• Home
  • Warren’s 10 Ways to Get Rich
  • Berkshire Hathaway
  • Contact Us

Blog Archives

Buffett Winning $1 Million Bet Against Wall Street

Feb 4, 2013
by Kelly Scott in berkshire hathaway // warren buffett with No Comments

Since the “million-dollar bet” first came into existence five years ago against the Wall Street experts, Warren Buffett is currently in the lead.

During the year 2008, the chairman of Berkshire Hathaway made a 10 year long bet with Protegé partner Ted Seides. Warren Buffett put his money in a low-cost S&P stock index fund from Vanguard. Seides chose to put his money in five different hedge funds.

The overall bet states this: whichever person has the best return by the end of the year 2017 – and this includes all costs that will potentially be associated with every fund – will be the absolute winner. They are guaranteed a one million-dollar victory. The proceeds of this bet go to either Buffett’s designated charity, which is Girls Inc. of Omaha, or Seides designated charity Absolute Return for Kids.

Carol Loomis recently reported that the fund Warren Buffett shows is currently up 8.69%. The hedge funds chosen by the Protegé partner have only received a 0.13% average increase.

This is vindication for Warren Buffett who has a long-held belief that the supposed “experts” aren’t able to outperform the stock market overall. He bases this premise on his belief that the so-called “helpers” charge fees which they really cannot justify.

Both of the strategies suffered major losses during 2008, which happened to be the first year that they started this challenge. Loomis also noted that it took both parties this long to get into the black.

When you look at arguments that take place on a website that recorded the wager, Protegé believes that hedge funds are looking to “generate positive returns over time regardless of the market environment” and they aren’t just looking to beat the market. Regardless, through a cycle, “top hedge fund managers have surpassed market returns net of all fees, while assuming less risk as well.”

Protegé has a strong belief that there is a major difference between the returns from a top hedge fund as opposed to an average hedge fund, “funds of funds with the ability to sort the wheat from the chaff will earn returns that amply compensate for the extra layer of fees their clients pay.”

  • Recent Posts

    • 3 Things Warren Buffett Taught Bill Gates
    • Buffett Hints At 2016 Hilary Clinton Presidential Run
    • Tracy Britt: The Female Warren Buffett?
    • Berkshire Hathaway Considering Unipol Insurance Assets
    • Buffett Suggests Hillary Clinton Should Be #45
  • Recent Comments

    • Michele on Doris & Warren Buffett Present Online Advice about Giving
    • Md Bayazid Khan on Berkshire Hathaway: The Company That Warren Buffett Built
    • Sumflow on Buffett’s Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad To Start Testing LNG Fuel
    • Meridith on Warren Buffett’s $2 Billion Bet On Solar Energy
    • David Sears on We Want Your Questions for Warren Buffett
  • Blogroll

    • 10 Ways to Get Rich
    • Berkshire Hathaway
    • Why Billionaires are Dumping Stocks
  • Categories

    • Acquisitions
    • berkshire hathaway
    • billionaires
    • charity
    • doris buffett
    • get rich
    • howard buffett
    • investing
    • Personal Quotes
    • stocks
    • warren buffett

    Tags

    MidAmerican Energy J.P. Morgan Chase American Express IBM bank of america cnbc 3G Capital Nebraska federal reserve New York Times fiscal cliff coca-cola Goldman Sachs berkshire hathaway Google BYD facebook Moody's Media General ted weschler See's Candies ajit jain howard buffett jamie dimon Oracle Of Omaha wells fargo Ben Bernanke daVita Inc. Geico Charlie Munger Benjamin Graham Omaha Burlington Northern Santa Fe Citigroup Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Value Investing Congress cnbc.com todd combs H.J. Heinz Co. General Electric newspapers bill gates H.J. Heinz President Obama

© 2013 Powered By WordPress Theme By All In One Theme

  • Home
  • Terms Of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact