Motley Fool Money - Au revoir, Warren….
Episode Date: November 13, 2025Warren Buffett’s surprise announcement this past May that he would be stepping down as Berkshire Hathaway’s CEO lefty a few lingering questions that many ardent Berkshire followers wanted to know.... Many of those questions were answered in this week’s letter he penned to shareholders that will be his new Thanksgiving tradition. Tyler Crowe, Matt Frankel, and Jon Quast discuss: - The end of the government shutdown and the market’s “meh” response throughout. - Buffett quietly exiting stage left and his lasting impact on all of us. - Stocks on our radar. Companies discussed: BRK-A, BRK-B, CSIQ, APPN, DECK Host: Tyler Crowe Guests: Matt Frankel, Jon Quast Engineer: Dan Boyd Disclosure: Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, “TMF”) do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. We’re committed to transparency: All personal opinions in advertisements from Fools are their own. The product advertised in this episode was loaned to TMF and was returned after a test period or the product advertised in this episode was purchased by TMF. Advertiser has paid for the sponsorship of this episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Buffett quiet exits. So we're going to be the band that plays him off. This is Motley Fool Money.
Welcome to Motley Fool Money. I'm Tyler Crow. And today I'm joined by longtime full contributors,
John Quast and Matt Frankel. Today, we're going to talk about Warren Buffett's farewell letter,
I guess, for a lack of a better term. And as usual, it's the Thursday show. So we're going to do
stocks on our radar. But first, we'd be remiss if we didn't acknowledge that this is officially the end
of this current government shutdown. Yesterday today, we kind of debated which one it was, but
we'll just say it's the day anyways. Before we really kind of get into a discussion, I actually
want to ask both of you guys a quick question. What was the return of the S&P 500 during the shutdown?
Just give me a number. I would guess up less than 1%.
Yeah, since John kind of took my answer, I'll say up 3%.
Well, let's split it right down the middle because it was 2.0.0.8.
Maybe one of you would consider the win with the Dow Jones was actually of 3.91 over the 42-day
span.
Now, I bring this up, and I don't want to sound tone-deaf to everyone that had to go through
some rough times over the past five weeks.
But the market didn't really seem to care that much.
2% is technically like, if we look at long-term historical averages, that's technically
better than the historical average.
So am I wrong that the market, I guess, just.
didn't seem to care. Yeah, Tyler, you bring up a great point. There were essential workers that had to
continue to go into work and they did so without a paycheck. They do get back pay, but, you know,
they still had bills in the meantime. So it did cause hardship for people and we don't want to make light of that.
But to your point about the market being up, in spite of the headlines, you know what? I'm glad
it worked out that way because you would have thought from all of the talk and all the chatter
leading up to the shutdown during the shutdown, you would have thought that it would have made a big difference
in the stock market. But looking at the results, it frankly didn't. Great investor, Peter Lynch,
tells investors not to look at the macro, but rather to focus on the individual businesses.
And, you know, I think that we're seeing, once again, that there's a whole lot of noise out there,
but very few of the headlines are actually of true significance for long-term investors.
So it's refreshing that something as big and as scary, supposedly, as the longest government
shutdown in history, actually had really little impact on the stock market.
Yeah, and I mean, it did have some impact, to be fair, when they announced that there was
a deal in sight over the weekend. We definitely saw the market rally a little bit. That's what
happened on Monday and Tuesday this week. The Dow set a new record. And that was really on
the backs of the announcement. But for me, the most important thing isn't what the shutdown means
to investors, you know, what, a five week or six week or whatever it was. It's what we are
avoiding by the shutdown not lasting even longer. So just to name a couple examples, real estate
investment trusts that own government-leased properties have been collecting rent because the October
and November payments were generally authorized already. If it had kept dragging on, there would
have been some disruption there. Airlines are another one. There have been some flight cancellations.
They never even really ramped up to that true 10% that they were talking about before the shutdown ended.
It was really only a week or so that we saw flight cancellations. And another thing that the
government reopening does is that allows agencies to start releasing economic data, again,
at the normal cadence for jobs, inflation, etc., which has mostly either been paused or delayed.
That's why the Social Security cost of living adjustment was delayed.
This is essential for allowing things like the Fed to act with the latest available information in mind
for investors like us to make informed decisions about the economic factors that affect our
companies and things like that.
Again, getting back to it, this was kind of a five-week dead zone, I guess, if you will,
for a lot of economic data and things like that, largely to make decisions and for us really
to have things to talk about.
And this is what I, someone who discusses investing topics with you guys and with the
world, it kind of struggles with.
Like, the Motley Fool, among many other great investors over time, have always disposed
buying and holding stocks for several years and kind of letting the businesses growth and value creation
do the heavy lifting.
Like in this type of investing, a 42-day period of government shutdown doesn't really change things.
As glib as I make this whole event sound.
And yet, it's something that most investors want to discuss.
I mean, we look at, it was the head of the Wall Street Journal.
It was the head of Bloomberg.
Like, every new financial media outlet that I checked this morning had all these, had, this was the headline.
And it's what people want to read and want to talk.
about. How will impact businesses like travel and leisure? Could government contracts be at risk,
et cetera, et cetera? In the world, investings, these are such minor bumps in a long and windy road.
So I want to pose this question to you guys, because this is very much one of the signal versus
noise problems that we as investors have to grapple with every day, how have you oriented
your investing, we'll call it the signal detector to filter out what in the moment seems like
a pretty big deal?
News versus noise is always a big struggle for investors. I don't always get it right. No investor does.
Think of the pandemic era and how many things that seemed like they were here to stay.
Now seem like ancient history, things like putting on masks and social distancing.
A lot of people thought that was just a new normal that was going to last forever.
I tend to try to compartmentalize things into temporary and permanent headwinds for my investing decisions or potentially permanent.
there's really no world where the government shut down would have drug on forever, for example.
So it was clearly a temporary headwind.
And as you mentioned, the market really kind of dismissed it as such.
More generally in my investing, I love investing based on temporary headwinds when they affect stocks.
Like if a company is beaten down because current weakness in the real estate market
or because of tariff uncertainty is having a temporary impact on the business,
that's some of my favorite times to invest.
but permanent headwinds, say like regulatory changes, for example, can be a thesis changer.
Yeah, I didn't realize how similar my answer was to Mats until right now.
But when you're looking to filter out the noise, yeah, time is such an important filter to put in place.
And so when you look at the shutdown, for example, we knew going in that in a worst-case scenario,
it would be short-lived.
And it was the longest one in history, and it still lasted less than two months.
And when we're talking about investing over five years, two months is just the blink of an eye.
So that time filter shows us that the shutdown was a little bit more noise than news.
And you look at other things, for example, we can look at things on the other side of the equation.
I think of something like the aging workforce.
So baby boomers are hitting retirement age, this huge generation.
That's a trend that can play out for significant time.
And so I think that does have more ramifications for investors.
Or how about housing, for example, there's an under supply of homes.
And we've talked about it on this podcast.
That can't be rectified very quickly, even if we tried, even if we built a lot of homes today.
So that's another time filter that puts that more into the news or the signal category than the noise.
Speaking of people hitting retirement age, we're going to talk about Warren Buffett's most recent,
letter coming up next. Some of the best lessons don't come from a classroom. They come from experience.
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One of the lingering questions many Berkshire Hathaway investors have had since Warren Buffett
announced he was stepping away from the CEO role was, how will he be involved? Will this still
be like brokering deals as executive chairman? Will he still be doing those marathon Q&A sessions at the
annual meeting? I think there was a lot of like wish casting around Berkshire's future. Oh, he'll
swoop in when he needs to, to get those big deals or something like that. But we got a little bit more
a sense of finality this week of Warren Buffett's tenure when he penned a Thanksgiving letter
that more or less said he's laid out his future role. And in short, Greg Abel's going to handle
all of it. Now, the one thing that Buffett did commit to was an annual Thanksgiving letter,
the one that he just penned, and for as long as he can do it. I certainly have thoughts on how this
clarifies the role Buffett will play in the future, but I would like to get your thoughts on it as well.
was what Warren Buffett announced where it's basically he's saying, I'm going to handle, basically
walk away from more or less all the things you've known that me doing was kind of what you expected.
