People Moves
Renowned US Investment Figure Charlie Munger Dies, Aged 99

Munger's influence on investors spread far beyond the shores of the US. A business partner with Warren Buffett, his achievements and commentaries are part of the folklore of the investment industry.
Charlie Munger, the right-hand-man to investment tycoon Warren
Buffett, has died at the age of 99.
The word “legendary” doesn’t quite do justice to Munger, whose
influence on how people think about investment and portfolio
management has been immense. Munger is very much associated with
the notion of “value investing” – finding firms trading at cheap
valuations and looking to benefit from this process. He was
influenced by investment writer Benjamin Graham.
In a statement yesterday on his Berkshire Hathaway website,
Buffett said: "Berkshire Hathaway could not have been built to
its present status without Charlie's inspiration, wisdom and
participation."
Berkshire, of which Munger was vice-chairman, has become a
multinational conglomerate that wholly owns popular brands such
as Dairy Queen and Fruit of the Loom, taking stakes in
Apple, Coca-Cola, among others.
Munger was, like Buffett, a native of Omaha, studying maths at
the University of Michigan, but dropped out at the age of 19
during World War II to serve in the US Army Air Corps. While in
the Army, he studied meteorology at Caltech in Pasadena,
California, and the state became his home. Munger later switched
to the law, studying at the Harvard Law School. In the late
1950s, he met Buffett, and they forged a business friendship and
partnership.
His influence was global. To illustrate this, here are comments
from Charlie Huggins, manager of the Quality Shares Portfolio at
Wealth Club, based in the UK: “Every year Charlie Munger
shared his wisdom, alongside his long-time investment partner,
Warren Buffett, at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual general meeting.
Every year I listened intently. It’s no exaggeration to say that
without these meetings, I wouldn’t be half the investor I am
today. I may not even be investing at all.
“Buffett aside, Charlie Munger has taught me more about investing
than all other investors combined. No other person on the planet,
not even his business partner, had his ability to boil down
business and investment principles to their core essence. Munger
was a man of few words, but everyone dripped with insight. Munger
could pack more wisdom into a single sentence than some people
get across in a lifetime.
“Munger was hugely intelligent, but so are a lot of people. It
wasn’t his intellect that set him apart. It was his common sense
and rationality. Munger paid zero attention to conventional
wisdom and was the dictionary definition of independent. He
excelled at pouncing on investment opportunities when everyone
else was running for the hills. And he played a huge role in
Buffett’s metamorphosis from an investor in cheap ‘cigar butts’
to embracing great businesses, like See’s Candies and
Coca-Cola.
“But arguably, it isn’t his investment prowess that Charlie
Munger will be most remembered for. It’s his understanding of
human psychology. His magnum opus talk, ‘The Psychology of Human
Misjudgment’, provides great insights on why we behave the way we
do. In my opinion, no one understood the common flaws and biases
in human behavior and judgement better than Charlie Munger. No
one internalized these principles to greater effect. And no one
did more to share this wisdom with others.
“Many people seek success by trying to grasp the esoteric rather
than master the obvious. Munger was the opposite. Key to Munger’s
success was his ability to invert problems: finding what didn’t
work – and then avoiding that like the plague. In Munger’s own
words – `It's remarkable how much long-term advantage people
like us have gotten by trying to be consistently not stupid,
instead of trying to be very intelligent.’”