2014-08-30

9781611634099 (1611634091), Carolina Academic Press, 2013

The original edition of The Essays of Warren Buffett: Lessons for Corporate America was the

centerpiece of a symposium held two decades ago at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law under the

auspices of its Samuel and Ronnie Heyman Center on Corporate Governance. This gathering brought

hundreds of Cardozo students together for a two-day dissection of all the ideas in the collection, featuring a

series of vibrant debates among some 30 distinguished professors, investors, managers, and other students,

with Warren E. Buffett and Charles T. Munger participating throughout from their seats in the front row.

The Essays was the standard textbook for a specialized course I taught at Cardozo in proper business

practices and is adopted by scores of professors at other law and business schools for classes such as

investment, finance and accounting. Some investment firms have distributed copies to their professional

employees and clients as part of training programs. I am grateful for the positive feedback from these

students, teachers, and other users and delighted to know that the lessons are being taught and learned.

Special thanks to Professor Tom Johansen (Ft. Hays State University, Kansas) and Professor Leo Chan

(Delaware State College).

Continuing thanks also to Mr. Buffett's good friend and advisor, Robert Denham, whom I have had the

pleasure of getting to know in the years following the symposium. Mr. Denham, a partner in the law firm

Munger, Tolles & Olsen, introduced Mr. Buffett to Cardozo and me through another mutual friend, former

Munger, Tolles colleague and now Cardozo professor Monroe Price, and I thank both of them for opening

that door. Thanks also to Carol Loomis, a close friend of Mr. Buffett's and the person who annually edits

each shareholder letter. For institutional support in countless ways, thanks as always to Sam and Ronnie

Heyman.

As in previous editions of The Essays, this one retains the architecture and philosophy of the original

edition but adds selections from Mr. Buffett's most recent annual shareholder letters. All the letters are

woven together into a fabric that reads as a complete and coherent narrative of a sound business and

investment philosophy. As an aid to all readers, and to enable readers of the previous editions to see what

is new in this one, a disposition table at the end of the book shows the various places in this collection

where selections from each year's letter appear. Footnotes throughout indicate the year of the annual

report from which essays are taken. To avoid interrupting the narrative flow in this collection, omissions of

text within excerpts are not indicated by ellipses or other punctuation.

The new edition is called for not because anything has changed about the fundamentals of sound

business and investment philosophy but because Mr. Buffett's articulation of that philosophy is always

done in the context of contemporary events and business conditions. So periodic updating is warranted to

maintain its currency.

In preparing the previous editions, I was aided by numerous people, to whom I expressed gratitude in

those editions, and I want to thank them again. Among those, I especially thank Mr. Buffett. His generosity

not only made the symposium possible but his participation enriched it manifold; his willingness to entrust

the rearrangement and republication of his letters to me is a great honor. His partner, Charlie Munger,

deserves repeated thanks too, for not only did he participate in the symposium from the front row he also

graciously chaired, on a moment's notice, one of the panels.

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