Warren Buffett's annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders — Key highlights

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Warren Buffett’s annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway’s (BRK-A, BRK-B) shareholders is out, and it’s rich with insights from the greatest investor of all time.

In it, Buffett warns of the overpriced market for acquisitions and why he’s opting to increase the size of Berkshire’s equity portfolio; he defends stock buybacks; he acknowledges the massive write-down from Kraft Heinz; and he addresses government debt and deficits while also taking a jab at gold-touting doomsayers.

The letter accompanied news that Berkshire Hathaway booked a $25 billion loss in Q4, an unusual blemish largely driven by paper losses on stock holdings during a period of unusual market volatility.

To kick things off, however, Buffett points to a big change he’s made in the format of his letter.

“Long-time readers of our annual reports will have spotted the different way in which I opened this letter,” he said at the top. “For nearly three decades, the initial paragraph featured the percentage change in Berkshire’s per-share book value. It’s now time to abandon that practice.”

Buffett said that reporting that metric “has lost the relevance it once had.” He pointed to three reasons why: 1) “Berkshire has gradually morphed from a company whose assets are concentrated in marketable stocks into one whose major value resides in operating businesses”; 2) “while our equity holdings are valued at market prices, accounting rules require our collection of operating companies to be included in book value at an amount far below their current value, a mismark that has grown in recent years”; and 3) “it is likely that – over time – Berkshire will be a significant repurchaser of its shares, transactions that will take place at prices above book value but below our estimate of intrinsic value.”

FILE--  Warren E. Buffett appears before a House Commerce subcommittee in this September 1991 file photo.  Stock in Wells Fargo & Co. fell 5 percent Thursday on speculation that billionaire investor Warren Buffett sold his stake in the struggling banking company.  Wells was omitted from a list of Buffett's major holdings in a regulatory filing, leading investors to believe his Berkshire Hathaway Inc. investment company had dumped the stock. (AP Photos/File)
Warren Buffett appears before a House Commerce subcommittee in this September 1991 file photo. (AP Photos)

On that final matter of stock buybacks, Buffett clarified: “The math of such purchases is simple: Each transaction makes per-share intrinsic value go up, while per-share book value goes down. That combination causes the book-value scorecard to become increasingly out of touch with economic reality.”

Berkshire is buying more stocks, but it’s not a market call

One of the ongoing the questions Berkshire investors have is how will management deploy some of the company’s massive $112 billion in cash. In the past, Buffett and Charlie Munger, his right-hand man and vice chair of Berkshire Hathaway, have characterized that elusive target as an “elephant-sized” acquisition.

Unfortunately, Buffett believes the market looks expensive.

“In the years ahead, we hope to move much of our excess liquidity into businesses that Berkshire will permanently own,” he said. “The immediate prospects for that, however, are not good: Prices are sky-high for businesses possessing decent long-term prospects.”