Becoming Berkshire

1972: See's Candies

20 min · 20 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio 1972: See's Candies

Descripción

How a $25 million candy company helped Buffett and Munger understand the power of brands, pricing power, and businesses that produce cash without needing much capital.

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21 episodios

episode 1971: “Who Is Warren Buffett?” artwork

1971: “Who Is Warren Buffett?”

Welcome to 1971. The markets are reeling from one of the worst bear markets since the Great Depression. Speculation has collapsed, confidence is shaken, and the financial world is searching for answers. In this episode of Becoming Berkshire, we turn to an unlikely source: George Goodman, writing under the name Adam Smith, and his book Supermoney. Written in the depths of the 1969–72 bear market, Supermoney captured the unraveling of Wall Street’s excesses—and quietly documented the most extraordinary investment record of the era. At the time, almost no one was paying attention. Goodman asked a simple question in 1971: Who is Warren Buffett? Even seasoned financial journalists didn’t know the answer. From a modest office in Omaha, Buffett had compounded capital at an astonishing rate for over a decade—without publicity, without committees, and without participating in the speculative culture of the 1960s. While others chased concepts and technology, Buffett applied Benjamin Graham’s principles with absolute consistency and stepped away entirely at the height of his success. This episode explores why the world missed him, how distance from Wall Street became an advantage, and what Supermoney reveals about temperament, discipline, and time—the real foundations of compounding.

4 de ene de 202634 min
episode 1970: The Obscure Stamp Company That LAUNCHED Buffett's Empire artwork

1970: The Obscure Stamp Company That LAUNCHED Buffett's Empire

Episode 17 | 1970: Goodbody’s Fall, Walmart’s Rise, and Buffett’s First Float Play 1970 opened with chaos on Wall Street. Broker-dealers were failing, the Fed was scrambling, and Goodbody & Co.—once a pillar of the brokerage world—collapsed in scandal before being rescued by Merrill Lynch. Meanwhile, in Bentonville, Arkansas, Sam Walton was taking Walmart public, setting the stage for one of the greatest retail stories ever told. At the same time, Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger, and Rick Guerin were quietly buying into Blue Chip Stamps, discovering the power of float—a concept that would define Berkshire Hathaway’s future. And inside Berkshire, the textile mill was fading, but insurance and banking were beginning to take root. This episode explores the contrasts of 1970: Wall Street’s crisis, Walmart’s rise, and the early blueprint of what Berkshire would become.

2 de sep de 202528 min