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Warren Buffett’s favorite Christmas gifts for his family? $10,000 in cash, dresses, and boxes of See’s Candies.<!-- wp:html --><p>Warren Buffett.</p> <p class="copyright">YouTube / University of Nebraska–Lincoln</p> <p><strong>Warren Buffett has given dresses, chocolates, and stacks of cash to family members for Christmas.</strong><br /> <strong>Buffett switched from giving cash to stock after realizing his children often wasted the money.</strong><br /> <strong>Buffett bought dresses in bulk, and still sends boxes of See's Candies to friends and relatives.</strong></p> <p>Warren Buffett's favorite Christmas gifts to give include dresses, chocolates, and envelopes of cash.</p> <p>The famed investor and billionaire CEO of Berkshire Hathaway certainly makes an effort when the holidays come around. Here are the details of his signature presents.</p> <h2>Cash and stock</h2> <p>"He would always give each of us $10,000 in hundred-dollar bills," Mary Buffett, who was married to Warren's son Peter from 1980 to 1993, <a href="https://www.thinkadvisor.com/2019/10/25/how-warren-buffetts-daughter-in-law-learned-his-investing-secrets/?slreturn=20191117070042">told ThinkAdvisor</a> in 2019. "As soon as we got home, we'd spend it — whooo!"</p> <p>Warren switched things up after realizing his family were blowing through the lump sum, equivalent to more than $30,000 in today's dollars.</p> <p>"One Christmas there was an envelope with a letter from him," Mary told ThinkAdvisor. "Instead of cash, he'd given us $10,000 worth of shares in a company he'd recently bought, a trust Coca-Cola had. He said to either cash them in or keep them."</p> <p>Mary decided the stock was worth more than $10,000, so she held onto the shares. After they rose in value, she repeated the strategy with Warren's future gifts.</p> <p>"Every year when he'd give us stock — Wells Fargo being one of them — I would just buy more of it because I knew it was going to go up," she said.</p> <h2>'Wheel out the dresses'</h2> <p>Buffett is famously prudent in allocating resources across Berkshire's companies. He also prizes efficiency in his Christmas shopping.</p> <p>The billionaire's strategy in the 1960s was to visit Topps, a dress shop in his hometown of Omaha, Nebraska, and hand an employee a list of the dress sizes of all the women in his life, <a href="https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=NCB3ULgTzhkC&pg=PT319&lpg=PT319&dq=i%27d+go+over+and+they%27d+wheel+out+the+dresses+buffett&source=bl&ots=WojKFESUy4&sig=ACfU3U1O_UcI2vmomd5miF2uwU2-EJuoNg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj649CFjL3mAhXvRxUIHfl2CTQQ6AEwAHoECAcQAQ#v=snippet&q=dresses&f=false">Alice Schroeder wrote in "The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life."</a></p> <p>"I would go over and they'd wheel out the dresses," Buffett said. "I'd make a variety of decisions and buy presents for my sisters, Susie, Gladys, and so forth. I kind of enjoyed it."</p> <h2>Christmas cards and chocolates</h2> <p>Buffett sends boxes of See's Candies — <a href="https://markets.businessinsider.com/news/stocks/warren-buffett-berkshire-hathaway-dream-business-is-sees-candies-2019-7-1028348838">one of Berkshire's best investments ever</a> — to dozens of relatives and friends each year, his longtime friend Carol Loomis <a href="https://fortune.com/2018/12/21/warren-buffett-christmas-card-2018/">wrote in Fortune</a>. Each box comes with his annual Christmas card attached.</p> <p><a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/warren-buffett-christmas-card-2013-12?r=US&IR=T">In 2013</a>, the card showed Buffett dressed as Walter White from "Breaking Bad" with the message "Have yourself a Meth-y Little Christmas."</p> <p>In 2016, it featured Buffett and his Berkshire partner, Charlie Munger, dressed in black tie for their induction into the Texas Business Hall of Fame with the caption "Butch & Sundance." </p> <p>In 2018, the card showed Buffett wearing a T-shirt reading "The Next Charlie Munger" with the caption "Aiming High in 2019."</p> <p>Buffett's <a href="https://twitter.com/MohnishPabrai/status/1337510563107098624/photo/1">Christmas card for 2020</a> showed him with his arm around a metal bust of Munger, who was unable to join him at Berkshire's annual meeting due to the pandemic. His sweater reads,"You can never have too much love or too much gravy."  The caption below reads, ".... or too much Charlie."</p> <p><em><strong>Read more:</strong> <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/david-rubenstein-book-warren-buffett-carlyle-berkshire-key-investing-skills-2022-10?utm_medium=referral&utm_source=yahoo.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener">David Rubenstein sees Warren Buffett as the ultimate investor. The private equity billionaire lays out the 12 traits and habits that are key to Buffett's success.</a></em></p> <div class="read-original">Read the original article on <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/warren-buffett-christmas-gifts-sees-candies-dresses-10000-cash-2019-12">Business Insider</a></div><!-- /wp:html -->

