Friday, December 27, 2013

Berkshire News Briefs - 12/27/13

GEICO Passes Allstate to Become 2d Largest U.S. Auto Insurer (Insurance Journal)
Based on third quarter reports, GEICO Corp. has surpassed Allstate Corp. to become the nation’s second-largest private auto insurer. According to data compiled by SNL, GEICO logged $4.89 billion in direct premiums written during the third quarter of 2013, while Allstate recorded $4.65 billion in premiums. State Farm remained firmly in the number one position with $8.7 billion.

More GEICO news at the bottom of this post...

Berkshire grew E&S premiums by 27.6% in third quarter (Business Insurance)

Berkshire Hathaway Inc. grew its U.S. excess and surplus premiums by about 27.6% year over year in the third quarter, which was higher than the property/casualty insurance industry's overall 5.29% increase, according to an analysis released Tuesday by Charlottesville, Va.-based SNL Financial L.C. “Industry watchers have been keeping a close eye on Berkshire following the company's announcement in June that it was forming a new division devoted specifically to U.S. E&S business,” said SNL in its analysis. SNL noted that Berkshire ranked within the top 15 in the third quarter, “although its direct premiums written are still a long way from companies like American International Group Inc., Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. and W. R. Berkley Corp.” Berkshire ranked 13th on SNL's list of third-quarter 2013 market share of U.S. E&S insurers, up from 15th spot in third-quarter 2012.

Fitch: E&S Market Will Feel Impact of Berkshire's Entrance in Coming Quarters (Property Casualty 360)

While Berkshire’s aggressive entrance into the excess and surplus lines space earlier this year through the hiring of top American International Group employees didn’t “significantly alter” the market through the third quarter of 2013, ratings agency Fitch says it expects pricing implications related to this expansion “to materialize in coming quarters.” [...] The report said the formation of Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance in the second quarter of 2013 “adds tremendous capacity to an already overcapitalized market, which will likely limit rate hikes and lead to more intense competition in 2014.”
'Buffett's Alpha' Misses The Real Source Of Growth In The New Berkshire Hathaway (Seeking Alpha)
Like many other value investors and Buffett followers I paid passing attention to the headlines and summary articles on "Buffett's Alpha" by Andrea Frazzini, David Kabiller, and Lasse H. Pederson. The summaries were all roughly the same: Buffett achieved smashing success, trouncing the market, but he did so by a simple strategy of buying cheap, low-beta, high-quality stocks and levering his portfolio up by a 1.6 ratio. A secondary observation was that the public holdings of Berkshire Hathaway had outperformed its private holdings (companies owned outright). [...] When glancing at public articles on the "Buffett's Alpha" paper I had lazily let the public-versus-private-holdings assertion pass unexamined until a comment by X.L on my recent article "The Big Five: Which Would You Be Willing to Own If They Closed The Market for 20 Years" raised the question.

Warren Buffett's Biggest Winners (Fool)

It's been almost exactly one month since Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway announced its latest stock holdings -- and The Motley Fool decided to check in on how the portfolio of the Oracle of Omaha's company is doing. Buffett has had a solid run since the end of September, and based on the roughly $92 billion that Berkshire held, the company has seen the value of its holdings grow by a little more than $4.5 billion, a return of almost 5%. That narrowly trails the S&P 500's return of 5.5% over that same time period. Of course, Buffett's investing ability isn't characterized by 55 days of returns, but Berkshire Hathaway has had a number of remarkable performers since September.
Wind Power Rivals Coal With $1 Billion Order From Buffett (Bloomberg)
The decision by Warren Buffett’s utility company to order about $1 billion of wind turbines for projects in Iowa shows how a drop in equipment costs is making renewable energy more competitive with power from fossil fuels. Turbine prices have fallen 26 percent worldwide since the first half of 2009, bringing wind power within 5.5 percent of the cost of electricity from coal, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co., a unit of Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., yesterday announced an order for 1,050 megawatts of Siemens AG wind turbines in the industry’s largest order to date for land-based gear.

Berkshire’s MidAmerican Names Caudill NV Energy President (Bloomberg)

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co. named Paul Caudill president of NV Energy after completing its purchase of the Nevada utility whose chief executive officer will step down next year. Caudill, 59, had been president of MidAmerican Solar. He'll work with NV Energy CEO Michael Yackira, who plans to retire in June from the Las Vegas-based provider of electricity and natural gas, the companies said today in a statement. NV’s solar projects include facilities near Primm, Nevada and in North Las Vegas.

