The story of Seeâs Candies reminds us of the importance of consistency, quality, and long-term growth in investing. by Zachary Crockett.
[The Hustle]( Issue #209
[The Hustle, May 15, 2022](
May 15, 2022 Why a small candy company is Warren Buffettâs âdreamâ investment The story of Seeâs Candies reminds us of the importance of consistency, quality, and long-term growth in investing. BY [Zachary Crockett]( If investing were a video game, you might suspect Warren Buffett of using some kind of cheat code. His holding company, Berkshire Hathaway, boasts [$969B]( in total assets. It owns companies in dozens of industries, ranging from insurance (Geico) to underwear (Fruit of the Loom), and maintains a $340B+ stock portfolio with sizeable stakes in some of the countryâs biggest corporations: - 1.03B shares (12.8%) of Bank of America
- 907.6m shares (5.6%) of Apple
- 400m shares (9.2%) of Coca-Cola
- 325.6m shares (26.6%) of Kraft Heinz
- 174.5m shares (8.9%) of Chevron
- 151.6m shares (20.1%) of American Express But Buffettâs favorite investment of all time isnât on in the Fortune 500: Itâs a small candy company that he bought 50 years ago. With ~$500m in annual revenue, Seeâs Candy represents less than 0.1% of Berkshire Hathawayâs holdings. Yet, Buffett has [called]( the 100-year-old chocolate chain his âprototype of a dream business.â He frequently brings up the company in interviews and even keeps a box of the candymakerâs peanut brittle [on hand]( at annual shareholder meetings. In an era that prizes flashy, fast-paced investments, the story of Seeâs reminds us that a companyâs true value canât always be quantified on a balance sheet. The little chocolatier that could Mary Seeâs journey to chocolate stardom began in the backwoods of Ontario, Canada. Born in 1854, Mary married at 20, had 3 children, and settled into a domestic but industrious life co-managing a hotel with her husband. Over the decades, she spent countless hours in the kitchen perfecting her own candy recipes. When her son, Charles, relocated to California in 1919, Mary â then a 65-year-old widow â decided to join him. [The See Family] Mary See (far left) with Charles See (far right) and family in 1920s California (via âSee's Famous Old Time Candies: A Sweet Story;â Seeâs Candies) A druggist by trade, Charles had lost his chain of pharmacies to a forest fire and, for a brief time, worked as a confections salesman. In Los Angeles, he decided to focus on the highest-quality product he could think of: His motherâs homemade chocolates. In November of [1921](, Mary and Charles opened their first Seeâs Candies shop, offering a variety of chocolates made with fresh ingredients. From the beginning, Seeâs chose to build a brand around small-batch quality and invested in the highest-caliber ingredients: California almonds, Ozarkian walnuts, and African chocolate. The company put Maryâs face on the cover of every $0.85 box, and adopted the slogan âQuality without compromise.â By the 1920s, Seeâs had expanded to 12 shops. During the Great Depression and WWII, Seeâs stayed true to its principles. During a time when butter, sugar, and cream were severely rationed, the company had a choice: - It could use inferior ingredients and maintain its sales volume, or
- It could stick to its higher-quality ingredients and sell much smaller batches. The family chose the latter option and closed the store each day when inventory ran out. Following Maryâs death in 1939, Charles (and later, his son, Laurance) took the reins, growing the chain to more than 160 stores. By 1970, Seeâs successors were looking for an exit. And 1.5k miles away, in Omaha, Nebraska, an unlikely buyer would soon make an offer. Enter the âOracle of Omahaâ Warren Buffett was cut from the same entrepreneurial cloth as Mary See. As a child, he made money selling anything he could get his hands on: chewing gum, Coca-Cola bottles, magazines, golf balls, and stamps. After graduating from business school, he formed a number of partnerships that made him a millionaire â and by the age of 30, heâs earned a reputation as an investment wünderkind. In 1970, he became the chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, a then-flailing textile firm, and turned it into a holding company for his growing investments. [Buffett teaching a class] Warren Buffett teaching an investing class at the University of Nebraska at Omaha in the early 1960s (University of Nebraska at Omaha, via Twitter) Early on, Buffettâs investment philosophy was rooted in â[value investing](,â the art of hunting for, and buying, companies undervalued or overlooked by Wall Street. But when Buffett met Charlie Munger, who later became his partner at Berkshire Hathaway, his mentality shifted from investing in great bargains to investing in great businesses. Munger convinced Buffett that it was worth paying a [premium]( for companies âwhose main value would be earned in the future.â In 1972, Robert Flaherty, an investor at Blue Chip Stamps (a Berkshire Hathaway company) was tipped off that Seeâs was for sale. He called his boss, William Ramsey, who in turn rang up Buffett and pitched an investment. âGee, Bob,â Buffett initially [told]( him. âThe candy business. I donât think we want to be in the candy business.â At the time, Seeâs didnât look too exciting on paper: - $30m in sales
- $2m in post-tax earnings
- $8m in assets But as Buffett researched Seeâs, he realized that the value of the companyâs intangibles â things like its brand and customer loyalty â far exceeded the numbers on paper. So, the usually shrewd investor did something extremely out of character: He bought Seeâs for $25m â more than 6x its earnings, and 3x its book value. It was Buffettâs biggest purchase up to that point, and one of the first companies Berkshire Hathaway bought outright. It also represented a major shift in his approach to investing, setting him on a path of âpaying higher prices for better businesses.â Quality over quantity Within minutes of buying the business, Buffett installed Charles Huggins, an ex-paratrooper and longtime Seeâs employee, as CEO. In a letter, Buffett cautioned Huggins to never sacrifice quality for profit. He warned that the company shouldnât try to scale too quickly, and should instead continue to produce the chocolates locally, in âlimited quantities.â âThere is a certain mystique attached to products with geographical uniqueness,â he wrote, harping on the value of branding. âMaybe grapes from one little 80-acre vineyard in France are really the best in the whole world, but I have always had a suspicion that 99% of it is in the telling and about 1% of it is in the drinking.â [letter] After visiting a Brandeis department store and observing Seeâs sales in 1972, Buffett wrote a letter to the companyâs CEO, Charles Huggins, in which he shared his thoughts on branding and quality (abridged; via Saber Capital Management) In lieu of scaling Seeâs at lightning speed, Buffett opted to keep the operation small and charge a premium on quality. He recognized that Seeâs had 3 distinct advantages: - It possessed a strong built-in customer loyalty [moat](
