess could ease supply constraints and price volatility linked to lithium-based batteries by expanding the range of viable chemistries and reducing dependence on lithium mining and processing. Sodium is far more abundant than lithium – around 1,000 times more abundant in the Earth’s crust and roughly 60,000 times more abundant in the oceans. SIB manufacturing primarily relies on soda ash (sodium carbonate) as the main sodium precursor. Soda ash is widely used across several industries, and is far more abundant than lithium, making it less susceptible to resource availability concerns and price volatility. Natural soda ash resources globally are estimated at 47 billion tonnes, while reserves are estimated at 25 billion tonnes. Soda ash can also be, and already is, produced synthetically from salt and limestone, both virtually unlimited resources. Cost could still be one of the competitive advantages of SIBs over LIBs due to a number of factors. The first of these is the abundance and accessibility of sodium, a material that is considerably cheaper than lithium. [International Renewable Energy Agency]
  • Well into his seventies, Wilson would march into the Princeton Club and order a half dozen martinis, to be prepared not sequentially but simultaneously—six shining glasses in a bright row, down which Wilson would work, all the while talking and thinking at a rapid pace. To the end of a long life, he kept on making the only thing he thought worth making: sense, a quality almost entirely lacking in American literature where stupidity—if sufficiently sincere and authentic—is deeply revered, and easily achieved. Although this was a rather unhealthy life in the long run, Wilson had a very long run indeed. But then he was perfect proof of the proposition that the more the mind is used and fed the less apt it is to devour itself. When he died, at seventy-seven, he was busy stuffing his head with irregular Hungarian verbs. Plainly, he had a brain to match his liver. [Gore Vidal
  • American Catholicism is in steep decline. In 2000, 2.6 million American children attended Catholic schools. In 2025, only 1.6 million did. In 2001, more than a quarter-million Catholic weddings took place; in 2024, around 107,000 did. In 2001, more than a million infants were baptized in the Church. In 2024, fewer than half a million were. These numbers presage a future in which the Catholic Church will be much smaller and poorer than it currently is. Given these facts, talk of a Catholic revival—spurred this spring by a surge in adult conversions, many in urban and university churches—is misplaced. [First Things]

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Thursday Night Links

  • Murray and Bregman and their fellow partners started the firm with ideas rather than money. They had none to manage and not even the $100,000 they needed to pay the rent and an employee or two. To bring in cash and build a reputation, they opened a subscription research service. They called it “Horizon,” as in what they strove to see over. (“Kinetics” arrived in an acquisition later on.) The first report they produced was a bullish analysis of Texas Pacific Land Corp., which, giving effect to subsequent splits, was a penny stock. Whether or not the authors persuaded the subscribers, they surely persuaded themselves. Texas Pacific today, quoted today at $438 a share, is the firm’s largest single holding, in at least one HK mutual fund accounting for more than 50% of AUM. [Murray Stahl
  • As this audience knows better than any, options are a growing business. The dynamic nature of the options marketplace was readily apparent from the staff presentation at the roundtable. For example, between 2012 and 2025, the number of unique underliers grew by 144%, and the number of unique options series increased by 719%. In December 2025, the median OPRA message count was 131 billon – which is 3,275 times the daily average in 2000. Option activity on expiry, or “0DTEs,” has grown from nearly 20% of volume at the start of 2022 to 28% in 2025. On the other hand, the number of options market makers has dropped from 98 in 2012 to 51 in 2025. [Jamie Selway]
  • I mean, look, the concern that we have, that you should have, I think, that everyone should have is, are there signals here that this asset has lost the investment characteristics that attracted us to it in the first place? Has it, is the future going to be materially worse than the past? You know, this asset's been operating for over 60 years, and is the next 50 gonna be materially worse than the last 60? Are we unrealistically clinging to bright memories of the past, allowing ourselves to be misled into making more investments into the future that shouldn't be made? We're trying to be very careful that we don't fall into that trap. [Natural Resource Partners L.P.]
  • The Iliad accepts violence as a permanent factor in human life and accepts it without sentimentality, for it is just as sentimental to pretend that war does not have its monstrous ugliness as well as to deny that it has its own strange and fatal beauty, a power, which can call out in men resources of endurance, courage, and self-sacrifice that peacetime, to our sorrow and loss, can rarely command. Three thousand years have not changed the human condition in this respect; we are still lovers and victims of the will to violence, and so long as we are, Homer will be read as its truest interpreter. [Bernard Knox]
  • JQA’s ambition began with his parents’ ambitions for him. His mother, the formidable Abigail Adams, told him early on that he was destined to be a “guardian of his country’s laws and liberties.” He accepted that destiny. His father wrote him, when the 26-year-old was wavering a bit about his future: “You come into life with Advantages which will disgrace you if your success is médiocre.—And if you do not rise to the head of…your Country, it will be owing to your own Laziness Slovenlinessand Obstinacy” (emphasis in the original). [Claremont Review of Books]
  • Even though the American Right might like to occasionally proclaim Anglo-Saxonness, it’s moving away from the traits that defined this identity. Historically, Anglo-Saxon identity was tied to Protestantism, individualism, rationalism, capitalism, constitutionalism, and British heritage. Elements of the New Right seem eager to move beyond all this. Traditional Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy are favored over Protestantism. Individualism is denounced as a weakness, as is capitalism. Rationalism is discarded in favor of village-crone irrationalism that resembles schizophrenia. The Constitution is seen as a suicide pact and the cause of American decline. Anglophobia is more popular than Anglophilia. One can see that with arguments that Spanish colonialism was superior to British colonialism. Other European ethnicities are favored and their respective histories are adopted as “our past.” Some parts of the New Right would like to return to Anglo-Saxonism and the “Heritage American” concept is popular among all elements of the New Right. But now the Heritage American is imagined as a Russian Orthodox man who despised British traditions and norms. It’s an ahistorical image. [Scott Greer]
  • Whether because of his innate political skill, affable personality, or a compelling business pitch that promised hundreds of new jobs and significant local tax revenue, Symington eventually won over the government and citizens of Snowflake. In August 2016, a town council decision went his way by one vote, and the city granted a special-use permit to Copperstate Farms. Notably, not until 2018 did the Latter-day Saints Church formally allow its members to use medicinal cannabis, thanks to a deal brokered between Utah’s lawmakers, law-enforcement agencies, medical organizations, and LDS representatives. Copperstate Farms now produces about 120,000 dry pounds of cannabis every year under 1.7 million square feet of canopy. The facility is one of the largest cannabis greenhouse operations in North America. [Fife Symington IV]