20-something Buffett protégé freezes paint firm pensions (NY Post)

It’s not just the temperatures that have dipped below freezing at Benjamin Moore headquarters. The 130-year-old paint brand, struggling under the ownership of billionaire Warren Buffett, told employees at its Montvale, NJ, offices last week it has frozen their pension plans, even as it continues to fire workers, as first reported on nypost.com. The lumps of holiday coal come courtesy of Buffett’s 29-year-old financial assistant, Tracy Britt Cool, whom he installed last year as chairman of Benjamin Moore after taking the rare step of firing a former CEO.

Johns Manville Adds Commercial and Residential Mineral Wool Insulation to Product Offering (Business Wire)

Johns Manville, a Berkshire Hathaway company and leading building products manufacturer, has added commercial and residential mineral wool to its full spectrum of insulation products, allowing customers to meet an even broader range of project demands. JM mineral wool insulation offers a variety of performance benefits in both commercial and residential construction. With a high melting point in excess of 2000°F, mineral wool can help delay fire spread, create quieter buildings and homes, increase privacy between rooms and reduce heating and cooling costs by keeping structures warm in winter and cool in summer.

MiTek Announces SAPPHIRE™ Build, Software Suite for Production Home Builders (Business Wire / Vancouver Sun)

MiTek Industries, Inc. (MiTek), a Berkshire Hathaway company, and the world’s leading supplier of advanced engineered structural connector systems, software, equipment and services for the building components industry announced today the introduction of SAPPHIRE Build, a suite of business and workflow management software tools for production home builders. MiTek’s recent acquisition, Kova Solutions, LLC, provides the functional core and framework for SAPPHIRE Build, which is now an end-to-end integrated solution. [...] The introduction of SAPPHIRE Build is the integration of two MiTek solutions that are already in the market: MiTek Blackpoint™ software and Kova. Now they are integrated into a single, re-branded platform.
Warren Buffett donates $10m to Rambam Hospital (Globes)
US billionaire Warren Buffet has donated $10 million to Rambam Hospital in Haifa. The contribution was announced by his close friend Eitan Wertheimer at an event last weekend to celebrate 75 years since the hospital's establishment. Wertheimer has been a close friend of Buffett since the sale of the family's precision tool developer and manufacturer Iscar Ltd. to the American's company Berkshire Hathaway. In May 2006, Berkshire Hathaway bought 80% of Iscar for $4 billion, and in May this year it exercised an option to buy the remaining 20% for $2.05 billion.

Hot Doughboy: Pillsbury Mascot Crashes Geico Commercial (ABC News)

Move over, gecko. A new commercial for Geico stars not the insurer's famous lizard but the Pillsbury Doughboy. Huh? How can that pairing possibly make sense? [...] The TV spot, by the Martin Agency of Richmond, Va., is the most recent in Geico's "Happier Than ..." series of commercials, each of which asks "How happy are people who switch to Geico?" In this case, the answer is: "Happier than the Pillsbury Doughboy on his way to a baking convention."

The commercial is here on YouTube, with nearly 1.9 million views.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Berkshire News Briefs - 12/13/13

Rabbit Hunting With Warren Buffett (Fool)
In his 2010 annual letter to shareholders, Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and CEO Warren Buffett used the metaphor of his company's cash as an "elephant gun" to be used in his hunt for big companies to purchase. Ever since then, the news media has fixated on Berkshire Hathaway's hunt to bag that elephant to fuel its future growth. After all, how can an enormous company the size of Berkshire Hathaway grow even larger without swallowing up increasingly larger subsidiaries? [...] While the world watches and waits for that elephant to come along, though, Berkshire Hathaway has been quietly growing another way: rabbit hunting. Rather than using the metaphorical elephant gun to bring down the biggest game of all, the subsidiaries Berkshire Hathaway already owns have been quietly hunting their own small targets. Taken individually, most of these moves barely made the news outside of a company press release. But looking at all of the little moves together, you can see from the pattern that Berkshire Hathaway is growing just fine without any elephants.

