Posts for Ticker ‘BRK/B’

Is Warren Buffett Buying AIG? (AIG, BRK/A, BRK/B)

Aig_logoBuffett_image_2Covering financial stocks on a day like today is sort of like watching the Chinese ping pong championship.  It’s all action, happens faster than most can see, and no one really knows who the winner is.  Now, the latest rumors have the Oracle of Omaha, Warren Buffett, and his company Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK/A, BRK/B), looking at doing a deal to save American International Group (NYSE: AIG). There are things to consider. 

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Buffett & Berkshire Hathaway Earnings Watch (BRK.A, BRK.B, KFT, BUD)

Buffett_imageAfter the close of trading on Friday, we’ll get to see earnings out of Wall Street’s favorite idol as Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE: BRK.A, BRK.B) reports earnings.   

The first thing we ant to advise readers about is that there are very few estimates on Wall Street out of analysts, so the actual numbers are generally thought of as a hint or a nod rather than a formal bar.  Guidance is also not formally given so traders have to listen to the inferences made for internal projections.

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Berkshire Hathaway & Buffett, The True Anheuser-Busch Winners (BRK.A, BRK.B, BUD)

Everyone has reported on the huge acquisition offer from InBev for Anheuser-Busch Companies Inc. (NYSE: BUD).  What is interesting above and beyond the global beer initiatives and consolidation is that Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. (NYSE: BRK.A, BRK.B) owns a fairly massive slug of the company stock.  As Budweiser is an easy brand to recognize it easily fits within Buffett’s "hold forever" strategy.

According to the most recent filings, Warren Buffett’s holding and operating company owns a combined amount of 35,563,200 shares as of March 31, 2008, which is roughly a 4.99% stake.

With a $62.00 share price this morning this represents a stake worth some $2.2 Billion.  That ought to allow Buffett and friends to recapture some cash to either make more acquisitions or to add to the cash arsenal for future deals.

You can see the full list of Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway holdings.

This was one of our "brands that could disappear" as far as US ownership is concerned.  Recently we ran "Top US Brands Foreigners Could Buy With Cheap Dollars (SKS, HSY, WFMI, STZ, BUD, ETFC, S, LEAP, X, AA, LAMR)" which you can see.

Jon C. Ogg
June 12, 2008

Buffett & Berkshire Hathaway Holdings I-S (BRK.A, BRK.B, IR, IRM, JNJ, KFT, MTB, MCO, NKE, NSC, PG, SNY, STI)

After today’s close, we saw which stocks Warren Buffett held in Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE: BRK.A, BRK.B) as of March 31, 2008.  Buffett’s filing cut off date is longer as he has 45-days to make his filings.  This is a snapshot of his various holdings, and these were broken down.  Some of these have multiple positions because of the various entities that are held.

Ingersoll Rand (NYSE: IR) small position

Iron Mountain (NYSE: IRM) small position

Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ)

  • $280M for 4,322,500 shares
  • $1.314 BIL for 20,266,300 shares
  • $1.711 BIL for 26,386,148 shares
  • $21M for 325,300 shares
  • $589M for 9,087,200 shares
  • $51 for 792,000 shares
  • $37M for 575,000 shares

Kraft Foods (NYSE: KFT) 

  • $2.766 BIL for 89,222,400 shares
  • $954.8M for 30,790,300 shares
  • $310M for 10,000,000 shares
  • $8M for 259,800 shares
  • $248M for 8,000,000 shares

M & T Bank (NYSE: MTB)

  • $483.1M for 6,003,360 shares
  • $43.9M for 546,000 shares
  • $13.3M for 165,700 shares

Moody’s (NYSE: MCO)

  • $1.124 BIL for  32,280,600 shares
  • $547.5M for 15,719,400 shares

Nike (NYSE: NKE)

  • $519.5M for 7,641,000 shares

Norfolk Southern (NYSE: NSC)

  • $105M for 1,933,000 shares

Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG)

  • $4,099 BIL for 58,500,000 shares
  • $1.524 BIL for 21,752,000 shares
  • $437M for 6,240,000 shares
  • $501M for 7,154,500 shares
  • $54,655 for 780,000 shares
  • $109,309 for 1,560,000 shares
  • $384,369 for 5,485,500 shares
  • $306,556 for 4,375,000 shares

Sanofi-Aventis (NSE: SNY)

  • $18.3M for 488,500 shares
  • $96.8M for 2,578,933 shares
  • $6.3M for 169,300 shares
  • $13.1M    350,000 shares

SunTrust Banks (NYSE: STI)

  • $129.2M for 2,344,600 shares
  • $47.4M for 860,000 shares

Very Small Position defined as "under $100 Million."  That may be anempire for the rest of us, but it isn’t worth nothing on Mr. Buffett’sscale.