Yeah, I mean, I mean, I thought he was going to walk away. He's 95. His involvement behind the scenes,
I'm guessing, has been declining for some time. You know, he can't do the marathon, you know,
12-hour days of being in meetings and things like that anymore. He doesn't do interviews as much
as he used to, and there's a reason for that. So I'm not sure.
shocked to see him turn everything over to Greg. I wouldn't be surprised to see something else from
Buffett toward the end of the year. I don't think this is a total farewell, maybe just like a
short CNBC interview or something to that effect. I wouldn't go so far as to say this letter is
what I would have expected, but it's not a surprise for Buffett to help ease the leadership
transition in the minds of investors because he's been doing that for years. I'll certainly
be reading these Thanksgiving letters as long as Buffett's around, but I don't expect them to be too
heavy on investing thoughts or commentary or anything like that. This one really wasn't. So that's kind of
where I'm at with it. Yeah, when it comes to the leadership transition between Warren Buffett to Greg Abel,
Warren Buffett, everything I know about him, he does not strike me as a backseat driver. He's the
kind of guy who's going to throw you the keys to the car and say, I prepared you for this moment
and go drive down the road. And it seems like that's what he's doing with Greg Abel. So it's not that
surprising to me. I will say that what was surprising was that his Thanksgiving letter, if this is
his final curtain call, if this is his farewell, it really felt anticlimactic. It was a great
letter. I enjoyed reading it, but this is the greatest investor of all time, in my opinion. And I would
have loved to see something just way more ceremonious and just way more celebratory for such a great career,
you know, a big to do. He needs a parade somewhere. You know, this is, it felt anti-climactic to me.
It was a great letter. But then again, you know what? Buffett, he's a simple guy. He's a modest guy.
It did feel like how he wants to go out. I think at this point, anybody who has spent more than,
I don't know, 12 hours working in kind of the financial investing media world that the three of us find
ourselves in. We've had at least one tidbit of Buffett advice that's really stuck with us. And I'm going to,
I'll give mine and I want you guys to give yours and any parting thoughts on Thanksgiving letter.
But mine was basically, it was at the 1999 annual meeting where basically somebody asked,
if you were to start over today, what would you do? And it sounds a little glib, but he just basically
said start with the A's. It was this idea of, you know, being able to, you know, sticking with the
tradition that he has been as kind of a worker turning over as many stones as possible,
really trying to find those, what he's called the great business at a good price sort of thing.
And to do that takes a monumental amount of work.
And it reverberated with me the most because I think the follow Buffett mantra has become
just by the things that he buys versus using the principles that he has espoused upon us
about investing and using the tools rather than just being copycats.
My favorite line from Warren Buffett came from his 1992 letter to shareholders, where he wrote,
we think the very term value investing is redundant. And in that section of the letter,
Buffett was talking about these mental categories that investors tend to have between gross
stocks and value stocks, as if they're two completely opposing ideas. And for,
for Buffett, he was explaining that, yeah, what a company is going to be worth in five years,
the value of the company. It has a lot to do with the growth that's going to experience over the
next five years. And so you can't calculate future value without estimating its future growth.
And for this reason, all investing for Warren Buffett is value investing,
trying to pay an appropriate price based on what the business is going to be worth over your
holding period, whether that's five years, 10 years, whatever that is.
And so, yeah, I really love that quote.
It's a great thing to think about.
He thinks the term value investing is redundant.
For me, there's too many Buffett quotes that I love to discuss them all here.
I literally wrote an article once that compiled 100 different Buffett quotes that I loved.
But if there's one that really changed my investing mindset more than others, it's the quote
that it's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a
wonderful price.
So, in other words, cheap garbage is still garbage.
In my early days of investing, if you can even call it investing, I made a mistake that a lot of
young investors make. I would generally look for companies that were just down by 70, 80, 90%,
and buy them in the mindset that they were going to come back. But after actually learning about
investing, I knew they were that way for a reason. Think things like mortgage companies in the years
leading up to the financial crisis when things started to collapse. Now I focus on great businesses
first, then consider valuation. And it has served me well for more than 50,
years of what I would call serious investing.
