Loomis reports that instead of lunch at New York's Smith & Wollensky steakhouse, the auction's regular venue, Weschler and Buffett actually had dinner both years at Buffett's favorite Omaha steakhouse, Piccolo Pete's.
According to Loomis, the "two men liked each other right away" and Buffett invited his guest to come to Berkshire's annual meeting this spring.
Loomis writes: "At a large private dinner on the night of the meeting, (Weschler) introduced himself to this reporter, made an impression as smart and friendly, and described himself as having a great time."
At first, Buffett wasn't sure Weschler wanted the job. He tells Fortune:
"I very much wanted him to do it, but I didn't expect to get very far with the idea. Ted will no doubt make a lot of money at Berkshire. But he was already making a lot of money with his fund—you can get an idea of that from the size of his Glide bids—so money wasn't a reason for him to come."
After Buffett "almost apologetically" sounded out Weschler over dinner this July, he took a few weeks to think it over and then accepted the offer.
The new guy isn't talking now about why he took the job, but Loomis says she "can speculate that Weschler's long-time admiration for Buffett made this an offer he just couldn't refuse."
Like Combs, Weschler will be handling about $1 billion to $3 billion of Berkshire's money, while Buffett will continue to "manage most of the funds until his retirement," according to the news release.
It goes on to say:
"After Mr. Buffett no longer serves as CEO, Todd and Ted—possibly aided by one additional manager—will have responsibility for the entire equity and debt portfolio of Berkshire, subject to overall direction by the then-CEO and board of directors. With Todd and Ted on board, Berkshire is well-positioned for successor investment management at the time Mr. Buffett is no longer CEO."
Weschler is like Buffett in that he prefers to buy just a few stocks and hold them for long periods of time, although the new hire probably won't be able to short stocksand borrow money to boost his investing capital, as he has at Peninsula.
According to Peninsula's latest 13F filing in July, the hedge fund held almost $2 billion worth of publicly traded U.S. stocks as of June 30.
Aside from two clunkers (most notably FiberTower) and one moderate loser, the stocks have been winners over the past year with big gains from Cogent Communications, Liberty Media, and WR Grace.