Financial History 134 (Summer 2020) | Page 16

David Dodd and his wife, Elsie, at a 1972 Columbia Business School award ceremony. Courtesy of David Anderson Courtesy of George School Barbara Dodd Anderson cutting ribbon on the new George School library in 1997 with her granddaughter, Mollie Dodd Anderson, as Warren Buffett looks on. of students in the tradition of Graham & Dodd until 1978. After retirement he continued to live with his wife, Elsie, in their apartment at 39 Claremont Avenue. He did some consulting and worked extensively on both the 1962 and 1988 editions of Security Analysis. He also was instrumental in helping GEICO survive a huge $126,500,000 loss caused by overexpansion during the 1973–75 recession. David Anderson, Dodd’s grandson, has many fond recollections of his grandfather in retirement. Each summer, the whole family spent two months in their family cottage on Chebeague Island, off the coast of Maine. He affectionately called his grandfather “Pop” and remembers spending a lot of quality time with him over many years, including fishing on the local pier. He remembers him as “a wonderful grandfather.” He also describes him as being highly respected by everyone who knew him. In January 1981, Dodd’s wife, Elsie, passed away. He maintained his New York apartment but lived at Chebeague Island from late spring through the fall. He later married Lilian Brown, who also had a summer cottage on the island. When they married, they purchased a winter house in Falmouth Foreside, on the coast of Maine, just west of the island, and lived there until Dodd’s death in 1988. 50 Years of Security Analysis (1984) 1984 was a great year in the history of value investing. In May, Michael Sovern, president of Columbia University, awarded Dodd an honorary doctorate of letters. Sovern told Dodd: “You have applied your financial theories with brilliant results in the highly competitive world of investments.” Also in May, Buffett gave a now-famous speech at Columbia Business School, entitled “The Super Investors of Graham and Doddsville” which he delivered at a seminar marking the 50th anniversary of Security Analysis. These investors included himself; Walter Schloss; Tom Knapp of Tweedy, Browne; Bill Ruane of the Sequoia Fund; Charlie Munger and others. Buffett’s speech challenged the prevailing conventional wisdom that stocks are efficiently priced by detailing the performance of eight disciples of Graham and Dodd, including himself. According to Buffett, these disciples all shared a “common intellectual theme… They search for discrepancies between the value of the business and the price of small pieces of that business in the market… Our Graham and Dodd investors, needless to say, do not discuss beta, the capital asset pricing model, or covariance in returns among securities… The investors simply focus on two variables: price and value.” The third event of 1984 was Murray’s profile of “Graham and Dodd: A Durable Discipline,” in the Financial Analysts Journal’s 50th anniversary edition of the publication of their book. Murray, Graham and Dodd’s successor at Columbia, wrote that their “disciplined approach to financial analysis represents a permanent enhancement of the quality of decision-making in finance and a lasting contribution to the increased efficiency of markets in the allocation of resources.” He noted their influence on developing the “concept of earning power, as distinct from reported earnings... [which] led directly to the valuation of companies, instead of stock certificates.” Murray continued: But Graham and Dodd’s contribution did not stop with the publication of Security Analysis. The authors were inveterate teachers, whether in 14 FINANCIAL HISTORY | Summer 2020 | www.MoAF.org