Friday, May 1, 2026

The Buffett Puzzle

Warren Buffett has described the ideal business with perfect clarity. "The best business," he once said, "is one that is a royalty on the growth of others." He has also observed that "you'll never buy companies as cheap as stocks sometimes get." 

Together, these two statements imply a fantastic investment strategy: steadily deploy capital into businesses that are either royalties or have "royalty-like" economics, dollar-cost averaging into minority stakes using dividends and cash flows from existing investments. A five or ten percent stake in Marriott International might go on sale when investors are worried about a recession or a slowdown in travel, even when the entire company would not be obtainable at a cheap price. And when the cash flows in and no royalty business looks attractive, simply repurchase shares of one's own holding company.

Buffett identified this ideal strategy early, articulated it repeatedly, and has spent the past several decades largely ignoring it. That is what we consider the Buffett Puzzle.

The evidence of the missed opportunity is not subtle. Over the past couple of decades, businesses with exactly the characteristics Buffett described have compounded quietly and relentlessly. Companies like CME Group or Visa Inc. require little reinvestment, tend to generate cash in excess of reported earnings rather than consuming it, sit atop irreplaceable assets, and benefit from network effects or structural monopolies. They are either monopolies or oligopolies and they carry very high free cash flow margins on revenue. They are, in Buffett's own language, royalties on the growth of others. Yet he did not buy them, or bought them too little and too late.

A comparison of capital-light and capital-intensive businesses over the past thirty-five years shows an enormous performance gap, with the capital-light group pulling ahead so consistently that the divergence is not a matter of picking the right year to measure. It is a structural feature of modern capitalism. Businesses that can grow without consuming capital are simply worth more, in ways that compound over long periods. Buffett, who understands compounding better than almost anyone alive, appears to have understood this principle intellectually while failing to act on it in practice.

Consider two businesses that have the attributes that Buffett spent his career describing as ideal.

Google is a royalty-like interest on the broader economy. Its core business connects customers with merchants of every kind, both online and brick-and-mortar, and it earns a small toll on an enormous and steadily growing share of global commerce. The capital requirements relative to the earnings power are modest. The network effects are extraordinary. The business has gone on sale repeatedly, but Berkshire never owned it until 2025. Google traded for less than 20 times earnings in 2008, again in 2011 and 2012, in 2022, and for parts of 2025. In June 2012 specifically, the stock traded at 17 times earnings. Earnings per share have risen roughly fifteen-fold since then. Anyone who thought 17 times earnings was expensive in 2012 was not merely wrong but spectacularly wrong, and the magnitude of that error is a useful calibration point for thinking about what cheapness even means in a business with this kind of compounding power.

Marriott is a royalty specifically on travel lodging. It does not own most of the hotels that carry its brands; it manages and franchises them, collecting fees on the revenue and profits that flow through its system. The capital intensity sits with the property owners, while the brand, the loyalty program, the distribution system, and the global reservation network sit with Marriott. Travel demand grows roughly with global wealth, and Marriott captures a steady percentage of an expanding pie without having to fund the buildings. The business has gone on sale regularly. Marriott traded for less than 20 times earnings for most of 2008, in 2011, in 2013, for much of 2016, in 2020, and again at several points in 2023. Each of those windows offered a chance to build a position in a "royalty-like" business that is growing without using incremental capital.

Perhaps Buffett does not think 20 times earnings is sufficiently cheap. We will return to that question later in the essay. But the dollar-cost-averaging strategy I described at the outset would have generated meaningful positions in both companies many times over, at prices that look in retrospect like obvious bargains.

What he bought instead were extremely capital-intensive businesses that have certainly under-performed the "royalty-like" businesses and in many cases have been outright disappointments. Berkshire's railroad acquisition BNSF earns a large headline profit. But in his 2023 annual letter, Buffett finally acknowledged what the net income number had been obscuring for years. Since Berkshire's purchase of BNSF fourteen years earlier, capital expenditures had exceeded depreciation charges by more than $22 billion, amounting to over $1.5 billion annually. "Ouch," he wrote. The depreciation charge was actually insufficient to maintain the road, and so the dividends BNSF paid to Berkshire consistently fell short of stated earnings. "Berkshire is receiving an acceptable return on its purchase price," he admitted, "though less than it might appear, and also a pittance on the replacement value of the property."