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Buffett & Berkshire Hathaway Holdings A – H

Buffett & Berkshire Hathaway Holdings T – W

Jon C. Ogg
May 15, 2008

Berkshire Hathaway Dumps Ameriprise (AMP, BRK.A, BRK.B)

Ameriprise Financial Inc. (NYSE: AMP) was the stand out stock in Warren Buffett’s holdings today.  Beakshire Hathaway inc. (NYSE: BRK.A, BRK.B) held some 661,742 shares and listed as worth some $36.4 million back at the end of 2007.  NO MORE….

Ameriprise was not in the holdings listed. today.  It was really a small position anyhow.

Jon C. Ogg
May 15, 2008

Warren Buffett: A Media & Watcher’s 360 Review Into Annual Meeting (BRK.A, BRK.B, C, WWY)

Everyone loves covering Warren Buffett, rain or shine.  His long-term shareholders love him, the media follows his every move, and everyone on Wall Street either cares about his potential next buyout or cares about the stock positions he discloses in his latest filings.  This weekend is the Annual Meeting for Berskshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B), so you can just about count on steady weekend coverage too.

There are two important coverage pieces that Buffett fans and financial viewers will want to see today and this weekend.  CNBC has been airing bits of a Becky Quick interview with Warren Buffett on and off today from Omaha ahead of the meeting.  This weekend and on Monday, Fox Business will also be showing some interviews of their own and a live weekend blogging from Liz Claman there in Omaha as well.  But one interview is going to stand out sharply today that is different than others, as Fox Business gets a chance to interview John Freund from Citigroup (NYSE: C) around 3:00 PM EST (media times always subject to change).  This is said to "Buffett’s stock broker."  You can bet money he won’t be giving up any of the Oracle of Omaha’s secrets, but this may be a real first as far as a close Buffett industry source.

This annual meeting We are probably not that far away from seeing the latest round of Berkshire Hathaway’s quarter-end holdings, but here were his last holdings broken down in alphabetical order in 3 groups:

The current climate is actually more of the sort of market that Buffett can thrive in since his buyouts time frame deals with a projected hold time of FOREVER.  He’s plunked down $11 Billion over the last couple months between Marmon Holdings and on his share of the Wm Wrigley Jr Co. (NYSE: WWY).  Earlier this week, Warren Buffett already noted "We are in a recession", noting the difference from the man in the streets versus what the National Bureau of Economic Research gets around to saying.

The real question people may be asking for this weekend is "Will Warren announce a successor?"  While we hope so, we doubt it.  This may stay just as "the four replacements" (three of whom are internal).

Lastly, Mr. Buffett will be heading to Europe mid-month to go tour closely-held companies that can be rolled up or where opportunities are.  He never did do his true "Whale of a deal," but that doesn’t mean it’s ever entirely off the table.

Jon C. Ogg
May 2, 2008

Warren Buffett Calls Recession (BRK.A, BRK.B)

Warren Buffett of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A, BRK.B) has been on CNBC this morning discussing his Wrigley’s bid this morning.  Interestingly enough this interview was more of a general discussion about the current economic climate and strategy since he said, "We are in a recession." 

The call in the last few minutes also noted that the classic definition of a recession being negative GDP for two consecutive quarters and a 0.1% growth may keep the classic definition from being there.  He also noted that the National Bureau of Economic Research is the one who officially calls the classic recession, and that definition is far different "from the man in the streets."

He also noted that the current trade policies will weaken the dollar, although he noted how he was also surprised that inflation hasn’t been higher from commodity costs. Warren Buffett also said he thinks this will deeper and longer than many people think.

We have been in "recession mode" according to our own internal readings for the entire part of 2008.  Whether or not GDP will show a true negative number or not is immaterial.  Things started heading south ahead of Christmas, and the wings were ripped off the plane mid-flight starting in January to February.

The Fed interventions and actions to save the financial institutions have done more than the rate cuts, and we’ve noted that the FOMC should maybe take that throttle off of rate cuts now.  The rates get advertised in the windows for lower rates, but you can’t qualify.

Berkshire Hathaway’s holdings for the end of Q1 are not yet out, but here is a partial list of his most recent holdings as of the last filing date.

Jon C. Ogg
April 28, 2008

White Mountains Buys Off Warren Buffett (WTM, BRK/A)

White Mountains Insurance Group, Ltd. (NYSE: WTM) entered an exchange agreement with Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE: BRK-A) to transfer certain runoff businesses and a substantial amount of cash to Berkshire Hathaway, and this will allow it to take back it 16.3% stake or some 1.7242 million shares owned by Berkshire Hathaway. 

