Posts Tagged ‘Berkshire Meeting’

Shareholder Dilemma

Friday, April 22nd, 2011

It happens every year. Berkshire Hathaway shareholders come to Omaha to attend the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholders’ meeting, visit the exhibition hall at the Qwest Center and end up buying more than they can carry home with them.

Well fret no more, people. Borsheims has the solution right inside its booth at the Qwest Center. It’s called the RuMe bag:

The bag rolls up into a tiny size to fit in your pocket, purse or briefcase. Then, when you need it (like after you’ve purchased armloads of Berkshire Hathaway-related products), just unroll it and go. You can fit a lot of goodies into the 15.5″ bag. But don’t try to take the Dilly bars home in the bag. They melt and MUST be eaten immediately!

Reminder: Asking Questions at the Annual Meeting

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011
Just a reminder of how the question and answer session at the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholders’ meeting works. Here is the section straight from Warren Buffett and the folks at Berkshire Hathaway headquarters:
Financial journalists from organizations representing newspapers, magazines and television will participate in the question-and-answer period, asking Charlie and me questions that shareholders have submitted by email. The journalists and their email addresses are: Carol Loomis, of Fortune, who may be emailed at cloomis@fortunemail.com; Becky Quick, of CNBC, at BerkshireQuestions@cnbc.com; and Andrew Ross Sorkin, of the New York Times, at arsorkin@nytimes.com. From the questions submitted, each journalist will choose the dozen or so he or she decides are the most interesting and important. (In your email, let the journalist know if you would like your name mentioned if your question is selected.)
So, if you want to submit a question via email, go right ahead. There will also be 13 microphones set up at the Qwest Center for shareholders to ask questions, but there is always quite a line so be prepared to wait!

Omaha Documentary

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Hello Weekenders,

Aside from the regular sea of cameras at Berkshire, you may see a very different kind of film crew. They are a documentary group from Germany led by Dr. Gisela Baur. Dr. Baur and her film crews will be attending all the Berkshire Hathaway events this German Documentariansweekend. They have been in Omaha since last Saturday and they been visiting different locations throughout the city and interviewing many different people. They intend to produce a film that focuses on Warren Buffett and his interaction with the city of Omaha.

I was lucky enough to speak with Dr. Baur and she was very complimentary about Omaha and Omahans. She called us “very friendly people.” She also said that she “loved the atmosphere in Omaha.” So, watch out for her and her film crew. You just might have ended up in a German documentary.

Hope you had a great time,

Bill, the blogger

Should Warren Webcast?

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

Hello Berkshire Weekenders,

I recently read a blog post on Gurufocus.com written by Bill Freehling called “Should Warren Buffett Webcast Berkshire Hathaway Meeting.” His blog post weighs both sides of a pretty popular debate.

One side would like Warren Buffett and the Berkshire crew to webcast the entire Berkshire Meeting on Saturday May 1st. Some proponents of the webcast believe that the webcast should be required by the SEC’s fair disclosure regulations. Others would just like more access to the famous Buffett investing wisdom. They would like access to Buffett and Munger’s ideas without the filter of a news agency.

On the other side, many shareholders believe that this should be a shareholders-only event. One big reason is tradition. This very famous, once-a-year meeting has been closed-door to all video and photography since before Buffett’s chairmanship. Buffett probably also enjoys keeping the event semi-private, as the event brings a lot of shopping to his hometown of Omaha, NE every year for the shareholder’s meeting. If the meeting were to be webcast, it might diminish travel to Omaha every May for the Berkshire Shareholder’s Weekend. Every year, 30,000+ visitors come to Omaha for the Berkshire Shareholder’s Meeting and the economic benefit to the city is quite large.

Currently, it takes a shareholder’s credential to get into the meeting and to listen to Warren Buffett’s and Charlie Munger’s advice first hand. Everyone else has to wait for the media to recap what was said later in the day.

So what do you think? Would you like to see a live webcast of the Berkshire Meeting? Do you think it should stay private?

Best Wishes,
Bill, the blogger