This was an extraordinary statement. The most celebrated capital allocator in history had spent fourteen years and tens of billions of dollars on a business that was, by his own accounting, delivering a pittance on replacement value.

Newsletter writer Porter Stansberry, in a recent open letter to Berkshire's board of directors, calculated that on a capital-weighted basis, the gap between what Berkshire earned from its whole-company acquisitions and what it would have earned from simply holding the superior publicly traded businesses in the same industries amounts to nearly one trillion dollars of lost value

Embarrassingly, a comparison of each major Berkshire acquisition against the obvious public market alternative, available at the time of purchase, shows that Berkshire consistently chose the inferior business: See's Candies instead of Hershey, Nebraska Furniture Mart instead of Home Depot, Dairy Queen instead of McDonald's, BNSF instead of a basket of the publicly traded railroads. (See's Candies deserves a partial exemption from this list. Buffett has said it transformed his understanding of earning power divorced from capital requirements. The mistake was not buying See's; it was failing to apply the lesson at scale in the decades that followed.)

The Conventional Defense, and Why It Falls Short

The standard explanation for Buffett's capital allocation choices is size. Apologists say that Berkshire became so large that only a handful of investments could move the needle, and the universe of businesses large enough to matter grew small. But it does not fully explain the pattern. It might explain why Buffett could not buy small royalty businesses. It does not explain why he didn't accumulate large minority stakes in the best capital-light businesses available, since they were and are large enough to absorb serious capital. Google and Marriott are not small companies. The size constraint has become relevant over time, but it can only excuse so much.

Alex Rubalcava, a venture capitalist in Los Angeles, asked a question that goes to the heart of this tension at the 2003 Berkshire annual meeting. He noted that in his writings, Buffett expressed admiration for businesses that could employ large amounts of capital at high returns, while in other contexts Buffett and Charlie Munger both praised businesses that required very little capital. He asked whether these statements were contradictory.

Buffett's answer invoked Berkshire's scale: the sheer amount of capital it needed to deploy required businesses that could absorb it productively. At the time, this probably sounded reasonable to most of the audience. But the answer was actually an admission dressed up as an explanation. The real problem it revealed was that Buffett was unwilling to do what the situation logically required: return capital to shareholders.

A manager who genuinely could not find enough wonderful businesses at fair prices to buy could have simply paid dividends or repurchased stock. Buffett resisted this for decades, preferring to keep the capital inside Berkshire and working. And since he needed to deploy capital but was too cheap to pay fair prices for great businesses, he ended up buying a great many mediocre ones at prices that felt comfortable. BNSF. Berkshire Hathaway Energy. A collection of capital-intensive industrial businesses that satisfied the value investor's need for a familiar-looking multiple while quietly requiring capital investment in excess of what the depreciation charges showed. The scale argument was not an explanation for why Berkshire couldn't find better investments. It was a rationalization for why Buffett didn't have to confront the alternative.

The Long Decline in Returns on Capital

If the size argument is really a rationalization for not returning capital, the question becomes why Buffett insisted on deploying capital into the businesses he chose. The answer begins with cheapness. Buffett's deepest instinct is that of a value investor, and value investors are cheap. Cheapness is usually a virtue. It is the bedrock of margin of safety, the discipline that keeps an investor from paying for optimism that never arrives. But cheapness has a corresponding weakness: it makes it very difficult to pay what a genuinely great business is actually worth. The royalty businesses Buffett should have been buying rarely looked cheap on conventional metrics. Companies like Google, Marriott, CME Group, or Texas Pacific Land have almost never traded at the kind of headline P/E multiples that would have satisfied a classically trained value investor. Buying them required accepting that the world had changed, and that returns on capital have been falling across the entire economy as the world has grown wealthier.

It is worth taking this point seriously, because it is the central macroeconomic fact of the past two centuries and the one Buffett's framework has had the hardest time absorbing.

There was a time when a person could live off the yield on government bonds. If you read a Jane Austen novel, the characters are getting a certain number of pounds per year, which was the interest on their consols, the perpetual government debt of the British empire. (See: 1, 2.) The yield was probably around four percent in sound money, which was a significantly higher real yield than the 2.7% that thirty-year TIPS offer today. (Not to mention the important difference in income tax rates.) A modest fortune invested in consols funded a country house, servants, horses, and a respectable place in society. Today, the real yield on government debt, particularly after income tax, varies between negligible and negative. The same nominal capital that supported a Regency-era family in idleness would have trouble supporting a retired couple in a nice place to live today.

The same thing has happened to real estate investments within living memory. During our lifetimes, there were times and places when you could buy residential real estate (like a single family house) and the rent would cover the mortgage. The cap rate on the property was perhaps a hundred basis points higher than the cost of the mortgage, so the property paid you to own it from day one. That has never recurred, even during the housing crash and the various housing corrections that followed. Cap rates on residential real estate and on similar streams of safe cash flow have compressed steadily toward the TIPS yield. The cap rate on a house in a nice part of the U.S. will generally sit a couple hundred basis points below the cost of a mortgage. The economics of being a small landlord have gone from positive carry to substantial negative carry, and the change is structural rather than cyclical.

