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I’m a Berkshire Hathaway investor and I was wrong about Greg Abel. Here’s why he’s a better fit than Buffett right now

I walked out of BRK’s annual meeting last year and thought Greg Abel was not the right person to be president. Berkshire Hathaway. Abel lacked Buffett’s charisma, warmth and humor. I remember telling a friend that listening to him at the annual meeting was like listening to another consultant-turned-executive: convenient, boring, and with a very narrow vocabulary of corporate speak. Greg Abel wasn’t Buffett, and he certainly wasn’t Munger.

I was wrong.

Greg Abel is the right CEO for today’s BRK; in fact, he’s a better fit for BRK today than Buffett. My thoughts changed when I started thinking about Tim Cook, who recently announced he was stepping down as CEO. Apple.

Tim Cook is not Steve Jobs. But there is no other Steve Jobs. The chances of Steve Jobs being replaced by another Steve Jobs are almost zero. When I look at Tim Cook’s tenure, I can see that if he and Steve had run Apple together, the company would have been much more successful. Tim is, as Jobs himself described, “not a product guy” and that’s why he has failed to deliver another product the size of the iPhone. The Apple Car that would have been this product was a massive failure due to many changes in direction and eventual disbandment. Apple Vision Pro felt half-baked; I’m not sure Steve Jobs would publish it. Siri, which was revolutionary when it launched on the iPhone, today has the IQ of a toaster compared to other AI models. Apple has filed a class-action lawsuit for overstating the AI ​​capabilities of its newest iPhones.

Still, Tim Cook has done an incredible job running Apple. Small, incremental improvements made the iPhone an indispensable device. During Jobs’ era, the Apple ecosystem was the biggest competitive advantage; Cook doubled down on this advantage, with all devices working together seamlessly. It extended Apple’s software advantage to hardware and Intel For in-house M chips that power MacBooks with multiples of the battery life of the Intel processors they replace, without sacrificing performance. Apple is no longer the most creative company in Silicon Valley, but things are going well. Apple’s revenues have nearly quadrupled since Jobs’ death.

I remember reading in Walter Isaacson’s biography of Steve Jobs that Jobs’ advice to Cook was (paraphrased): Don’t ask what Steve will do, will you do it? That’s exactly what people are running for Disney They didn’t do this after Walt Disney died and almost destroyed the company.

If we had to choose between Jobs’ creativity and vision and Cook’s ability to run an extremely complex supply chain and manufacturing operation, I would argue that Cook was more important to Apple than Jobs at the time of Jobs’s passing. And again, while talents like Jobs’ are virtually unrepeatable, Cook’s talent is much easier to copy.

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