In 2016, it’s easier than ever to play the financial markets. From the explosion of online brokers to the rise of robo-advisors, armchair investors have dozens of tools just a few clicks or taps away. Daily trading is a snap. Deep financial research has never been more widely available. If anything, you’d be a fool not to jump in, right?
Warren Buffett might disagree.
Today, the Oracle of Omaha is worth upwards of $60 billion. He’s beaten the stock market roughly 47 of the last 50 years. Along the way, he’s made his fortune not through a whirlwind of clever trades, but instead, through a series of smart, long-term investing decisions.
Buffett has controversially avoided tech stocks and fancy new investing technology, preferring to evaluate companies by simple, time-tested standards. Is the market undervaluing a company’s intrinsic value? Does the company have a smart, responsible management team? Is the organization based on a fad, or is it a strong leader in a durable industry?
To get a better sense of Buffett’s success and investing mindset, the team went back to his childhood, tracking his net worth from birth to the present day.
For this timeline, note that Buffett’s pre-1994 net worth is based on estimates, rough calculations and one-off reporting. Some famous Buffett stories and anecdotes are cited in several places across the web, but not necessarily based on one solid, primary source. With this in mind, FindtheCompany tries to caveat each figure, and presents a range where necessary.
Starting in 1994, FindTheCompany turned to Buffett’s publicly available form DEF-14As. These documents provide information on Buffett’s Class A and Class B shares in his company, Berkshire Hathaway, as well as the current market value of the stock. Given that more than 98 percent of his net worth is tied up in the company, his net worth can be estimated over the last 22 years with fairly strong confidence.
For each year or range of years on this list, this report highlights key moments in Buffett’s life, from his teenage pinball machine business to his lucrative acquisition of GEICO. But it starts even earlier, when Buffett turned a few sticks of gum into a tidy profit.
The 1930s
Estimated net worth: $100
2016 dollars: $1,700
Age: childhood
As early as six years old, Buffett was already an entrepreneur. He bought Coca-Cola six packs for 25 cents at his grandfather’s store, then sold each bottle for 5 cents — a 20 percent profit per pack. He employed a similar model for Juicy Fruit gum, netting 2 cents of profit per pack. Rumor has it he wouldn’t sell individual sticks, for fear he wouldn’t be able to sell the remaining four pieces individually.
The Early 1940s
Estimated net worth: $5,000 – $6,000
2016 dollars: $65,000 – $70,000
Age: early teens
Buffett bought his first stock in 1941, six shares of Cities Service (later, CITGO, an oil company) at $38 each. A short time after, he sold the stock at $40. The price would skyrocket to more than $200 over the next two years. It was a missed opportunity for Buffett, but a lesson in patient investing that shaped the rest of his career.
Buffett went on to make $175 per month delivering the Washington Post as a paperboy. He claimed a $35 tax deduction for his bicycle.
In 1944, he invested $1,200 of his savings into 40 acres of farmland. By the next year, his net worth was likely as high as $6,000.
The Late 1940s
Estimated net worth: $9,800
2016 dollars: $98,000
Age: late teens
In 1947, Buffett and a friend spent $25 on a used pinball machine, setting it up in a local barbershop. They went on to buy two more, and after growing the business for several months, the two boys sold the whole operation for $1,200. In 2016 dollars, that would have amounted to more than $10,000 in profit in under a year — not bad for a couple of teenagers.
Between his paper job, land investment, the pinball business and other savings, Buffett had saved about $9,800 by the age of 19.
The Early 1950s
Estimated net worth: $20,000 – $50,000
2016 dollars: $100,000 – $500,000
Age: early 20s
The early 1950s represented a transitional period for Buffett. He received his M.S. in economics from Columbia Business School, married Susan Thompson and accepted a job from one of his college professors, Benjamin Graham. His starting salary was $12,000 per year (about $106,000 in 2016 dollars).
That said, our net worth estimates for this period are fairly wide. Buffett was establishing the foundation for his portfolio, but he had yet to make most of his key investments.
The Late 1950s
Estimated net worth: $140,000 – $174,000
2016 dollars: $1.2 million – $1.5 million
Age: late 20s
Buffett started Buffett Partnership Ltd, an investment partnership based in Omaha. He went on to found two additional partnerships over the next several years.
In 1958, he bought a five-bedroom house, where he still lives to this day. The house was $31,500 ($267,000 in 2016 dollars). By 1958, he had doubled his original partnership’s money, and his net worth was well into the six figures.
