Michael Lewis Reviews Schroeder’s Biography Of Warren Buffett

May 18, 2009 No Comments

Interesting review of Alice Schroeder’s book, Snowball- The Biography of Warren Buffett.

Note: I recommend reading the excerpts below before reading the full piece. Enjoy!

Click Here To Read Michael Lewis’ Book Review Of Snowball The Warren Buffett Biography

Article Introduction (Michael Lewis Via TNR)

There is now a long shelf of books about Warren Buffett, but this is the first time he has gone to any trouble to add to it. Reportedly Buffett now regrets his decision–he has apparently put some fresh distance between himself and his official biographer. If so, it’s not hard to see why. Alice Schroeder is a former Morgan Stanley research analyst, able to understand and to explain Buffett’s money-making, but she declined to confine herself to the business at hand. She has sought to describe Buffett’s psychological landscape as clearly as his financial one. For the reader, the results are pretty terrific–there are not a lot of 838-page narratives that leave you wanting more–but for Buffett they are no doubt upsetting.

Additional Article Excerpts (Michael Lewis Via TNR)

On the surface at least, he seems like a guy who has spent the last few years ignoring all of his own best advice. What does Schroeder make of this? By September of last year, when Berkshire’s share price began to collapse, The Snowball was already in bookstores. Its final chapter has a rushed, panicky feel to it, as if the author sensed that she was going to watch some meaningful part of her story unfold after she told it. If so, she was right: Buffett’s role in the current crisis is likely to be as interesting as any episode of his career.

Berkshire Hathaway may no longer be AAA-rated, but it will easily survive even this debacle. The problem in this sorry episode was not that we suffered from too much of Warren Buffett’s instincts, but that we suffered from too little.

In short, there has never been a better time to bet against Warren Buffett. The reader will forgive me, I hope, if I decline to do it. For one, he is sitting on a huge pile of increasingly precious capital, and has the power to extract the most onerous terms for its use. Yes, he railed incessantly against derivatives and yes, he has gotten himself twisted into the awkward position of having traded them himself. But the problem, as he most surely knew, was never derivatives. (This was a man who, in 1998, stood ready to buy the entire trillion-dollar derivatives book of the collapsed hedge fund Long Term Capital Management.) The problem was stupidly priced derivatives.

Buffett might not like it, but this book has done him a very Buffett-like service. Twenty years from now, when the financial markets have forgotten our current trauma, and finance is once again fashionable, some young person will pick it up and discover that history’s most legendary investor was not a cartoon but a real live human being. And still, somehow, deeply admirable.

Click Here To Read Michael Lewis’ Book Review Of Snowball The Warren Buffett Biography

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