Most people stress about finding the right sweater or candle for holiday gifts. Warren Buffett had a different problem entirely: his family kept blowing through his Christmas cash faster than you can say "compound interest."
The longtime Berkshire Hathaway chairman used to hand out $10,000 in crisp hundred-dollar bills every December. Nice gesture, right? Except there was a catch. "As soon as we got home, we'd spend it — whooo!" Mary Buffett told ThinkAdvisor back in 2019. Mary was married to Buffett's son Peter from 1980 to 1993, so she witnessed these holiday traditions firsthand.
Buffett — being Buffett — noticed the pattern. The cash vanished quicker than wrapping paper on Christmas morning. So he did what any rational investor would do: he changed the product.
From Cash to Coca-Cola
One Christmas, the family opened their envelopes to find something unexpected. "Instead of cash, he'd given us $10,000 worth of shares in a company he'd recently bought, a trust Coca-Cola had," Mary recalled. The letter inside gave them a choice: cash it in or keep it.
Mary kept hers. Smart move. "I thought, 'Well, [this stock] is worth more than $10,000.' So I kept it, and it kept going up."
That became the new tradition. Every Christmas brought another envelope with stock certificates instead of bills. Wells Fargo was among the companies he gifted. "I would just buy more of it because I knew it was going to go up," Mary said. The message wasn't exactly subtle: cash disappears, ownership builds wealth.
The Math Makes It Clear
Let's put some numbers to this lesson. Wells Fargo traded around $1 per share in 1990. Today it sits near $85. If you received $10,000 worth of Wells Fargo stock back then — roughly 10,000 shares — you'd be sitting on about $850,000 now, and that's before counting dividends. Multiply that across multiple Christmases with different stocks, and you're looking at potential wealth in the millions.
That's the compounding magic Buffett talks about constantly. According to Mary, investing was pretty much all he talked about at home. "That's all he talked about!" she said. When the family gathered in Laguna for the holidays, business heavyweights would show up, "and they'd all talk about companies. Investing was the only thing Warren ever talked about!"
The Education Stuck
Those dinner table conversations changed Mary's career trajectory completely. She went from working at Columbia Records and Hugh Hefner's music publishing companies to becoming a bestselling author. Her books, starting with "Buffettology," translated Buffett's investment approach for regular people trying to build wealth.
She absorbed his key principles: buy businesses you understand, avoid IPOs, and steer clear of companies that need endless research and development spending just to survive. The Christmas stock gifts were a perfect embodiment of that philosophy. Buffett wasn't trying to impress anyone with luxury presents. He was demonstrating, in his characteristically understated way, how real wealth actually gets built.
Sure, opening an envelope stuffed with hundred-dollar bills is a memorable moment. But Buffett understood something deeper: money gets spent and forgotten, while ownership keeps compounding year after year. Sometimes the most valuable holiday gift isn't what you unwrap on December 25th. It's what's still growing long after you've taken down the tree.
Not everyone has Warren Buffett as a relative handing out $10,000 in carefully selected stocks each Christmas. But the principle applies at any scale. Working with a financial advisor can help families create investment strategies, choose assets aligned with their goals, and build their own version of holiday compounding — even if it starts with much smaller numbers.