BNSF CEO Rose changes roles, renews Buffett succession talk (Reuters)

Berkshire Hathaway Inc's BNSF Railway Co moved Chief Executive Matthew Rose to an executive chairman role, renewing speculation that he may be in line to replace Warren Buffett at Berkshire's helm. As executive chairman, Rose, 54, will work on activities including organizational planning, market positioning and public policy at BNSF over the next decade, the company said on Wednesday. Carl Ice, 57, will replace Rose as chief executive at the nation's largest railroad, beginning January 1. Ice has been at the railroad for 34 years, and has been president of BNSF since November 2010.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Grows Again with 12 Affiliate Signees (MarketWatch / BusinessWire)

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, the new real estate brokerage network operated by HSF Affiliates LLC, today announced the signing of 12 more affiliates for the network. [...] These signings bring to 502 the number of offices that have transitioned to or signed with the brand since July, and include nearly 19,000 agents in 24 states. Many more signings are on the way, said Earl Lee, CEO of HSF Affiliates LLC.

Related:

Warren Buffett’s new franchise brand, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, grows to 51 firms (Inman)

Warren Buffett’s new real estate franchise brand, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, will convert 12 more Prudential Real Estate-affiliated brokerages, bringing the total number of firms committed to the 1-year-old network to 51. [...] The 12 new firms, which grow the new franchise network to 502 offices and 19,000 agents in 24 states, will transition to the new brand by the middle of 2014. [...] HomeServices of America created the new brand when it took a majority stake in the Prudential Real Estate and Real Living brands from Brookfield Asset Management in October 2012. It will eventually replace the Prudential Real Estate brand, which is slated to disappear in the 2020s as a condition of Prudential Financial Inc.’s sale of its real estate franchising business to Brookfield Asset Management in 2011. [...] So far, only Prudential-affiliated firms have committed to Buffett’s new brand.

Brokerages converted to the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices brand and having their press releases turn up in my BRK news search this week include Middle Tennessee, Nebraska, Atlanta, GA, Orlando, FL, Greenville, SC, and Wellesley, MA.

Buffett's Berkshire Buys More DaVita (NASDAQ)

Warren Buffett 's company, Berkshire Hathaway, bought 1,314,170 additional shares of DaVita HealthCare Partners this week. The transaction, reported Dec. 9, represents a 6.77% increase to the existing holding. After the buy, Berkshire's DaVita stake is sized at 36,461,294 shares, raising its ownership to about 17.14%. [...] The two companies have agreed that Berkshire will not acquire more than 25% of DaVita without DaVita's approval.

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway acquires Hartford UK variable annuity business (Life Insurance and Pensions)

This story came up last summer, and the deal is just now finalizing.

Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway firm, has purchased Hartford Life International Limited (HLIL) in a transaction valued at approximately $285m. Property and casualty insurance provider Hartford originally signed an agreement with Columbia Insurance in June this year, to divest its UK variable annuity business, as part of its strategy to streamline its operations. HLIL's sole asset is its subsidiary, Hartford Life Limited (HLL), a Dublin-based company that sold variable annuities in the UK from 2005 to 2009. As of 30 November 2013, HLL had $1.7bn in assets under management.

Berkshire Estimates Were Cut For Bad Reasons. Expect A Good Q4 (Seeking Alpha)

After strongly outperforming the S&P 500 through July, Berkshire treaded water for a few months but then began to notably underperform the SP500 since Berkshire announced Q3 earnings on Nov 1. The culprit? Not only did Q3 earnings miss the consensus estimate, but, even worse, that surprise caused the few analysts who cover Berkshire to lower future earnings forecasts. We think that in their rush to not get fooled again, they overreacted.

Did Buffett Buy ExxonMobil Because It's More "Buffett" Than Berkshire? (Fool)

Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett's most notable investment this past quarter, 8.8 million shares of ExxonMobil, actually started with a larger 31 million-share buy in the quarter ended June 30. Based on the Sept. 30 13F, this makes ExxonMobil Berkshire's seventh-largest stock holding, worth $3.75 billion. While that's significantly smaller than the company's holdings in Wells Fargo, Coca-Cola, IBM, and American Express -- each worth more than $10 billion -- ExxonMobil is perhaps the most "Buffett" of all the companies that Buffett has invested in over the years. Let's take a look at why.

Warren Buffett Places One Heck of Bet on Energy (Fool)

Warren Buffett made big headlines in the energy space when Berkshire Hathaway publicly disclosed that it had accumulated a $3.4 billion position in ExxonMobil. This alone is a pretty significant bet on the future of oil and gas. When you look at some of Buffett's other energy holdings, though, it points to a very specific investment strategy: Canadian oil sands. Let's take a look at Buffett's energy holdings and what makes all of them work.