It is possible, and I think likely, that equities are going through a similar transition. I am not saying this is certain. It is a hypothesis. But, as Kris Abdelmessih has written, the mass adoption of passive investing may be the invisible hand wringing the equity index risk premium out of the market. The mechanism is straightforward. As markets have built and popularized increasingly cost-effective ways to diversify away idiosyncratic risk, the price discounts that risky investments need to offer in order to attract capital have come down. A century ago, holding a diversified equity portfolio was expensive and difficult, and the equity risk premium that compensated investors reflected that friction. The friction is now nearly zero. There is no obvious reason for the premium to stop compressing.

Future investors may eventually look back at twentieth-century equity returns the way we now look at twentieth-century housing affordability or government bond yields. Can you believe people earned 8-10% real in stocks and thought that should last forever? 

There is a second change in the investment landscape that compounds the first. As we pointed out in our review of the American Express corporate history, large company management teams have become meaningfully better at capital allocation over the past three decades, and they have purified their business models to deliver higher returns on capital. The conglomerate era of the 1960s and 1970s produced sprawling businesses with undisciplined balance sheets, divisions that subsidized losers with the cash flow from winners, and managements that confused empire building with value creation. The shareholder revolution of the 1980s and 1990s, however uncomfortable and uneven, forced companies to think harder about what they actually did well. The businesses that survived and thrived tended to be those that identified their core advantage and stopped subsidizing everything else. They divested non-core operations, returned capital aggressively, focused on the highest-return uses of incremental dollars, and managed the balance sheet with discipline.

The result is that the best public companies today are structurally better businesses than their predecessors of a generation ago. They are not merely benefiting from accommodative monetary policy or temporary advantages. They are run by people who have absorbed forty years of accumulated lessons about how capital should be deployed and which businesses deserve to be inside a corporate structure at all. A company like CME Group is not expensive because the market has lost its mind; it is priced to reflect a business model that has been refined to near-perfection and sits atop a franchise that is genuinely difficult to displace. These businesses deserve to trade at higher multiples than what a value investor trained in the 1950s would consider normal, both because returns on alternative capital have collapsed and because the businesses themselves have improved.

The Insurance Mind

We can think of an additional explanation for why cheapness is so ingrained in Buffett's behavior, despite the two factors that we mention above (falling returns on capital and rising business quality) and it has to do with where Buffett's temperament was formed.

Berkshire's insurance operations are genuinely extraordinary. Buffett is one of the great insurance minds of the twentieth century, and the discipline he built at GEICO, General Re, and the reinsurance operations reflects a profound understanding of how that business works. In insurance underwriting, patience and stubbornness are not just desirable attributes, they are the whole kahuna. In a hard market, pricing is attractive, terms are disciplined, and underwriters earn good returns. In a soft market, competitors cut prices to buy volume, and the disciplined underwriter who refuses to write business at inadequate rates will appear to be leaving money on the table right up until the cycle turns and the undisciplined writers get crushed. The market cycles from hard to soft and back again with regularity. The curmudgeon who said no all through the soft market is vindicated. Stubbornness, in the insurance business, is the strategy.

Buffett's insurance success caused him to internalize this model deeply. He then applied it to equity markets, where it also worked for a long time. The logic transferred reasonably well: be patient, wait for the "hard" market in stocks (a crash), and then deploy capital aggressively when prices reach levels that others find unbearable. The approach was spectacularly rewarded in 1974, in 1987, in 2002, and again in 2008. Each of those dislocations produced the kind of prices that justified decades of waiting.

But the hard markets in equities are getting structurally shallower, for two related reasons. The first is that the world is wealthier, and more capital is now competing for distressed assets. When prices fall, the buyers appear faster and in greater numbers than they did in previous generations. The dislocations do not go as deep or last as long. The second reason is fiat currency and the modern toolkit of central bank intervention. The authorities now have both the instruments and the political will to short-circuit financial crises before they reach the depths that create Buffett-style generational buying opportunities. The Federal Reserve's response to the 2020 pandemic is a perfect example. What looked briefly like a 2008-style dislocation was resolved in a matter of weeks. Would-be buyers of distressed assets, including Buffett, barely had time to act before the floor was put back under markets. It happened again in 2023 where a Federal Reserve bailout (Bank Term Funding Program) preempted any distressed investment by Berkshire in the regional banks.

So the cash piles up at Berkshire. He is waiting, with the discipline and the temperament that made him one of the greatest investors in history, for a hard market that the modern financial system is increasingly engineered to prevent. The insurance mind, which was his greatest professional asset in the business that built Berkshire, has become a constraint in a world where the cycles that once justified it are being deliberately suppressed. He is not merely cheap in the abstract. He is cheap in a specific, structured way, expecting the world to present him with the prices it presented in 1974. That world might not be coming back, and Berkshire's cash pile is the visible evidence of a strategy waiting for conditions that may no longer reliably arrive.

The Seduction of Scale

Cheapness, as reinforced by experience in insurance underwriting, may not fully explain the pattern. There may be another, less flattering force at work.

There is a meaningful parallel to James Ling, who built LTV Corporation into one of the great conglomerate empires of the 1960s through relentless acquisition. Ling was a genuine financial genius, a student of deal structure and capital markets who understood things about reorganizing corporate balance sheets that few of his contemporaries grasped. He was also, ultimately, a man for whom size had become a goal in its own right, a psychological reward that gradually overwhelmed his judgment about what actually created value. The behavioral fingerprint is this: a highly intelligent person who articulates sound principles about capital allocation and then consistently makes decisions that build scale rather than per-share value. LTV eventually collapsed under the weight of its ambitions, and Ling was left with almost nothing.

