Warren Buffett is more important than the Pope.

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rubato
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Joined: Sun May 09, 2010 10:14 pm

Warren Buffett is more important than the Pope.

Post by rubato »

He's done more good in any case:


http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk ... evolution/


Reporter Karen Weise dug up records showing the charity, attempting to remain anonymous, gave $20 million to a ground-breaking study of nearly 10,000 women in St. Louis, which found that when providers offered them all forms of contraception for free, two-thirds opted for IUDs and hormonal implants.

The charity also funded a $23 million-program in Colorado that offered more than 30,000 IUDs to women who lacked health insurance. It ultimately gave at least $200 million over recent years to the research and promotion of IUDs, which has evidently boosted the public's trust in the method.
The St Louis study is groundbreaking in that it shows how easy and cheap it is to provide effective birth control to women.

yrs,
rubato

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Lord Jim
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Re: Warren Buffett is more important than the Pope.

Post by Lord Jim »

Buffet is a loud-mouthed hypocrite, (which is why it's not surprising you find him laudable) who whines about how little he pays in taxes when he is perfectly free to write the government a check any time...

And who pontificates (an appropriate word to use, given your subject line) about things like "excessive" executive compensation but never practices what he preaches when the opportunity presents itself. (as I posted earlier:)
Buffett Punts on Pay

Joe Nocera

“The way to get big shots to change their behavior is to embarrass them.”

So said Warren Buffett, a.k.a. the World’s Greatest Investor, in 2009 on the subject of excessive executive compensation. He was speaking at the annual meeting of his conglomerate, Berkshire Hathaway, a forum that he has often used to criticize executive compensation practices. In that 2009 meeting, though, he also made a suggestion about how to begin to change such practices. Institutional investors, he said, should start to “speak out on the most egregious cases.”

Apparently, though, Buffett doesn’t believe in the adage that you should practice what you preach. At least not based on what we saw this week. Given a chance to embarrass some major big shots — namely his fellow board members at Coca-Cola, a company where he is the largest shareholder, and whose equity compensation plan he felt was unjustifiably rich — he chose instead to punt. His reasons for doing so illustrate exactly why it is impossible to rein in excessive compensation.

The controversy over Coke’s equity compensation began about a month ago when one of the company’s investors, David Winters of Wintergreen Advisers, wrote a letter to the Coca-Cola directors complaining that the plan was excessive. “The Company expects that the 2014 Plan will award a mix of 60% options, 40% full value shares, resulting in the issuance of 340,000,000 Coca-Cola shares,” he wrote. Winters estimated that this would result in a transfer from shareholders to management of around $13 billion — and combined with previous equity awards, “this figure rises to $24 billion.” He called it an “outrageous grab.”

The equity compensation plan had to be approved by shareholders, so Winters began a campaign to get big institutional shareholders to vote it down at the annual meeting. In the weeks preceding the meeting, he ratcheted up his attack on the plan, complaining, among other things, that the performance targets that had to be met to get the equity awards were adjustable. (“In football terms, this allows the Compensation Committee to move the goal posts closer once the ball is in the air.”) Coke, of course, disputed Winters’s assessment and urged shareholders to vote for the plan.

“We thought Buffett would be a natural supporter of our position,” Winters later told me. To that end, he sent a separate letter to the Oracle of Omaha: “Like Jiminy Cricket,” it read, “you sit on our shoulders reminding us to do what is right.” He then laid out his rationale for why he believed the plan was excessive and a “no” vote was justified.

As Buffett would later acknowledge, the Winters letter prompted him to take a closer look at Coke’s equity compensation plan. And, sure enough, he came to the same conclusion as Winters: It was excessive — “you can give away too much of a company,” he told Becky Quick of CNBC on Wednesday, in the wake of the annual meeting. But he didn’t divulge his views to anyone on the Coca-Cola board. And when it came time to vote with Berkshire Hathaway’s 400 million shares, he abstained.

Quick, who is one of Buffett’s favorite journalists, seemed stunned when he told her what he had done. She pressed him for his rationale. Essentially, it was cowardice.

“I love Coke,” he said. “I love the management. I love the directors. So I didn’t want to vote no. I didn’t want to express any disapproval of management. But we did disapprove of the plan.”

Buffett went on to say that he had been on 19 boards in 55 years — “and I’ve never heard of a vote against a compensation plan voted by the compensation committee” — though he acknowledged that sometimes board members grumbled about compensation plans outside of the board room. When Quick asked him if he had ever voted for things he disagreed with, Buffett replied: “Sure. I’ve voted for compensation plans that I haven’t agreed with.”

“I’m still trying to get my head around this,” said Quick. So am I. This was potentially a teachable moment — Buffett could have shown other directors that it is O.K. to dissent from an executive compensation plan and still “love” the company. “He could have shown that you can separate out feelings of liking management with disagreeing with something management does,” said Gary Hewitt, the head of research at GMI Ratings. “That doesn’t mean it’s a betrayal.” He added, “That is leadership Buffett could have provided.”

Instead, what Buffett showed was how impossible it is for directors — even billionaires known for speaking their minds — to rock the boat. The need for collegiality trumped good corporate governance.
As it almost always does.

How sad. If Warren Buffett won’t use his unparalleled clout to rein in excessive compensation, how can we expect anyone else to?
I would be delighted to receive investment advice from Warren Buffett....

His opinions on anything else?

Not so much....
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rubato
Posts: 14245
Joined: Sun May 09, 2010 10:14 pm

Re: Warren Buffett is more important than the Pope.

Post by rubato »

Some more details:
Buffett, a businessman to his core, was just thinking economically, according to a 2008 interview with Judith DeSarno, the Buffett Foundation’s former director for domestic programs: “He thinks that unless women can control their fertility — and that it’s basically their right to control their fertility — that you are sort of wasting more than half of the brainpower in the United States.”
Smart man. He likes women and wants them to be autonomous.

"... The charity also funded a $23 million-program in Colorado that offered more than 30,000 IUDs to women who lacked health insurance. It ultimately gave at least $200 million over recent years to the research and promotion of IUDs, which has evidently boosted the public's trust in the method.

Advocates say the Colorado program led to a sharp drop in teen pregnancies. Between 2007 and 2012, birth rates among high school-age girls in the state dropped 39 percent, compared to 29 percent nationwide, according to the CDC. A state analysis found the initiative was responsible for three-quarters of the decline. ... "
"... Last year, the Post’s Tina Griego asked Colorado officials why the IUD program worked so well.

“If you have a drug that is 20 times more effective than other drugs, you will always start with that as your first option,” Greta Klingler, family planning supervisor for the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, told her. “What we did (in the Colorado Family Planning Initiative) is kind of flip the mindset, so rather than introducing all contraception as being on the same playing field, we said, ‘Let’s start with what is most effective.'”

Nowadays, the popularity of long-term, reversible birth control continues to swell. From 2006 to 2013, the rate of American women choosing the IUD — a small, T-shaped devices placed in the uterus — and hormonal implants nearly doubled, CDC data shows, spiking from 3.8 percent to 7.2 percent. ... "


My wife is a big advocate for IUDs and implanon.


yrs,
rubato

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