Warren Buffett just wanted to say sorry.

The chief executive officer made a few blunt admissions at his annual meeting of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. shareholders on Saturday. Among them were regrets over Apple Inc. stock sales, the circumstances surrounding its airline share dump, and a failed healthcare venture.

“That was probably a mistake,” Buffett said of its decision to sell some of the iPhone maker’s stock last year. The move was also deemed an error by his business partner Charlie Munger, who had let Buffett know of his view “in his usual low-key way,” Buffett joked at the virtual meeting.

Buffett, 90, is no stranger to contrition. A portion of his shareholder letter in February was devoted to explaining his “big” error in overpaying for airplane-parts maker Precision Castparts. But this year’s annual meeting was peppered with the acknowledgment of missteps, even after its businesses posted a strong quarter with earnings hitting the second-highest level in data going back to 2010.

“He and Charlie have always tried to admit their mistakes and face their mistakes,” said James Armstrong, who manages assets including Berkshire shares as president of Henry H. Armstrong Associates. Buffett also kept “trying to gently remind us that most of Berkshire’s money is invested well,” he said.

Airline Stocks
The billionaire faced questions over why Berkshire didn’t seize upon the temporary market downturn starting in late March last year to snap up more stocks at depressed prices. Instead, the conglomerate used the first weeks of the U.S. shutdowns to dump its airlines stocks as the pandemic curbed travel and, later in the year, trimmed its bank holdings.

Stocks of Delta Air Lines Inc. and Southwest Airlines Co., two carriers Berkshire owned, had then rallied more than 45% after the end of May through the rest of 2020.

“I do not consider it a great moment in Berkshire’s history,” Buffett said of the period, adding that the economic recovery had surpassed their expectations, thanks to government stimulus measures.

Buffett also said it would have been hard for those carriers to get the federal aid that rescued them if a rich investor was considered a significant shareholder in those companies. He still wouldn’t invest in airlines given current pressure on travel, he told investors on Saturday.

And while Buffett made some deals including a bet on natural gas assets, he didn’t strike any particularly substantial acquisitions despite the pandemic’s pressure on some businesses. For his part, Munger explained that it would be too high a standard to think that money managers can always perfectly time the bottoming of a market to put lots of money to work.

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