Warren Buffett & Co. will get 100% of a White Mountains subsidiary, which will hold Commercial Casualty Insurance Company, International American Group, Inc., and $751 million in cash before adjustments. 

This group had combined gross assets of about $435 million and shareholder’s equity of $58 million.  This will act to reduce the outstanding common shares of White Mountains would be reduced to approximately 8.8 million shares and also allows White Mountains to exit runoff businesses with potentially volatile reserves.  It also allows it to reduce undeployed capital and to redeem about one-sixth of the company’s shares at a small premium to GAAP book value. 

The value of the transaction is listed roughly $836 million at $485 per share.  White Mountains and Berkshire Hathaway expect no substantial taxable gains in the exchange and this has been approved by both companies.  White Mountains closed at $478.00 per share on Friday.

This is one of the more odd transactions out there, but Berkshire Hathaway has been making more difficult financial transactions and new businesses in the new markets that can capitalize off of the liquidity and credit crunch that has affected the markets and the economy.

Jon C. Ogg
March 10, 2008

Implications Of Warren Buffett Panning Insurance Industry (BRK/A, BRK/B, ABK, MBI, AIG, RE, HIG, CB, PGR)

It is no great mystery that Warren Buffett of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A, NYSE: BRK.B) is still one of the most followed and most revered "long term value investors" on the planet.  Any time there is Warren Buffet news you can count on every financial website having at least one story on him.  We even have our own "Buffett" index code.

His annual investor letter is always an important read, although investors should really note that this should be viewed and interpreted as a "macrocosm" of Microcosms.  Warren Buffett will be the first to tell you he cannot predict the stock market, cannot exactly predict the economy, cannot predict the weather, and cannot predict the short-term implications on every stock out there.  But he smooths out all the news and noise from the long-term vision.  That is what a long-term value and income manager is supposed to do, particularly if his holding period is "Forever." If you look over his latest public stock investment holdings, you’ll see he still goes for the simple and easy to understand. We gave a list of candidates that could fall under his ambitions of a "whale of a deal," although this seems more like the past rather than the present or future.

So what are the implications of the Oracle of Omaha panning the insurance sector.  Of his $2.35 Billion in net earnings for the last quarter, $1.44 Billion of the total $2.35 Billion came from insurance underwriting and insurance investment income (61%).  For Q4 2006, the percentage of insurance-tied numbers was 60% of the $2.868 Billion in operating earnings.  For all of 2007, the percentage of insurance-tied numbers was 59% of the $9.634 Billion in operating income.

In his annual letter to shareholders, Mr. Buffett noted specifically that margins in insurance were going to be lower even if we had another disaster free year.  He even noted, “If the winds roar or the earth trembles, results could be far worse.”  In the past two years he has joked about having the foresight to benefit from no disasters.  If that prediction isn’t harsh enough, try this one: “It is a certainty that insurance-industry profit margins, including ours, will fall significantly in 2008. Prices are down, and exposures inexorably rise.”  Or better yet, "That party is over." 

Mr. Buffett has even gone out on a limb to predict the future Berkshire Hathaway as a whole will have breakeven or positive earnings.  He admitted the law of large numbers has caught up with Berkshire Hathaway.  But what happens if you are an executive or bean counter at OTHER insurance companies?

Berkshire Hathaway from best we can tell has not gotten mixed up with all of the leveraged and crazy CDO structures that couldn’t be explained.  That isn’t true elsewhere.  But every portfolio manager talks his or her own book.  There are many things that have yet to be resolved and there are likely to still be at least some failures from all this fallout.  Insurance companies will be in that boat too as their financial bets are frequently much farther out than that of banks. 

  • Mr. Buffett has already made a backstop offer for the bond insurers to pick up their municipal assets on the cheap, which were rebuffed faster than the offers were made.  MBIA (NYSE: MBI) and Ambac Financial (NYSE: ABK) are still a "pending situation" as far as ultimate long-term viability, and Berkshire Hathaway decided to open a competing municipal bond insurance operation to compete.
  • American International Group (NYSE: AIG) has been hamstrung by leveraged loan and CDO exposure that was first disclosed as immaterial and somehow has grown to a quarterly loss of some $5 Billion.  It also has noted a total of $42.2 Billion of exposure to the troubled bond insurers, and it has written roughly $61 Billion of credit default swaps on CDO’s with some subprime collateral.  They are far from immune, AIG stock fell some 6.5% Friday alone to $46.86, and its 52-week trading range is $44.10 to $72.97.
  • Everest Re Group, Ltd. (NYSE: RE) is one of the largest pure-play reinsurers out there, another arena in which Berkshire Hathaway is a giant.  It only fell 1% Friday to $96.88, and its 52-week trading range is $90.27 to $115.86.  They would not at all be immune, particularly after its profits fell some 90%.
  • Hartford Financial Services (NYSE: HIG) is another insurance monster that saw shares fall another 3.75% to $69.91, and its 52-week trading range is $65,76 to $106.23.  Chubb (NYSE: CB) is yet another that saw a 3.1% drop Friday to $50.90, while its 52-week trading range is
  • $45.65 to $55.99.
  • Progressive Corp. (NYSE: PGR) competes head to head with GEICO and it too saw a 3% drop on Friday to $18.33, while its 52-week trading range is $16.98 to $25.16.

