Friday, August 28, 2015

Berkshire News Briefs - 8/28/15

GEICO van and gecko, from GEICO's Flickr stream

This week, 90% of the news I saw about Berkshire Hathaway fit into three categories:

  1. Slower news outlets and blogs covering last week's announced purchase of Precision Castparts.
  2. The stock market dip earlier this week caused Warren Buffett to lose a lot of money.
  3. Comparisons between Berkshire Hathaway and Google... errr... Alphabet.
But there were a few interesting other news bits:

Geico to pay $6M to settle Calif. insurance bias charges (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)

Geico, the auto insurance unit of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc, agreed to pay $6 million to settle charges it discriminated based on gender, education level and occupation when quoting rates online, the California Department of Insurance said on Monday.

The settlement lasts three years and resolves claims first raised by the Consumer Federation of California against Geico, which insures more than 22 million vehicles.

Geico was accused of targeting women, people with low incomes and people not working in professional or executive jobs with deceptive and inflated rate quotations, while offering better terms to drivers it considered more desirable. [...]

DQ Bakes is Dairy Queen's largest-ever menu expansion (Minneapolis Star Tribune)

Look for a raft of Dairy Queen TV ads next month for the Turkey BLT, Triple Chocolate Brownie a la Mode and more items from the new DQ Bakes menu.

Dairy Queen says it’s the restaurant chain’s largest-ever menu boost, aimed at bolstering its appeal as a food destination, while fortifying its stronghold in sweet treats.

Dairy Queen’s franchisees nationwide are installing oven systems — a big investment — to make DQ Bakes. And the Edina-based chain is for the first time doing year-round advertising to burnish a brand that turned 75 this year. [...]

While Berkshire is publicly traded, it doesn’t include Dairy Queen’s results in its financial reports. Gainor said that Dairy Queen’s stores together do $4.1 billion in annual sales. The company’s massively popular Blizzard makes up about 36 percent of that tally.

The chain’s same-store sales growth, a key restaurant financial gauge, has been in the high single digits in the past year or so, and in the mid-single digits on average since the 2009 recession, Gainor said. [...]

Shaw to make more carpet from recycled PET (Plastics News)

Shaw Industries Group Inc. plans to spend tens of millions of dollars at a South Carolina carpet fiber plant to increase the use of fiber from recycled plastics.

The world’s largest carpet maker, based in Dalton, Ga., is planning new polyester extrusion operations that will include the use of recycled PET beverage containers. The company also will add nylon fiber capacity. [...]

The $45 million project will create more than 50 new jobs at the facility, which already employs 290, the company said. Across South Carolina, Shaw has seven plants and more than 1,500 workers. [...]

S&P: Reinsurance M&A Will Be Driven by Berkshire Hathaway Model (Insurance Journal)

“We have seen an increased interest by investors to emulate the Berkshire Hathaway Inc. business model,” S&P said in its report. “Through their investment holding companies, they are acquiring [insurer/reinsurers] with strong operating cash flows that will be upstreamed to the parent company. This buy now and pay later [insurance/reinsurance] model generates cash flows, or “float” that these [Berkshire Hathaway] copycats invest.” [...]

The Berkshire Hathaway “business model is hard to duplicate and it is becoming a crowded trade in an already saturated reinsurance market,” the ratings agency said. “We expect more similar deals to come to the market during the next 12 months, which will likely continue to put pressure on reinsurance pricing given these holding companies’ lower cost of capital relative to stand-alone, publicly traded reinsurers.”

Burger King peace offer to McDonald's: 'Let's make a McWhopper' (Business Insider)

In the name of global peace, Burger King proposed making the hybrid hamburger to its rival McDonald's on Wednesday, at least for one day, the United Nations-promoted International Day of Peace on Sept. 21.

Burger King, perpetually locked in tough competition with the larger but less profitable McDonald's, delivered the olive branch via a full-page advertisement in The New York Times, saying it is time to "call a ceasefire on these so-called burger wars." [...]

Behind the scene in the campaign is some of the financial power of Burger King's part-owner, Berkshire Hathaway head Warren Buffett.

Peace One Day is strongly backed by the charitable foundation of the tycoon's son Howard Buffett, who is a director of Berkshire Hathaway and possible successor to his father as chairman.

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