Buffett’s Annual Letters: a Wistful Farewell
Buffett’s Annual Letters: a Wistful Farewell
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Buffett’s Annual Letters: a Wistful Farewell

🕒︎ 2025-11-04

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Buffett’s Annual Letters: a Wistful Farewell

Innovation and influence are very distinct phenomena. Bob Dylan, for instance, didn’t invent folk music: He borrowed extensively from Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger and others in the folk revival movement of the fifties and sixties, yet he became far more influential than any of them . When he decided to go electric in the mid-1960s, rock n’ roll was already a dominant force in pop culture, yet Dylan became far more important for the genre than nearly all of the bands and solo acts that came before him . Such is the relationship between Warren Buffett and earlier finance and investing writers, especially Benjamin Graham, author of The Intelligent Investor. Buffett didn’t dream up most of the ideas that he espoused — many came straight out of Graham’s teachings — but he brought them to the masses through the Berkshire Hathaway Inc. annual letters and gave us all a proof of concept through the company’s extraordinary performance. In doing so, he earned his place as our greatest investor and our leading finance and investing writer. Without Buffett, we may not be talking about Graham at all today.

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