The Early 1960s
Estimated net worth: $1 million – $1.5 million
2016 dollars: $7.9 million – $12 million
Age: early 30s
Legend has it Buffett set a goal to become a millionaire by age 30 (1960), and many reports estimate he was successful. But a safer date estimate would be 1962, when Buffett’s partnerships hit around $7.2 million in value. Given Buffett’s percentage of the business, he was worth at least $1,025,000 by that year.
Buffett merged his partnerships into one firm, then purchased Berkshire Hathaway, a failing textile manufacturing firm. He would grow his fortune almost entirely through Berkshire Hathaway up to the present day.
The Late 1960s
Estimated net worth: $10 million – $25 million
2016 dollars: $75 million – $162 million
Age: late 30s
In 1965, Berkshire Hathaway bought a 5 percent stake in the Walt Disney Corporation for the modest price of $4 million. It would prove to be one of Buffett’s smartest investments (although he admits he made a mistake to sell the shares in the ’90s).
Buffett’s net worth is estimated to be around $10 million at this point, and probably close to $25 million by 1969.
The 1970s
Estimated net worth: $100 million
2016 dollars: $328 million
Age: 40s
Living solely on a $50,000 per year salary, Buffett saved the rest of his assets, which likely passed the $100 million mark around 1979. During this time, Berkshire Hathaway would acquire See’s Candies (1972), and invest in all sorts of big brands, from the Washington Post to SAFECO to ABC Broadcasting.
Perhaps most lucrative of all was his investment in GEICO (1976), which Buffett bought at around $2 per share. His company would continue investing in GEICO until 1996, when it bought the car insurance company outright.
The 1980s
Estimated net worth: $350 million – $1.5 billion
2016 dollars: $$863 million – $3.3 billion
Age: 50s
It’s possible — perhaps even likely — that Buffett became a billionaire sometime in the 1980s. Berkshire Hathaway continued to invest in companies from publishing (TIME, 1982), oil (Exxon, 1984) and finance (Freddie Mac, 1988), among many others.
Buffett officially shut down the textile arm of Berkshire to focus entirely on his portfolio of investments. He later regretted all the money he spent trying to keep the textile part of the business alive.
Buffett’s wealth would fall by hundreds of millions in the 1987 stock market crash, though the business magnate would be quick to recoup his losses.
The Early 1990s
Estimated net worth: $1 billion – $5 billion
2016 dollars: $1.8 billion – $9 billion
Age: early 60s
If he hadn’t already, Buffett officially became a billionaire in 1990, when shares of Berkshire Hathaway hit $7,175. Buffett’s wealth would grow rapidly over the next dozen years, as shares would climb well past $10,000.
Berkshire bought 10 percent of Wells Fargo (1990) and invested in Guinness (1991), among other companies.
1994
Net worth: $9,689,959,200
2016 dollars: $15,503,346,261
Age: 64
Here, we move into our more precise estimates, based on Buffett’s form DEF-14A filings. Berkshire invested in PNC Bank, Gannett Publishing and McDonald’s.
1995
Net worth: $15,247,435,800
2016 dollars: $23,722,668,963
Age: 65
Berkshire Hathaway skyrocketed to more than $25,000 per share, quadrupling its value in just half a decade.
1996
Net worth: $16,197,431,800
2016 dollars: $24,477,942,967
Age: 66
Berkshire Hathaway completed its two-decades-long , securing 100 percent of the auto insurance company.
1997
Net worth: $21,998,672,000
2016 dollars: $32,499,234,371
Age: 67
Berkshire Hathaway invested in Dairy Queen and Travelers ÈȵãºÚÁÏ, while Buffett invested 2 percent of his portfolio in silver. The company also invested in US Airways, which would prove to be a rare fruitless investment for Buffett.
1998
Net worth: $33,476,240,000
2016 dollars: $48,696,838,912
Age: 68
Berkshire Hathaway General Re and Executive Jet, among others.
1999
Net worth: $26,647,387,800
2016 dollars: $37,925,502,813
Age: 69
Berkshire Hathaway added Jordan’s Furniture company and MidAmerican Energy Holdings to its growing list of brands.
2000
Net worth: $33,724,858,000
2016 dollars: $46,437,484,351
Age: 70
Now 70 years old, Buffett led acquisitions of Ben Bridge, CORT, Acme Building Brands, Shaw Industries and Benjamin Moore. Berkshire Hathaway emerged from the dot-com bust relatively unscathed, given Buffett’s distaste for tech investments.
