The late Charlie Munger’s final stock-portfolio update is out

Charlie Munger (right) and Warren Buffett.JOHANNES EISELE/AFP via Getty Images

Daily Journal filed its final stock-portfolio update from Charlie Munger’s time in charge.

Warren Buffett’s late business partner made no changes, showing his discipline and conviction.

Munger didn’t touch stakes in Bank of America, Wells Fargo, or US Bancorp for at least a decade.

The late Charlie Munger grew Daily Journal’s stock portfolio from nothing to $300 million within 15 years. The newspaper publisher just filed its final portfolio update from the legendary investor’s time in charge, and it underlines Munger’s exceptional patience, discipline, and conviction.

Munger, best known as Warren Buffett’s right-hand man and Berkshire Hathaway’s vice chairman, died aged 99 on November 28. He chaired Daily Journal’s board for about 45 years from 1977 to 2022. When markets crashed during the 2008 financial crisis, he made the call to plow some of the company’s money into stocks and started managing its investments.

Daily Journal’s first portfolio filing dates back to the fourth quarter of 2013, likely because that’s when the value of its holdings breached the $100 million reporting threshold. The publisher and legal-software provider disclosed 2.3 million shares of Bank of America, almost 1.6 million shares of Wells Fargo, 140,000 shares of US Bancorp, and 64,600 shares of South Korean steelmaker Posco.

Remarkably, Daily Journal held the exact same amount of Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and US Bancorp shares a decade later, on December 30 last year. While it slashed its Posco position to 9,745 shares in the fourth quarter of 2014, it didn’t touch it again until the fourth quarter of 2022, when it exited the holding.

Munger made only one other big change to Daily Journal’s portfolio. He bet on Alibaba at the start of 2021, quadrupled his wager by the end of the year, then halved it the next quarter after souring on the Chinese e-commerce titan and deciding he’d made a mistake.

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It’s worth noting that Munger’s hands-off approach wasn’t a winner across the board. The value of Daily…

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