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1967 — Berkshire Hathaway Acquires National Indemnity: Buffett Enters Insurance

Category: Capital Strategy • Insurance Operations • Float Economics • Corporate Transformation

Summary

In 1967, Warren Buffett purchased National Indemnity Company from Omaha insurance executive Jack Ringwalt for $8.6 million. This acquisition marked Buffett’s entry into the insurance business and transformed Berkshire Hathaway from a failing textile mill into a future insurance‑anchored conglomerate.

More importantly, it was the moment Buffett recognized the power of insurance float — the investable capital generated when premiums are collected long before claims are paid. This insight became the foundation of Berkshire’s long‑term compounding engine.

Background

By the mid‑1960s, Berkshire Hathaway was a struggling textile manufacturer. Buffett had taken control of it reluctantly, intending to use it as a platform for better investments. But textiles were capital‑intensive, cyclical, and uncompetitive.

Buffett needed a business that generated:

Insurance was the perfect fit — if managed with underwriting discipline.

What Happened

In March 1967, Buffett purchased National Indemnity and its small sister company, National Fire & Marine, from Jack Ringwalt. Ringwalt was a brilliant but temperamental underwriter who wanted out of the business before regulators forced him to raise capital.

Buffett saw something different:

This was the hinge moment when Buffett realized:

If underwriting breaks even or better, float becomes a source of long‑term investment capital.

This insight would define Berkshire for the next half‑century.

Why It Mattered

The National Indemnity acquisition:

This was the birth of the Berkshire Hathaway insurance empire.

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