2001
Net worth: $35,909,848,800
2016 dollars: $48,105,198,637
Age: 71
Johns Manville Corp, MiTek, XTRA Corporation, H&R Block and Moody’s Corporation were added to the Berkshire portfolio.
2002
Net worth: $34,556,104,500
2016 dollars: $45,545,483,569
Age: 72
Berkshire Hathaway Fruit of the Loom, CTB and The Pampered Chef, among others.
2003
Net worth: $40,026,669,500
2016 dollars: $51,580,237,129
Age: 73
Buffett oversaw the acquisitions of McLane, Clayton Homes and Burlington Industries.
2004
Net worth: $41,752,324,200
2016 dollars: $52,408,339,563
Age: 74
Bill Gates was elected director of Berkshire Hathaway. Gates and Buffett would go on to become partners in charitable giving.
2005
Net worth: $42,094,322,760
2016 dollars: $51,106,128,848
Age: 75
Berkshire Hathaway bought stock in Procter and Gamble and Anheuser-Busch (owner of Budweiser and dozens of other popular beer brands). While both were smart investments, Buffett would later admit to selling the Anheuser-Busch stock too soon.
2006
Net worth: $52,245,030,020
2016 dollars: $61,447,774,370
Age: 76
Buffett announced at least 85 percent of his fortune will go to charity, largely through the Gates Foundation.
2007
Net worth: $64,430,187,520
2016 dollars: $73,680,712,027
Age: 77
Buffett claimed he was looking for a successor to run Berkshire Hathaway, a person he would settle on by 2015 (though the successor remains unnamed.)
2008
Net worth: $42,051,836,970
2016 dollars: $46,311,259,554
Age: 78
Berkshire Hathaway bought out Marmon Holdings and Coachmen Industries. The company also bought $4.4 billion in bonds from Mars Inc. (the candy company that owns M&M’s, Snickers, Milky Way, Twix and 3 Musketeers, among other brands). Meanwhile, the company’s value began to tank as a result of the worldwide financial crisis.
2009
Net worth: $41,351,493,030
2016 dollars: $45,702,577,475
Age: 79
Berkshire Hathaway reported a $5 billion quarterly loss, its worst since a downturn after the September 11 attacks.
2010
Net worth: $48,166,802,165
2016 dollars: $52,375,897,146
Age: 80
Buffett acquired railroad company Burlington Northern for $44 billion, and Berkshire Hathaway joined the S&P 500.
2011
Net worth: $43,984,084,597
2016 dollars: $46,364,171,099
Age: 81
Like much of the world, Berkshire Hathaway continued to experience rocky results in the first couple of years following the 2008 downturn. The company also acquired Lubrizol, a specialty chemicals brand.
2012
Net worth: $49,253,748,067
2016 dollars: $50,866,335,609
Age: 82
Buffett’s wealth stabilized with Berkshire back on track. Ever the contrarian, Buffett continued to invest in publishing, despite the industry’s decline (it acquired the Omaha World-Herald). That said, Berkshire Hathaway also invested in IBM, among its first high-profile tech plays.
2013
Net worth: $62,682,997,863
2016 dollars: $63,800,737,073
Age: 83
Berkshire Hathaway acquired a 50 percent stake in Heinz Company. At this point, Buffett was making an average of $37 million per day.
2014
Net worth: $76,150,072,909
2016 dollars: $76,270,697,898
Age: 84
Buffett became the second-richest person in the world (behind only Gates), with his personal wealth exceeding $70 billion.
2015
Net worth: $63,761,955,679
2016 dollars: $63,787,243,417
Age: 85
Buffett suffered one of his worst years in history, and one of the very few in which Berkshire Hathaway underperformed the S&P 500. Buffett’s tech-light portfolio probably didn’t help, as stocks like Netflix, Amazon, Google and Facebook made big gains, while almost all of Buffett’s investments declined. (Unlike its fellow tech companies, IBM had a bad 2015, adding to Buffett’s woes.)
2016
Net worth: $65,283,653,683
2016 dollars: $65,283,653,683
Age: 85
Buffett is off to a comparatively good start in 2016, especially considering the sluggish market. He has halted Berkshire Hathaway’s slide, with his personal net worth climbing nearly $2 billion since 2015.
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