👤
Ajit Jain
Chief Operating Officer, Berkshire Hathaway Reinsurance (1985-present)
# Ajit Jain
**Ajit Jain** joined Berkshire Hathaway's reinsurance operations in 1985 and became one of the most valuable individuals in Berkshire's history. Buffett has said that Ajit Jain has "probably created more value for Berkshire than any other person except Warren himself."
## The Arrival
Ajit Jain came to Berkshire with a background in consulting and insurance. Buffett hired him to build the reinsurance operations, giving him extraordinary autonomy and compensation structures tied to the economics he created.
The compensation model was unusual: Jain was paid based on the profitability of the reinsurance business, not on fixed salary. This aligned his interests perfectly with Berkshire shareholders.
## The Reinsurance Operation
Under Jain's leadership, Berkshire's reinsurance subsidiary became one of the largest and most profitable reinsurance operations in the world. Jain specialized in large, complex, and unusual risks that other reinsurers could not or would not take:
- Catastrophe coverage for hurricanes and earthquakes
- Aviation and aerospace risks
- Workers' compensation
- Rare and unusual risks that require deep expertise
## Why Jain Is Extraordinary
Buffett has described what makes Jain exceptional:
**Speed of decision-making**: Jain can evaluate and quote on risks in hours that would take other reinsurers weeks. He carries enormous pricing authority, meaning he rarely needs to consult Omaha before committing.
**Risk assessment**: Jain has an intuitive grasp of probability and risk that is extraordinarily accurate. He consistently prices risks correctly—or better than correctly—over cycles.
**Integrity**: Jain operates with the same integrity that characterizes Berkshire's culture. He honors his contracts even when claims are disputed.
**Calm under pressure**: In the aftermath of major catastrophes, Jain's judgment remains clear while others panic.
> "Ajit is a one-of-a-kind talent. There is simply no one else who can do what he does."
## The Compensation Question
For years, Buffett resisted disclosing Jain's compensation, citing competitive sensitivity. Eventually, it was revealed that Jain was among the highest-paid executives in America—rightfully so, given the billions in value he created.
## The Future
As of 2024, Ajit Jain remains active at Berkshire, continuing to manage the reinsurance operations. He has trained and developed a team that can continue the business, though no single person fully replicates his combination of talent and experience.
Jain represents the best of Berkshire: exceptional talent, properly incentivized, operating with integrity in a culture that rewards long-term thinking.
Mentions in Letters
1985·First public recognition of Jain's extraordinary contribution
“Ajit Jain has built our reinsurance operation into one of the most profitable in the industry.”
2010·On Jain's unmatched value creation
“If Ajit Jain were working for a mutual fund, he would be the most highly compensated fund manager in the world.”
2019·Highest praise for Jain's contribution
“Ajit has probably created more value for Berkshire than any other person except Warren himself.”
Explore the Value Investing Framework
Discover the core principles and concepts that shaped Ajit Jain's investment philosophy.