Realistically, this list could just go on and on.  There is no reason to.  Most of the reports out there merely just cover his comments in case everyone doesn’t have the time to read through his endless letter.  We have one solid rule when we question anything in the financial markets, and the answer is almost always "FOLLOW THE MONEY."  Mr. Buffett is a great manager, and those who bash him based only upon the "today" really look like clowns.  Regardless, it’s almost like he is trying to prepare his holders for the worst again after two years of no catastrophes.  Maybe he is trying to talk down other insurance operations so he can buy them on the cheap or show how Berkshire Hathaway insurance subsidiaries have better balance sheets.  Either way, he’s talking up his book even if it was meant to sound cautious.

The fact that we noted "Buffett’s Loss Could Be Your Gain" after Barron’s panned this one change nothing about the situation.

Jon C. Ogg
March 1, 2008

Regulators Beg Buffett To Get Into Bond Insurance

Perhaps the fact that Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) got into the bond insurance business just as it was falling apart was not entirely due to the genius of Warren Buffett. According to the FT, Mr. Buffett’s company began its new business "just weeks after receiving an unusual call from New York state’s insurance regulator urging it to enter the multi-billion dollar market."

The entreaties of the troubled fell upon the ears of the mighty. New York State approved the application to start the business in one month. People who are not Warren Buffett often wait six to nine months.

Now that Buffett and Company and their Fort Know balance sheet are in the bond insurance business, companies like MBIA (MBI) and Ambac (ABK) can head down the sewer. The stocks of both firms were shellacked today on concerns that they will have substantial losses. Both companies face having to raise money, or worse.

For Warren Buffett, it is good to be the King.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Barron’s Berkshire Hathaway Bashing Could Be Your Gain (BRK/A, BRK/B, BRK-A, BRK-B)

Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK/A) (NYSE:BRK/B) shares fell today after Barron’s called for investors to sell Warren Buffett’s growth machine.  This seemed like a long time since Berkshire Hathaway had gone down this much in a single session and it appears that this is the worst day in about 3 years.

Barron’s noted roughly a 30% rise since August 1 and a pre-drop market cap of about $220 Billion as the sixth largest US company.  Barron’s noted:

  • "Its stock now appears overpriced, reflecting a sizable premium for the skills of the 77-year-old Buffett. What’s Berkshire worth? Our estimate, based on several valuation measures, is around $130,000 a share – about 10% below the current quote."

We do agree with Barron’s that Wall Street (and us) would like to see his "whale of a deal" and we even went as far as to cover which stocks could fit the profile and take up some 75% of the cash positions at Berkshire Hathaway.   

The A-Shares closed down 4.6% at $136,400.00, and its 52-week trading range is $103,800.00 to $151,650.00.  The B-shares, the Baby-Buffetts, fell some 4.8% to $4,525.00.  The 52-week trading range is $3,460.00 to $5,059.00.  This now represents a 10% correction in Berkshire Hathaway stock from its yearly highs.

But where we disagree with Barron’s is that Berkshire Hathaway is done or overvalued.  Every time throughout Berkshire Hathaway’s history that shares have pulled back 10% it has represented a buying opportunity.  On days that the market rises, Berkshire Hathaway tends to rise.  On days the market is weak, traders tend to look to Berkshire Hathaway as a safe bet stock to hide money.  Even if Buffett is 77 years old and no heir has been declared, it’s just too hard to bet against the old guy.  He’s too down to earth and too forward about maintaining everything above the table.

Berkshire Hathaway has a lot riding on insurance and reinsurance, and Buffett makes no secret that the company has been lucky enough to avoid two straight hurricane seasons with any major US damage. 

The hit from Barron’s may have just opened up another opportunity for those whom have wanted to own Berkshire Hathaway stock.  Barron’s is right and we are wrong OR we’re right and Barron’s is wrong.  We’ll know down the road.

Jon C. Ogg
December 17, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he produces the SPECIAL SITUATION newsletter and he does not own securities in the companies he covers.