OMAHA, Neb. - Warren Buffett tried to reassure his shareholders Saturday that Berkshire Hathaway will be fine once he is gone, but the 77-year-old billionaire offered few new details of the company's succession plan.
Berkshire vice chairman Charlie Munger may have done more to reassure the roughly 31,000 shareholders at the company's annual meeting.
"Well, we still have a rising young man here named Warren Buffett," Munger said, to which Buffett joked that everyone seems young to the 84-year-old Munger.
Munger continued: "I think we want to encourage this rising young man to reach his full potential."
Several shareholders still asked about the succession plan and Berkshire's future.
Part of the reason why Michel Paquet and Lorie Armstrong made their second trip to the annual meeting from Calgary, Alberta, is that they're not sure how many more meetings will feature both Buffett and Munger.
"I will expect some volatility on the transition, but I'm ready for that," said Paquet, who plans to hold his Berkshire stock for many years to come.
To replace Buffett, Berkshire plans to split his job into three parts — chief investment officer, chief executive officer and chairman.