About this episode
Want to get our best investing ideas each month? Join the Value Spotlight newsletter here: ?https://einvestingforbeginners.com/value-spotlight-newsletter/?
Most investors buy a stock and assume they own a piece of the company. But do they actually have a say in how it’s run?
In this episode, Dave and Andrew break down the often-overlooked world of Share Classes (Class A vs. Class B) and what they mean for your rights as a shareholder.
Inspired by a listener question, the guys explain why companies like Berkshire Hathaway, Google, and Meta split their shares, how founders maintain total control even with minority ownership, and what "Activist Investors" like Bill Ackman actually do to force change.
We discuss:
Economic Rights vs. Voting Rights: Who is actually driving the bus?
The "Founder Control" Model: How Mark Zuckerberg controls Meta despite owning less than 100% of the company.
Berkshire Hathaway: Why Warren Buffett created a stock that costs $715,000 per share.
Google's Tickers: The difference between GOOG (no vote) and GOOGL (voting).
Red Flags: How to spot a "captured board" in the Proxy Statement.
Activist Investors: How funds buy their way onto a board to fire the CEO.
Timestamps
00:00 – Intro: Does your vote count?
01:18 – What are Share Classes?
03:40 – The "Bus Driver" Analogy: Voting vs. Economic Rights
08:53 – Why Founders Want Control
13:18 – Berkshire Hathaway: Class A vs. Class B Explained
17:12 – The Huge Red Flag: CEO Compensation Committees
20:03 – Google’s 3 Tickers (GOOG vs. GOOGL)
22:04 – Elon Musk & Tesla’s Share Structure
31:15 – What is an "Activist Investor"?
36:02 – The Investor’s Checklist: How to read a Proxy Statement
Resources Mentioned
The Value Spotlight Newsletter: ?https://einvestingforbeginners.com/value-spotlight-newsletter?/
Have questions or want your story featured? Email the show at ?newsletter@einvestingforbeginners.com? or comment below. Your feedback shapes the podcast!
Remember, invest with a margin of safety—emphasis on the safety. Ha