(Smart Money) WHILE JASMINE AND wisteria scent the air on Caltech's Pasadena campus, a spillover crowd buzzes in anticipation in a roomy auditorium. Most of the people here are seasoned money managers, and they've come from all over the world to catch sight of something rarer than a Berkshire Hathaway stock split: Charlie Munger, without his famous partner, Warren Buffett.
Munger, 84 and blind in one eye, walks stiffly to the stage. A prestigious physics professor waits to interview him, but once the lanky, thick-bespectacled guest starts blaspheming some favorite targets, the prof rarely gets a word in edgewise. Munger's topic du jour is the spiraling credit crisis: He flings vitriol at bankers, saying they've been selling investors "a hapless mess of super-complexity." The accounting profession has "disgraced itself" with its lax standards, and so has academia. "The idea that we need derivatives is just so much twaddle," he says. Yet despite all this inanity and skullduggery, Munger still sees the investing world as a place where common sense can triumph -- if only because "it isn't so common."
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Wednesday, September 3, 2008
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