Buffett acolytes would reject the comparison, and the differences are real. He has not used leverage recklessly. He has not chased acquisitions for the sake of novelty or prestige in any obvious way. But the behavioral pattern is recognizable. Scale brings attention. It brings adulation. It brings Becky Quick flying to Omaha. It brings heads of state returning calls. It transforms a successful investor into an American institution, a monument, a figure whose annual letter is studied by millions as a kind of secular scripture.

A portfolio of quietly compounding royalty interests in land companies, pipeline partnerships, and hotel franchisors would not generate that kind of gravity. It is harder to narrate as a legacy. You cannot easily explain to a television audience why you own four percent of Marriott. You can explain, in terms that feel weighty and serious, why you own the entire BNSF railway.

There is also a subtler dynamic. Businesses that generate substantial free cash flow without obvious opportunities for reinvestment create pressure to return capital. If CME Group is throwing off cash that Berkshire cannot redeploy at scale, it must be dividended out or used to buy back shares. The empire, in that sense, stops growing, or at least grows differently, returning capital to owners rather than accumulating assets. That is the correct outcome for shareholders. It is a different story than the one Buffett has been telling for sixty years, and it is a story that does not lend itself to the particular kind of immortality he has spent his career constructing.

There is a sympathetic counterargument worth acknowledging. Buffett's model of permanent, patient ownership built something with genuine value beyond the returns: a reputation that attracted exceptional businesses on favorable terms, a culture of decentralized autonomy that good managers found appealing, a guarantee that the businesses Berkshire bought would not be flipped or dismembered. The argument is that this reputational capital created deal flow that a minority-stake approach could not have replicated. The counterargument is real, but it does not survive contact with the BNSF numbers. A model that generates deal flow into capital-intensive businesses delivering a pittance on replacement value is not a competitive advantage; it is a more polite way of destroying shareholder value.

The Theory of the Puzzle

The theory of the Buffett Puzzle, then, has three interlocking parts. The first is that Buffett's temperament was formed in insurance, where stubborn patience waiting for the hard market is the correct strategy. He transferred that model to equities, where it also worked for several decades. But fiat currency, central bank activism, and the general increase in global wealth have made the hard markets shallower and less frequent. The insurance mind is now waiting for conditions that the modern financial system is built to prevent.

The second is that cheapness, already a deep instinct, prevented him from recognizing that the world had changed. Returns on safe capital have been falling gradually for two centuries and falling more sharply for several decades, in a long-running compression that has touched bonds, real estate, and now arguably equities. At the same time, the best public companies have become structurally better businesses than their predecessors. Both forces argue that royalty businesses with durable franchises deserve to trade at multiples that look expensive by historical standards. Buffett could not bring himself to pay those multiples, and so he passed on the businesses he had described as ideal.

The third is that scale provided an emotional reward for the alternative. Deploying large capital into large, visible, controllable businesses built a monument. Accumulating quiet minority stakes in the best businesses available and returning excess cash to shareholders would have been better for owners but harder to narrate as a life's work.

These three forces reinforced each other. The insurance mind supplied the patience. The cheapness supplied the principled-sounding reason to pass on royalty businesses priced to reflect a permanently changed investment landscape. And the appetite for scale supplied the emotional reward for deploying that capital into something more visible instead. The result was BNSF, Berkshire Hathaway Energy, and a collection of capital-intensive industrial businesses that look impressive on an organizational chart and have consumed, by Buffett's own accounting, tens of billions of dollars more capital than their reported earnings suggest.

The Question for Greg Abel

Warren Buffett is now stepping back, and Greg Abel is taking over as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway. Abel inherits a company shaped by the forces this essay has described. As he acknowledged in his inaugural letter to shareholders, there is a collection of capital-intensive businesses acquired at prices that felt comfortable, generating less free cash flow than their reported earnings suggest, sitting alongside a cash pile so large it has become its own problem.

Abel also inherits an opportunity that is, by any measure, extraordinary. He could choose to become one of the great capital allocators in the history of American business! The path to doing so would require something that would strike most Berkshire observers as bizarre, even heretical. He should shrink the company.

William Thorndike's book The Outsiders (see review) profiles eight CEOs whose returns greatly surpassed the market over long periods. The common thread was not operational brilliance, though several were excellent operators. It was capital allocation discipline, and specifically the willingness to do whatever the situation actually required rather than what felt comfortable or looked impressive. Henry Singleton of Teledyne bought back nearly ninety percent of his company's shares when his stock was cheap. Bill Anders of General Dynamics sold divisions and returned the cash when he could not find acquisitions that made sense. Tom Murphy of Capital Cities avoided the temptation to build for its own sake and focused relentlessly on per-share value. All of them were willing to make the company smaller when making it smaller was the right answer. None of them were building monuments.

Ironically, Buffett himself appears in the book, and was once exactly this kind of CEO. The early Buffett, running the partnership and the early years of Berkshire, was as disciplined about per-share value and capital return as anyone Thorndike profiles. The later Buffett, presiding over an accumulation of capital-intensive businesses too large to sell and too mediocre to celebrate, is a different story.

Abel's most consequential early decisions may well be subtractions rather than additions. Prune or spinoff underperforming operating businesses. Begin buying minority stakes in the best capital-light businesses available rather than acquiring whole companies at negotiated prices. And if Berkshire's own stock is the best thing available, buy that. What would be genuinely bold, and genuinely correct, is to stop managing Berkshire for scale and start managing it for per-share value, even if that means the company gets smaller, quieter, and harder to narrate as a legacy.