I feel the parallels of music, taste, and Warren Buffett quotes really tracks here because
we have three middle-aged men discussing their favorite things, and they all happen to
have in the 90s. Just a parting thought on investor quotes here. After the break, we're going
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slash Molly. You know, guys, hopefully one day we too will be able to have enough money like Michael
Burry that we can just kind of dissolve our capital management program and just go to a family
office like he is. But until that day, we're still going to be picking stocks and hopefully
bringing people along the ride with us. So we're going to do stocks on our radar. And I'm going to
go first this week. And the company on my radar is Canadian Solar, ticker CSIQ. I mentioned first
solar a couple weeks ago, I think, at this point. And a lot of the things that I talked about,
about with for solar, I think apply to Canadian solar as well. The idea where this AI infrastructure
buildout and the power demands that we are going to have to see for AI buildout is not going to
wait for nuclear to arrive. It's going to go now. We're seeing it happen now with natural gas being
deployed, with solar being deployed, because these are the fastest to deploy electrons we can
put into a system. I think for solar is going to be a major beneficiary of it. I think Canadian
solar is going to be a beneficiary because it's one of the very few companies out there in the utility
scale space that is going to have the scale to actually build up and sell into this sort of network.
The reason I'm highlighting Canadian solar this month or this time rather than with for solar
is I think it's a little bit more beaten down, going back to Matt's thing of buying stuff that's way
down and hopefully coming back. Maybe I'm going wrong on that regard, but I see a business that
is going to catch a long-term trend with AI infrastructure buildout in solar. I don't think a lot of
people are thinking that way, and that's why I've been looking into this one a lot more.
Well, one on my watch list, speaking of stocks that had been beaten down, is a company called Appian,
ticker symbol, APPN. It provided an automation platform for enterprise clients. The stock was
essentially left for dead by Wall Street a few years ago after years of sluggish growth,
being late to the AI party. They never really had a fantastic growth rate, even back in
like the 2021 era when they should have. But its recent results really show major signs of life.
The company had one of its best day ever after its third quarter earnings, showed cloud
subscription revenue up 21%. Strong operating income. They're net profitable. They lost
money a year ago. Strong guidance. I've owned this one for a while, and it was painful for
a little while, but the business really appears to have reached an inflection point, finally.
And I'll close us out with Decker's Brands, ticker symbol D-E-C-K, and I'm sticking with the theme
of stocks that are beaten down because this one's down more than 60% from its all-time high.
I'm a simple guy, so I like simple businesses that I can understand. This is a shoe company,
jogging shoes and boots. I can get my mind around that. Typically speaking, shoe stocks have
cheap valuations. And Decker's recently had a somewhat premium valuation. I think it's finally
dropped down to a valuation that's more becoming of a shoe business. That said, Decker's is a
quality shoe business. Both sales for its Hoka brand and its UG brand are still growing.
Profits are growing faster than sales. It has good profit margins for a shoe business. Also,
it has a pristine balance sheet with $1.4 billion in cash and no debt. That's a good thing.
if we do have struggles in the economy, it's well set up. There are expansion opportunities with
this business as growing in international markets, even though growth could be somewhat modest,
but there is growth. And I think the valuation is attractive at 12 times its earnings. I think
that for investors who buy today, they can enjoy some long-term upside from this starting point.
So if you're going to own a shoe stock, you want to own a quality one, and I think Decker's is that.
All right, so we have Decker's, Appian, and Canadian Solar to wrap out this week.
always, people on the program may have interests in the stock they talk about, and the Motley
Fool may have formal recommendations for our guest, so don't buy or sell stocks based solely
on what you hear. All personal finance content follows Motley Fool editorial standards and is not
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purposes only. See our full advertising disclosure. Please check out our show notes. Thanks for
producer Dan Boyd and the rest of the Motley Fool team. For Matt, John, myself, thanks for listening,
and we'll chat again soon.