Berkshire Hathaway Is Undervalued By 15% (Seeking Alpha)

Berkshire Hathaway is unlikely to repeat the 19.8% returns it enjoyed from 1964-2011 due to its size and because it has already bought up many of the most desirable investment opportunities in the marketplace. However, Berkshire should continue to generate solid growth and performance due to its mix of high quality businesses that it owns as well as its well-regarded portfolio of marketable securities. [...] Berkshire Hathaway's share price is undervalued by 15% relative to its fair intrinsic value and its business units continue to generate steady profit growth.

Berkshire Hathaway and Warren Buffett's 2013 Year in Review (Fool)

Berkshire Hathaway has had a relatively eventful 2013, with a major acquisition, a few significant stock purchases, and one question that still lingers.

Finally...

Warren Buffett held a Q&A session with MBA Students from 8 universities last month, and a professor from the University of Maryland Robert E. Smith Business School in attendance took copious, detailed notes:

Buffett talks about how he writes the annual letter to shareholders (2013's is already done except for the final numbers, watch for it to be published on February 28). He talks about the Goldman Sachs and GE warrant deals from 2008. He talks about how his political views were formed. Moats, negotiations, women's equality, assessing managers, influences, career advice.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Berkshire News Briefs - 12/2/13

Berkshire Said to Reduce Its Energy Future Bond Stake (Bloomberg)
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. reduced its holdings of Energy Future Holdings Corp. debt by a third after the Texas power provider made an interest payment and staved off a bankruptcy filing, according to a person with knowledge of the transaction. Berkshire sold about $615 million of its $1.8 billion in face value of Texas Competitive Electric Holdings Co.’s senior unsecured notes this month [...] The Omaha, Nebraska-based company had taken more than $1.9 billion in writedowns from 2010 through the third quarter of this year, “substantially all” of which was related to Texas Competitive bonds, according to regulatory filings on its website.

Berkshire’s PacifiCorp Looks to Sell Oregon Hydroelectric Dam (Bloomberg)

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s PacifiCorp utility is seeking to sell a hydroelectric dam that’s no longer profitable to operate. The dam is on the Deschutes River in Bend, Oregon, PacifiCorp said today in a statement. The company, owned by Warren Buffett’s Omaha, Nebraska-based firm, may seek to place the structure under local control.

Even Warren Buffett doesn't want old Berkshire HQ (CNBC)

The mayor of New Bedford, Mass., wants to save Berkshire Hathaway's old headquarters from demolition, but he's having trouble finding buyers. Even Warren Buffett himself isn't interested. The Wall Street Journal reports the owner of the 86-year-old "squat, dilapidated office building" at 129 Cove Street wants to build a parking lot in its place but has agreed to wait a few months while the city looks for a buyer for what once housed the Berkshire Hathaway textile company.

Why Warren Buffett Doesn't Mix Morals With Money (Fool)

Buffett and Charlie Munger once thought about buying a chewing-tobacco company. They traveled to Memphis, entertaining the idea along the way. They never took the deal. Buffett later said the following: "In the end, we decided we didn't want to own it. We would buy stock in a tobacco company, but we didn't want to own it." This is interesting. Buffett would own shares of a tobacco company, but he wouldn't own all of it. He wants some barrier between Berkshire Hathaway and the company, perhaps for liability reasons, and probably also for insurance on his reputation.

NetJets enhances safety features on Bombardier Signature Series long-range aircraft with Tempus IC medical device (Avionics Intelligence)

NetJets Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway company and a provider of private aviation for nearly 50 years, is partnering with Remote Diagnostic Technologies to add a new safety feature to all super midsize and large cabin NetJets Signature Series aircraft by equipping them with the Tempus IC Medical Device. The Tempus IC lightweight, compact telemedicine device uses the plane’s onboard satellite communication capability to connect to a doctor on the ground in the event of a medical emergency. The device enables trained medical experts to begin helping the crew and passengers within minutes of a medical incident occurring on board, especially in remote areas or on long flights, such as flying over the ocean.

5 Things You Probably Didn't Know About Warren Buffett (Fool)

1. Harvard turned him down
2. He learned the most from a guy you've likely never heard of
3. He's really good at what he does
4. His father was a four-time congressman
5. He doesn't consider himself the most important person at Berkshire