Warren Buffett is one of the greatest investors who has ever lived. That is not in question. He described the ideal destination, saw it clearly, and then drove somewhere else. A combination of forces got him there: a temperament built for insurance cycles that the modern financial system keeps suppressing, a value investor's cheapness anchored to a world where returns on capital were higher and businesses were worse than they are today, and the seductive pull of scale and the attention it brings. None of these forces were obviously bad in isolation. Together, they compounded into a decades-long detour.

The question for Greg Abel is whether he has the nerve to turn the car around.

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Thursday Night Links

  • Over the long run in infosec, the defensive side tends to win. There's a lot of deadweight loss in a hack, and hackers have a higher discount rate than defenders, so in an equilibrium state attacking needs to be massively easier than defending to be worthwhile. But that long-run equilibrium is driven by the changes in behavior that arise when attackers have a temporary advantage. And in a world where more code than ever is being written and a smaller proportion of it than ever is being read, the rewards for supply chain attacks targeting key libraries are unusually high. This is one reason for Anthropic's rather public-spirited approach to using Mythos to fix software vulnerabilities; exploits are typically chained together, so it's a race to break the links before they're misused. [Byrne Hobart]
  • Only a few economists’ works have inspired eponymous schools. Marxism and Keynesianism come to mind, but almost memory-holed is an American, Henry George, whose “Georgist” movement was a major political force in the heady days of late 19th- and early 20th-century progressivism. George was the author of Progress & Poverty, a bestseller shortly after its publication in 1880. In the 1880s and 1890s, P&P outsold every English-language book except the Bible. Yet today, no major publishing house handles his works, and the best edition is a scanned reprint of the 1905 edition from tiny Dover Publications. His work is so obscure and forgotten, despite his historical popularity, that no mainstream publisher can be bothered to pay for new typesetting. [The Tom File
  • For whatever number we came up with here, one must remember that in many ways the poorest Britons today live better than did Mr. Darcy regardless of which method for calculating income or wealth I used. For all his wealth, he still froze in winter, constantly stank of horse or pig or mud, had to travel very very slowly to town, died at 50 and likely saw several of his sisters, nephews or cousins die in childbirth or before they turned one, drank awful drinking water even when avoiding the many outbreaks of Cholera or the constant smog from the coal-burning fires in urban households (the Channel Four series The 1900 House is a good indication for how, then remove another hundred year of development). [Joakim Book]
  • Visa’s second quarter net revenue growth of 17% was the highest since 2022, driving GAAP EPS up 36% and non-GAAP EPS up 20%. Consumer spending remained resilient, and our strategy and innovations fueled strong performance in consumer payments, commercial and money movement solutions and value-added services. [Visa Inc.]
  • Seems to me that whenever you move somewhere that is "cheap," there will be massive drawbacks and difficulties, period. This is apparently even true in a Mediterranean paradise like Italy. You "pay" for your life in a cheap place by dealing with some element of life there that is not easy to deal with, be it isolation, high median ages, bureaucracy, clannish locals, harsh climates, lack of economic / cultural / religious opportunities, social problems, crime, etc. Most often, you deal with a combination of some or all of these. So when you do the "moving somewhere super cheap" thing, there WILL be times where you want to give up and leave. That's where the real question comes in: "just how much do I NOT want to do the high-cost, crowded, 4HL, working-to-pay-the-bills thing?" The only ones who will really be so averse to normalcy in an "easy place" will be those who are very eccentric, poorly adjusted to the salaryman life, likely kind of poor, and who expect to remain kind of poor indefinitely. [Hickman]
  • From 1936 to 1939 there were two life-and-death struggles in Spain, both of them civil wars. One pitted nationalist forces led by Francisco Franco, aided by Hitler, against the Spanish Republicans, aided by Communists. The other was a separate war among Communists themselves. Stalin in the Soviet Union and Trotsky in exile each hoped to be the savior and the sponsor of the Republicans and thereby become the vanguard for world Communist revolution. We sent our young inexperienced intelligence operatives as well as our experienced instructors. Spain proved to be a kindergarten for our future intelligence operations. Our subsequent intelligence initiatives all stemmed from contacts that we made and lessons that we learned in Spain. The Spanish Republicans lost, but Stalin's men and women won. When the Spanish Civil War ended, there was no room left in the world for Trotsky. [Pavel Sudoplatov]
  • In a March 16, 2026, decision in Fortis Advisors LLC v. Krafton Inc., the Delaware Court of Chancery adjudicated claims arising from the sale of a video game studio, Unknown Worlds, where Fortis alleged Krafton acted in bad faith to avoid a $250 million earnout. In enforcing the merger agreement and granting specific performance, the court cited evidence that Krafton’s CEO had consulted ChatGPT extensively, relying on the CEO’s chat logs with ChatGPT as evidence of his intent and planning in orchestrating the takeover. [link]
  •  We examine how “sleepy deposits” affect competition, bank value, and financial stability. Using novel data on account openings and closures at over 900 banks, we show that only 5–15% of depositors open new accounts per year. More closures are driven by moving or death than rate-shopping. We develop an empirical model in which banks face dynamic invest-versus-harvest incentives. We find that depositor sleepiness accounts for 57% of average deposit franchise value, softening competition particularly for banks in low-concentration markets and banks with low-quality services. Sleepiness also enhances financial stability and significantly reduced default probabilities during the 2023 banking turmoil. [NBER]
  • We have been excited to see a proliferation of vintage LM projects, including Ranke-4B, Mr. Chatterbox, and Machina Mirabilis. Alongside these efforts, we introduce talkie-1930-13b-base, a 13B language model trained on 260B tokens of historical pre-1931 English text. Additionally, we present a post-trained checkpoint turning our base model into a conversation partner without relying on modern chat transcripts or instruction-tuning data. talkie is the largest vintage language model we are aware of, and we plan to continue scaling significantly. As a next step, we are training a GPT-3-level model, which we hope to release this summer. A preliminary estimate also suggests we can grow our corpus to well over a trillion tokens of historical text, which should be sufficient to create a GPT-3.5 level model—similar in capability to the original ChatGPT. [talkie

