Sunday, June 23, 2013

Berkshire News Briefs - 6/23/13

Buffett Nets Cool $44 Million in Quiet Media General Deal (MoneyNews)
The merger of Media General and New Young Broadcasting led to a benefit for Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway [...] the story begins with Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway purchasing all of Media General's newspapers, except the Tampa Tribune, in May 2012. Berkshire Hathaway loaned Media General $445 million "to refinance a crushing debt load coming due," Poynter stated. The initial interest rate was 10.5 percent. Berkshire Hathaway got penny-a-share warrants to acquire 19.9 percent of the company. A benefit of the merger: Media General said last week it will be able to refinance its debt "at a considerable savings of interest expense." Poynter reported that Berkshire Hathaway will reportedly be paid a $44 million premium as part of the refinancing. Media General’s shares skyrocketed more than 30 percent the day the merger with New Young Broadcasting was announced, and have roughly doubled in value since Buffett’s investment just over a year ago.

Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Jumps Over Allstate as No. 2 Insurer (Property Casualty 360)

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, led by the group’s auto-insurance subsidiary Geico, leapt over Allstate in 2012 to become the second-largest P&C insurance group based on net premiums written [NPW], according to data from SNL Financial. [...] The Berkshire group saw a 2012 increase in NPW of 12.1 percent—the largest such growth in the Top 20 P&C insurance groups. Berkshire's NPW was about $27.25 billion. Allstate slipped to No. 3, with NPW of about $25.58 billion, which is still a 1.4 percent increase over 2011. State Farm by leaps and bounds retained its title as the largest P&C group in 2012, with nearly $53 billion in NPW.

MidAmerican to issue $700 million in bonds to fund Solar Star projects (Clean Energy Authority)

MidAmerican Solar, a subsidiary of Warren Buffet-controlled Berkshire Hathaway’s Mid-American Energy Holdings Co. is planning to issue $700 million in secured senior notes to support the $2.7 billion Solar Star project, which was formerly known as the Antelope Valley Solar Projects. The bonds, beings issued by Solar Star Funding, LLC, will support construction of the Solar Star projects, which MidAmerican bought from SunPower in January 2013. SunPower is currently building the Solar Star projects, which, when completed in October 2015, will consist of 597 megawatts of AC electric generation. Once complete SunPower will provide ongoing operations and maintenance of the projects, which are co-located in Kern and Los Angeles Counties, Calif.

An Interview with Whitney Tilson (Fool Video with Transcript)

[Whitney Tilson:] The way I value Berkshire is only secondarily as a multiple of book value, because book value is such an incorrect way to look at so many of Berkshire's holdings. Something like GEICO is being carried at book, but it's worth a significant premium to book. [...]

But again, this is a good example of the "I missed it" phenomenon. I think a lot of people look at Berkshire today and just say, "The A shares have run from closer to $100,000 a share to over $160,000 a share in not much more than a year. I've missed it." Well, people have been saying "I missed it" on Berkshire...When it ran from $100 to $1000, they said "I missed it," and then $1000 to $10,000, then $10,000 to $100,000. Each time, they didn't miss it. They just had to wash that thought from their brains, and evaluate it. I value Berkshire, just taking the cash and investments per share, as a little over $120,000 a share. Then I just put an eight multiple on the pre-tax earnings of the operating businesses, about $9000 a share. You take $9000 a share of earnings, times an eight multiple is $72,000 per A share. Add the cash bonds and investments of $120,000 per share, and you get a bit over $190,000 per share of intrinsic value.

Buffett: Tracy Britt isn't Berkshire CEO successor (Omaha World-Herald)

Last week's item following up on a Wall Street Journal profile of Warren Buffett's financial assistant Tracy Britt stretched toward the question of whether she might, someday, succeed him as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Seemed like the logical question to explore, as others have done in print and online. But not exactly, Buffett said in an email (relayed from his computer-less office through his assistant, Debbie Bosanek). [...] Britt's office is a ways down the hall, not next to his, as the Journal article said. The office sequence, in footage away from Buffett's corner office, is Bosanek, Todd Combs, Britt and Ted Weschler. Combs and Weschler manage some of Berkshire's investments.

Berkshire’s Abel, Britt Join Heinz Board After Swann Leaves (Bloomberg Businesweek)

Gregory Abel and Tracy Britt, two of Warren Buffett’s deputies who have been adding responsibilities at Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (A), were selected by the billionaire to join him as directors of HJ Heinz Co. [...] They replaced directors including Lynn Swann, the former wide receiver for the National Football League’s Pittsburgh Steelers. [...] Britt is chairman of at least two Berkshire units that replaced their CEOs last year, and Abel has been building the company’s energy business through acquisitions.

iCORE Global Partners with CORT Business Services (National Real Estate Investor)

iCORE Global, a full-service commercial real estate provider, has formed a strategic partnership with CORT Business Services, a Berkshire Hathaway Company. iCORE has been providing commercial real estate services in over 267 major markets worldwide for the past 28 years. Now, iCORE will be able to provide clients with furniture solutions. [...] "With CORT currently servicing over 80 percent of the top Fortune 500 companies, there’s already a significant overlap in our customer base," iCORE Global CEO and Managing Director Samantha Mueting said in a statement.

Berkshire Hires CNA's Fortin for New Insurance Unit (WSJ)

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. said Wednesday it hired CNA Financial Corp. executive Dan Fortin to work for a new insurance unit the company launched in April. Mr. Fortin will serve as senior vice president for executive and professional lines, Berkshire said in a statement. He was previously senior vice president at CNA Specialty and served as interim CEO of CNA Europe in 2009. Mr. Fortin joins a growing group of underwriters moving to Berkshire after several top managers from American International Group Inc. (AIG) departed to set up the new unit in late April. The new unit, called Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance, is based in Boston and headed by former AIG executive Peter Eastwood.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices gets social (Inman News)

The new Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices real estate franchise has rolled out Facebook, Twitter and Instagram accounts. The move comes in advance of broad adoption of the new brand by many Prudential Real Estate and Real Living brands beginning in the third and fourth quarters of this year.

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