Warren Buffett Thinks This Is a Particularly "Fabulous" Kind of Business

In This Article:

Key Points

  • The investment legend loves companies that don't require a lot of capital investment.

  • But he has invested in some very capital-intensive "Magnificent Seven" companies.

  • Most have been capital-light for many years, but that might be changing.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Berkshire Hathaway ›

When Warren Buffett speaks, savvy investors listen -- because he's often sharing valuable investing insights that can make us even savvier investors. It's not hard to find wisdom from Mr. Buffett, either, because he has been interviewed countless times, has penned a terrific annual letter to shareholders for decades, and has answered questions for hours at the annual meetings of his company, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B). (For most of the 60 years for which he has helmed Berkshire, the late Charlie Munger was his business partner and fellow wisdom dispenser.)

At the most recent annual meeting, in which Buffett announced plans to step down at the end of the year, he answered one question by revealing a kind of company he finds especially attractive.

Warren Buffett is shown in closeup.
Image source: The Motley Fool.

Here's what Buffett said

Many questions are posed to Buffett at the annual meeting -- from shareholders present and from business journalist Becky Quick, who creates a set of questions from the many that are emailed to her. Questions alternate between Quick and shareholders. Here's the relevant question:

This question [is] about the big cap technology stocks. In the 2017 annual meeting, you said ... you really don't need any money to run these companies and referred to them as ideal businesses, referring to the big tech companies -- Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon.com. With all of those companies now announcing massive capital investment endeavors around artificial intelligence (AI) ambitions, have you rethought the above comment just in terms of them being asset light and what you think of them as a result?

In other words, the questioner is reminding Buffett how he has long extolled companies that are capital-light instead of capital-intensive -- companies that can operate without needing regular infusions of cash. They're then pointing out how many such companies are now deploying a lot of capital to pursue AI-related goals. Here's Buffett's response:

Well, it's always better to make a lot of money without putting up anything than it is to make a lot of money by putting up a lot of money. A business that takes no capital to speak of [is] Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO): the finished product, which has gone through bottling companies, takes a lot of capital, but in terms of selling the syrup or concentrate, that doesn't take a lot of capital.