Warren Buffett.

Warren Buffett has given dresses, chocolates, and stacks of cash to family members for Christmas.
Buffett switched from giving cash to stock after realizing his children often wasted the money.
Buffett bought dresses in bulk, and still sends boxes of See’s Candies to friends and relatives.

Warren Buffett’s favorite Christmas gifts to give include dresses, chocolates, and envelopes of cash.

The famed investor and billionaire CEO of Berkshire Hathaway certainly makes an effort when the holidays come around. Here are the details of his signature presents.

Cash and stock

“He would always give each of us $10,000 in hundred-dollar bills,” Mary Buffett, who was married to Warren’s son Peter from 1980 to 1993, told ThinkAdvisor in 2019. “As soon as we got home, we’d spend it — whooo!”

Warren switched things up after realizing his family were blowing through the lump sum, equivalent to more than $30,000 in today’s dollars.

“One Christmas there was an envelope with a letter from him,” Mary told ThinkAdvisor. “Instead of cash, he’d given us $10,000 worth of shares in a company he’d recently bought, a trust Coca-Cola had. He said to either cash them in or keep them.”

Mary decided the stock was worth more than $10,000, so she held onto the shares. After they rose in value, she repeated the strategy with Warren’s future gifts.

“Every year when he’d give us stock — Wells Fargo being one of them — I would just buy more of it because I knew it was going to go up,” she said.

‘Wheel out the dresses’

Buffett is famously prudent in allocating resources across Berkshire’s companies. He also prizes efficiency in his Christmas shopping.

The billionaire’s strategy in the 1960s was to visit Topps, a dress shop in his hometown of Omaha, Nebraska, and hand an employee a list of the dress sizes of all the women in his life, Alice Schroeder wrote in “The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life.”

“I would go over and they’d wheel out the dresses,” Buffett said. “I’d make a variety of decisions and buy presents for my sisters, Susie, Gladys, and so forth. I kind of enjoyed it.”

Christmas cards and chocolates

Buffett sends boxes of See’s Candies — one of Berkshire’s best investments ever — to dozens of relatives and friends each year, his longtime friend Carol Loomis wrote in Fortune. Each box comes with his annual Christmas card attached.

In 2013, the card showed Buffett dressed as Walter White from “Breaking Bad” with the message “Have yourself a Meth-y Little Christmas.”

In 2016, it featured Buffett and his Berkshire partner, Charlie Munger, dressed in black tie for their induction into the Texas Business Hall of Fame with the caption “Butch & Sundance.” 

In 2018, the card showed Buffett wearing a T-shirt reading “The Next Charlie Munger” with the caption “Aiming High in 2019.”

Buffett’s Christmas card for 2020 showed him with his arm around a metal bust of Munger, who was unable to join him at Berkshire’s annual meeting due to the pandemic. His sweater reads,”You can never have too much love or too much gravy.”  The caption below reads, “…. or too much Charlie.”

Read more: David Rubenstein sees Warren Buffett as the ultimate investor. The private equity billionaire lays out the 12 traits and habits that are key to Buffett’s success.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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