Buffett, Warren Edward
[key], 1930–, American financial executive, b. Omaha, Nebr.,
studied at Wharton School of Finance (1947–49), grad. Univ. of
Nebraska (B.S., 1950), Columbia (M.S., 1951). After working as an investment
salesman and securities analyst, he was partner (1956–69) in the
investment firm Buffett Partnership, Ltd. In 1965, he acquired the textile
manufacturer Berkshire Hathaway and became (1970) chairman and CEO. Through
judicious investments and acquisitions of insurance, manufacturing, service,
and other firms, Buffett has transformed Berkshire Hathaway into a large
conglomerate with assets of more than $400 billion, and his investments have
made him one of the wealthiest people in the world, with a fortune estimated
at more than $70 billion in the 2010s. In 2006 he announced that he would
donate the vast majority of his wealth to charity, with the largest gift,
valued at $30 billion at the time, ultimately going to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
He has coauthored Warren Buffett Speaks (with J. C. Lowe,
1997) and Thoughts of Chairman Buffett (with S. Reynolds,
1998). His father, Howard Homan Buffett, 1903–64, an
investment banker, was a U.S. congressman from Nebraska (1943–49,
1951–53).
See biographies by R. Lowenstein (1995) and A. Schroeder (2008); studies by A. Kirkpatrick (1992), R. G. Hagstrom (1995), and M. Buffett and D. Clark (1997); P. Kunhardt, dir., Becoming Warren Buffett (documentary, 2017).
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