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Thursday Morning Links

  • “The poor” in the United States today are not, generally speaking, hungry. Around a third of Americans are considered overweight; nearly half are obese. If we break this down along class lines, the heaviest Americans tend to be the ones with the lowest incomes. The wealthiest Americans, by contrast, are the likeliest to be thin; indeed, there is probably no correlation stronger in contemporary sociology than the one between a below-average B.M.I. and one’s class background. One is almost tempted to say that what Our Lady prophesied in the Magnificat has been fulfilled not in some future eschatological sense but here and now, as a mere description of socioeconomic markers—the hungry have indeed been filled to the point of bursting with ultra-processed foods, while the rich have voluntarily absented themselves from the table. [The Lamp
  • Between 1870 and today, hours of work in the United States fell by about 40% — from nearly 3,000 hours per year to about 1,800. Hours fells but unemployment did not increase. Moreover, not only did work hours fall, but childhood, retirement, and life expectancy all increased. In fact in 1870, about 30% of a person’s entire life was spent working — people worked, slept, and died. Today it’s closer to 10%. Thus in the past 100+ years or so the amount of work in a person’s lifetime has fallen by about 2/3rds and the amount of leisure, including retirement has increased. We have already sustained a massive increase in leisure. There’s no reason we cannot do it again. [Marginal Revolution]
  • Without physical optics there would have been no microscope, and until the perfection of the microscope, the biologist was in the main limited to what his unaided senses told him. It was by means of the compound microscope that the development of the cell theory was made possible in the nineteenth century. Similarly it is by means of the new tools and techniques developed in many instances by the physical sciences that the door to a biology of molecules has only recently been opened. [Rockefeller Foundation]
  • “Concerning the advancement of learning,” Bacon writes in a letter to King James I in 1611, “I do subscribe to the opinion of one of the wisest and greatest men of your kingdom: That for grammar schools there are already too many, and therefore no providence to add where there is excess.” Quite right. Bacon was advising the king with regard to the charitable disposition of property; why, in our day, does Harvard need another two-hundred-million-dollar “charitable” gift to pile into its fifty-seven-billion-dollar endowment? [The Lamp
  • Old money, ever prudent, armors itself against these barbs, toughening up via a series of rituals Aldrich calls the three ordeals. In the ordeal of education, one is constantly under pressure to establish personal bests in all fields—academic, athletic, social—and become the kind of seemingly effortless “all-rounder” Aldrich’s Harvard yearbook showed him to have been. The second is the ordeal of nature—the struggle of mountaineers or yachtsmen against elements indifferent to the size of their trust funds. Both practices seem to have endured into our own time. The third ordeal, military service, has faded in importance since the day Teddy Roosevelt marched into Brooks Brothers to order up the uniform he wore when he led the Rough Riders up San Juan Hill. Somewhere between the estimable naval service of a John F. Kennedy or a George H. W. Bush and the rather less glorious contribution of George W. Bush to the Texas Air National Guard, the military lost its hold on old money’s imagination, perhaps to the detriment of both institutions. [The New Criterion

