Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Berkshire News Briefs - 3/25/14

Buffett's Berkshire gets its first TV station (CNBC)
For the first time, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway will directly own a television station. Under terms of an agreement in principle announced Wednesday, Berkshire will get ABC-affiliate WPLG in Miami from Graham Holdings. Graham holds the assets that remained after the Washington Post Co. sold its namesake newspaper to Amazon chief Jeff Bezos for $250 million last August. In the new deal, Graham would swap the station, some Berkshire shares it owns and some cash in exchange for roughly 1.6 million Graham shares now held by Berkshire. [...] The trade would leave Berkshire with just about 100,000 shares.

Media General to buy LIN in US$2.6b broadcast deal (NewsAsia)

US broadcaster Media General said on Friday it will buy LIN Media in a US$2.6 billion deal that creates the nation's second-largest television broadcasting company and a digital media powerhouse. The merged company will own and operate or service 74 television stations across 46 markets, and serve some 26.5 million households, or 23 percent of the US market, Media General said in a statement. [...] Media General, partly owned by tycoon Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, will form a new holding company that will be named Media General.

Warren Buffett's Warrants Shine in Media General Deal (The Street)

As Media General works to merge with LIN Media, forming the nation's second largest pure-play TV broadcasting company, Berkshire Hathaway continues to make money off of a newspaper deal it cut with Media General in 2012. In May 2012, Berkshire Hathaway bought 63 newspapers from Media General for $142 million in cash and agreed to provide the nationwide TV broadcaster with a $400 million term loan and a $45 million revolving credit line, as the company worked to repair its balance sheet. As part of the newspaper purchase and its loan to Media General, Berkshire also received penny warrants for approximately 4.6 million of Media General's Class A shares, about 20% of its outstanding stock at the time. Berkshire's loans, which carried an interest rate of 10.5%, and its warrants, quickly paid off.

Buffett’s BNSF Leads Locomotive Surge to Ease Railroad Cargo Jam (Bloomberg)

BNSF Railway Co., owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., is leading an effort by U.S. railroads to add hundreds of locomotives to ease a cargo jam spurred by bad weather and surging crude shipments. BNSF increased engines by 250 in the last two months and will have another 125 new ones on the tracks in the next two months, the company said. [...] The congestion started with BNSF before the bad weather because of equipment shortages and increasing cargo, then worsened as the snowstorms swept in, said Jason Seidl, an analyst with Cowen & Co. “A lot of business came their way and they sort of got behind the eight ball,” he said. “Then the weather hit and the rest is history as they say.”

Buffett’s Hathaway Compensation Rises to $485,606 (Claims Journal)

Well, OK, I guess he's earned a small raise.

Warren Buffett’s compensation from Berkshire Hathaway Inc. rose 15 percent last year to $485,606, although the billionaire’s salary remained $100,000. The increase came in “other compensation,” which includes company-paid costs for Buffett’s personal and home security. As usual, Buffett reimbursed Berkshire $50,000 for personal costs such as postage and phone calls.

Will This Company Soon Be Warren Buffett's Biggest Holding? (Fool)

Believe it or not, Bank of America could soon become the single largest holding of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway. Shocking, I know, but the math is really quite simple. Two and a half years ago, Buffett invested $5 billion in Bank of America. In exchange, Berkshire received a corresponding amount of preferred stock that pays a 6% dividend, and warrants to buy 700 million shares of the bank's common stock at an exercise price of $7.14 per share. The warrants expire in September of 2021. At today's price of roughly $17.90, Berkshire has already more than doubled its initial investment -- and that excludes the preferred stake. The common-stock position has been so lucrative, in fact, that it's become, in effect, Berkshire's fifth largest equity holding.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Named ‘Real Estate Agency Brand of the Year’ in 2014 Harris Poll (Business Wire)

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, the new real estate brokerage network operated by HSF Affiliates LLC, today announced it was named “Real Estate Agency Brand of the Year” in the 26th annual Harris Poll EquiTrend study. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices received the highest ranking in the Real Estate Agency category based on consumers’ perception of its brand familiarity, quality and purchasing consideration, among other qualifying elements. The study was based on opinions of more than 40,000 U.S. consumers surveyed online earlier this year.

Buffett Wins NCAA Billion-Dollar Hoops Bet as Brackets Go Bust (Bloomberg)

It took less than two full days of play for Warren Buffett to win his bet that no entrant in a Quicken Loans Inc. contest would predict the winner of each game in the three-week-long National Collegiate Athletic Association men’s basketball tournament. [...] Two upsets -- Dayton’s defeat of Ohio State two days ago, and Mercer’s win yesterday against Duke -- wiped out 99 percent of the entries. When Memphis defeated George Washington last night, the last of the perfect brackets was busted.

In preparing the news briefs post, I found this interesting two-part story on Seeking Alpha about the corporate structure of Berkshire Hathaway. I thought it was more nuts-and-bolts and not general interest news, so I dropped it down to the bottom; if you don't care how the sausage is made, you're welcome to skip over this post.

On The Structure Of Berkshire Hathaway, Part 1 (Seeking Alpha)

Berkshire Hathaway is a unique company. You have a property-casualty insurance giant owning many businesses directly through insurance subsidiaries, including huge businesses like a Class 1 Railroad - BNSF. Yes, National Indemnity owns BNSF in entire, and many other businesses as well. I thought the pre-crisis organization chart of AIG was complex - because of the many industries that it covers, BRK is far more complex.

On The Structure Of Berkshire Hathaway, Part 2: The Harney Investment Trust (Seeking Alpha)

In Omaha, there is Farnam Street. Among value investors, it is well-known, because the small main office of Berkshire Hathaway is located there. Less well known is Harney Street, but from an insurance standpoint it is important, because Berkshire Hathaway's largest insurance subsidiary, National Indemnity, is located there. One of the major assets of National Indemnity is the Harney Investment Trust, of which National Indemnity is the sole beneficiary. [...] Now, if you read through BRK's filings to the SEC, you won't find many mentions of the Harney Investment Trust. You have to read the insurance regulatory documents to find it, and even if you do that, you will still be puzzled.

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