He's also outperformed the S&P 500 over that time by returning 14% per year on average versus the index's 13.8% annualized gains.
Between July and September 1999, Buffett shared his outlook for the market in a series of talks that were summarized by Fortune's Carol Loomis in November of that year.
AdvertisementSince then, however, investors have enjoyed 15 years of ultra-low interest rates and growing corporate profits — a fact that has Smead worried.
"The only problem is it's a curse on long-term S&P 500 performance," Smead said of the 15-year run.
Related storiesBaked into Smead's outlook is an against-consensus view that inflation is set to surge again as the Fed cuts interest rates.
Persons:
—, Bill Smead, Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger, Smead, Munger, He's, Buffett, Fortune's Carol Loomis
Organizations:
Service, Business, Morningstar, Apple, Bank of America