- Its product was so good that customers would tolerate price hikes
- It required very little operating capital Over the next 10 years, Seeâs expanded from 167 to 214 stores â an extremely modest growth rate of around 2% per year. Similarly, the companyâs total volume of candy sold only increased from 16.9m to 24.7m pounds, or 3% per year. [Seeâs retail expansion] Zachary Crockett / The Hustle This slow expansion was, in part, a limitation of the market: âThe boxed-chocolates industry [is] unexciting,â Buffett told shareholders in 2007. âPer-capita consumption in the US is extremely low and doesnât grow.â But it was also part of a calculated decision to harvest revenue from the companyâs pre-existing strengths. Seeâs customers were fanatically loyal to the companyâs treats. When Huggins tried to eliminate 14 of Seeâs 100 candies in 1987, for instance, the company was flooded with so many [letters]( from angry customers, that it was forced to reverse the decision and apologize: - âA pox on all at See's who participated in the abominable decision..."
- "May your new truffles melt in transit, may they sour in people's mouths, may your costs go up and your profits go down..."
- "We are investigating the possibility of obtaining a mandatory injunction requiring you to supply..." Buffett soon learned that customers would remain loyal even with price hikes every year. While stores and volume grew only 2% and 3% respectively, Seeâs raised its effective price per pound by 10% per year â far above the rate of inflation. On paper, Seeâs growth didnât look very fruitful. But fueled by price hikes, total sales volume and profit over the same time period tell a different story. [See's revenue growth] Zachary Crockett / The Hustle âSeeâs is a slow grower, but its growth is steady and reliable,â Munger later [said](. âWarren and I raised the prices of Seeâs Candies a little faster than others might have. There are actually people out there who donât price everything as high as the market will easily stand. And once you figure that out, itâs like finding money in the street.â In the span of a decade, this slow and steady growth boosted per-store sales from $187k to $635k and per-store operating profits from $12k to $63k. [per-store sales and profit by year] Zachary Crockett / The Hustle In 1982, Buffett was offered $125m for Seeâs â 5x the $25m heâd paid for it just 10 years earlier, or a 20% compound annual growth rate. He passed, opting to let the company slowly chug along. âLong-term competitive advantage in a stable industry is what we seek in a business,â Buffett later [wrote](. âIf that comes with rapid organic growth, great. But even without organic growth, such a business is rewarding.â Slow and steady can yield sizeable returns Buffettâs rejection of the $125m offer would turn out to be a smart move. Continuing at that same steady growth rate, Seeâs sales crept up to $383m by 2007 (with $82m in pretax profits), and an estimated [$430m]( by 2018. Since 1972, the company has given Berkshire Hathaway [well over $2B]( in income. Thatâs a return of more than 8k%, or 160%+ per year. Over the same time period, the small operation required only $32m in capital to run. âModest physical growth,â wrote Buffett in 2007, had led to âimmodest financial growth.â Seeâs provided Berkshire Hathaway with a reliable stream of capital that it used to buy into other attractive businesses. In the late 1980s, he used Seeâs profits to buy Coca-Cola shares, which are now collectively worth more than [$25B](. [See's candy booth] âChairman-Sizedâ (15-pound) peanut brittle boxes from Seeâs up for grabs at Berkshire Hathawayâs annual shareholder meeting in 2011 (Photo: Andrew BEATTY/AFP via Getty Images) âSeeâs has given birth to multiple new streams of cash for us,â Buffett later told shareholders. âBut itâs far better to have an ever-increasing stream of earnings with virtually no major capital requirements.â Today, Seeâs Candies sell for $22.50 per pound â about double the 1972 price, after adjusting for inflation â but its customers have remained loyal. Just as it survived the Great Depression and the rationing of WWII, Seeâs has weathered the storm of ecommerce. Even during the pandemic, the bulk of the companyâs sales still happen in-store. For the 100-year-old company and 91-year-old Buffett, the values of that era continue to yield handsome returns. âIn candy, as in stocks, price and value can differ,â Buffett [wrote]( in 2007. âPrice is what you give, value is what you get.â Share & discuss this story on: [Facebook]( [Youtube]( [Instagram]( [Trends]( Free Resource
Instagram insights for B2B/B2C marketers What HubSpot experts went ahead and did for your sweet ass was survey 500 B2B/B2C professionals for Instagram marketing best practices. You can peruse all of the [2022 Instagram marketing trends and tactics]( without glazing over a single spreadsheet. A few telling figures: - 75% of B2B and 66% of B2C businesses leverage Facebook (Still? Still)
- 68% of B2B marketers said they plan to increase investment in influencer marketing this year (We keep saying this)
- 68% of them also said they plan to do the same for educational and informational content (Hell yeah) Get the quick on current Instagram trends to help you churn out content that connects. [Tips to win on Instagram â]( How did you like todayâs story? Today's email was brought to you by Zachary Crockett and Brad Wolverton. Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up [here](.
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