Friday, April 10, 2026

Friday Night Links

  • Citrini Research sent our incredibly capable field analyst – dubbed Analyst #3 in order to avoid emotional attachment – on assignment to the Strait of Hormuz. Armed with a fluency in four languages including Arabic, a Pelican case full of equipment, a pack of Cuban cigars, $15,000 in cash and a roll of Zyn, #3 set out to fulfill the itinerary we’d planned in our Manhattan offices the week prior. [Citrini Research]
  • What he discovered on the ground: the AIS data everyone is trading on is missing roughly half of what's actually transiting the strait on any given day. Ships are going dark, spoofing destinations, broadcasting "CHINESE CREW OWNER" through transponder fields to avoid getting hit. Iran's ghost fleet is running 29+ laden tankers inside the Gulf with transponders off, moving an estimated $3B in crude to Malaysia since the war started. The entire market is pricing a "closed" strait off satellite imagery and transponder data that has a 50% blind spot. Every oil model, every supply forecast, every macro call built on AIS throughput numbers is working from a dataset that systematically overstates the disruption. When the signals deliberately go dark, the people staring at dashboards are the last to know what's happening. Citrini figured that out by putting a guy on a speedboat 18 miles from the Iranian coast while Shahed drones flew overhead. [link]
  • Nature is not our mother: Nature is our sister. We can be proud of her beauty, since we have the same father; but she has no authority over us; we have to admire, but not to imitate. This gives to the typically Christian pleasure in this earth a strange touch of lightness that is almost frivolity. Nature was a solemn mother to the worshipers of Isis and Cybele. Nature was a solemn mother to Wordsworth or to Emerson. But Nature is not solemn to Francis of Assisi or to George Herbert. To St. Francis, Nature is a sister, and even a younger sister: a little, dancing sister, to be laughed at as well as loved. [G. K. Chesterton
  • We all know that past a certain age, men just want to sit and read books about history. I remember when my dad went through The Change; I came home from school one day, and instead of being in the driveway shooting baskets and listening to Dire Straits, Dad was inside reading a book about the Korean War the size of a cinder block. At age 45, I’ve now undergone a similar shift: I now seek out information about the Italian invasion of Ethiopia the way 15 year-old me sought out topless photos of Cindy Margolis. [link]
  • I am reading over the Trump pardons of well-connected fraudsters and people like that (not January 6 pardons or other political ones) and kind of synthesizing it with my mental image of the people described below, and as a result a sort of red-coded crook-pervert broad-elite is emerging in my mind, an alternate elite to the blue-coded broad-elite of professors and NGOs and whatnot, a more inchoate elite that isn't quite as legible as the blue one in the imagination of the general public but exists alongside it and is as every bit as loathsome, but for different reasons. It's a local gentry elite, the GOP's real base (not the blue-collar types voting Trump, but the "jet ski dealership" or "nursing home operator" McMansion dweller type), and the real reason the party exists. No one can actually name these people as individuals off the tops of their heads, at least not until the Trump pardon comes along. [@wmslamcan]
  • Lucky people scored significantly higher on one trait: openness to experience. They talked to strangers more, varied their routines more, and said yes to invitations at nearly twice the rate. The "unlucky" group followed the same routes, ate at the same restaurants, and talked to the same 5 people. Their networks were closed loops. No new inputs, no new collisions. Luck isn't random. Luck is surface area. And surface area is a function of movement. [@aakashgupta]
  • High-agency people seem to have this weird immunity to embarrassment. Getting rejected? Not embarrassing, that’s just data collection. Looking naive? Not embarrassing, that’s just information asymmetry you’re fixing. Breaking minor social rules? Not embarrassing, most rules are just Schelling points anyway. What would be embarrassing to them is not trying. That’s the thing they can’t live with. [@Kpaxs]
  • Keweenaw Land Association, Limited today announced that it has entered into an exploration option, lease, work commitment, and royalty agreement with Pulsar Helium Inc. to evaluate helium resources across a large portion of the Company’s mineral rights portfolio in Upper Michigan. Helium is a critical industrial gas used in healthcare imaging, semiconductor manufacturing, fiber optics, aerospace systems, leak detection, and other advanced technologies. Demand has expanded alongside growth in space technologies and advanced semiconductor manufacturing. Approximately 40% of global helium supply is currently offline from traditional producing regions. This agreement positions Keweenaw and Michigan to help meet domestic demand, by leveraging the scale we have built over the past few years and laying the groundwork for a broader expansion with our partners. Under the agreement, Pulsar will initially receive an exploration option covering approximately 488,000 acres of Keweenaw’s mineral rights. The agreement includes a 36-month staged surrender schedule of acreage, and a minimum exploration expenditure at a level consistent with early-stage district-scale programs allowing Pulsar to evaluate the regional helium system before refining its exploration focus to a core 20,000-acre development leasehold. [Keweenaw Land Association, Ltd.]
  • The other thing is that Bernie Sanders, who used to be a prominent critic of open borders, needs to lead his whole flock back to a politically sustainable posture on this. People are going to worry that the next Democratic administration will open up the floodgates to a chaotic flow of new asylum claims. They are going to understand that Democrats don’t like to be mean to sympathetic people, but that realistically the only way to prevent the situation from spiraling out of control is — yes — to frankly and unapologetically turn away people who are in fact not rapists or murderers or terrorists but just basically normal people who simply don’t have permission to move to the United States. This is going to be a tough issue for any Democrat, because the credibility problem after Biden is so severe, and because Democrats (myself included!) are really quite sincere in shying away from cruelty to people who really are just seeking a better life for themselves. But we do have immigration laws and we need to enforce them, and again I think moderating here is consistent with leftists’ core message. [Matt Yglesias]
  • Starship will make it possible to use low Earth orbit as a parking lot for a giant space-based arsenal. This would allow the U.S. to pre-position conventional munitions with ablation shields and inertial guidance systems to strike anywhere on Earth within minutes. Putting tens of thousands of small munitions into orbit would become cost effective, by my estimate, at around $100 a kilogram. Munitions could include bunker busters, kinetic weapons, antipersonnel, incendiaries, fuel-air explosives, cluster munitions, and antitank, antiaircraft and antiship capabilities with sophisticated terminal guidance. Starship’s payload capacity promises to be so great that it will enable the deployment of much larger single munitions than today’s biggest airplanes, enabling conventional effects of a greater magnitude against even the most deeply buried targets. New kinds of strikes would become feasible. Imagine a strike package of thousands of 200-pound bombs, each landing precisely, at the same time, on electric grid sites, government buildings, railway crossings, border stations and road intersections—without putting planes or military personnel at risk. This wouldn’t be limited by the number of available missile launchers or by the need for multiple sorties by strike aircraft. Such a system would obviate the need to establish air superiority before bringing in bombers and the need for large numbers of expensive cruise missiles. From an appropriately chosen low Earth orbit, munitions could be deorbited with very little warning. [WSJ]