Friday, November 13, 2015

Berkshire News Briefs - 11/13/15

Dairy Queen on Main St, Dublin PA

Berkshire Hathaway and the Billion-Dollar Acquisition No One Noticed (Fool)

Well, I wouldn't say no one noticed.

Through superior capital allocation and the resulting compounding of intrinsic value, Warren Buffett's conglomerate, Berkshire Hathaway, has become so large that its subsidiaries make billion-dollar acquisitions that go nearly unnoticed. [...]

On September 30, 2015, UTLX acquired approximately 25,000 tank cars from General Electric Company's leasing unit for a total purchase price of approximately $1.0 billion. This transaction and related transactions to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2015 are expected to further enhance the full-service capabilities of UTLX's repair, maintenance and inspection network and contribute to future revenue and earnings growth.

Here's the press release from Marmon, explaining that Union Tank Car (UTLX) and Procor will add the tank cars to their fleet which they lease out.

Kraft Heinz to close 7 North American plants, cut 2,600 jobs (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

Kraft Heinz Co. told about 2,600 employees at seven North American plants on Wednesday they wouldn’t have a future with the processed food company on a mission to streamline operations and meet goals set when investors created the bulked-up business earlier this year.

The cuts mark the second round of job trimming since the company was formed this summer in the merger of Pittsburgh’s H.J. Heinz Co. and Northfield, Ill.-based Kraft Foods Group. [...]

A plant in Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley that employs 400 people making A1 sauce, Grey Poupon mustard and single-serve coffee is among those slated to close in the next 12 to 24 months.

It and five other plants being closed had been part of Kraft. Those are in Fullerton, Calif.; San Leandro, Calif.; Federalsburg, Md.; Campbell, N.Y.; and Madison, Wis. The other plant being shuttered, in St. Marys, Ontario, Canada, was a Heinz plant. [...] In addition, Kraft Heinz will move its Oscar Mayer and U.S. meats business from Madison, Wis., to Chicago, taking about 250 jobs along.

Warren Buffett's Ice Cream Chain Dairy Queen Looks to Fix Its Winter Problem (Newsmax)

With a new menu of snacks and sandwiches, the 75-year-old fixture of American summers is looking beyond its signature soft-serve and diving deeper into fast-food fare, where even giants like McDonald’s Corp. have been struggling lately.

It’s a major bet — but one that DQ’s chief executive officer, John Gainor, says is already starting to pay off. After introducing a line of hot desserts and artisan-style sandwiches, part of the company’s biggest menu overhaul in its history, same-store sales grew in September and October. [...]

The bigger test will come when winter sets in next month. The hope is new warm fudge-stuffed cookies and chicken-bacon sandwiches will get customers to think of Dairy Queen when the weather turns cold. [...]

Jordan’s Furniture to open in New Haven (Yale Daily News)

Zip lines, a 45-foot fountain and the world’s largest indoor adventure rope course will all come to New Haven in time for Christmas, bundled inside a 200,000-square-foot furniture store.

Jordan’s Furniture — a family-run business that offers shoppers entertainment options including theaters in six locations across New England — opens on 40 Sargent Dr., the former New Haven Register building, on Dec. 11, President and CEO Eliot Tatelman announced Wednesday [...]

Though Jordan’s is owned by American conglomerate holding company Berkshire Hathaway, Tatelman said his family runs the day-to-day affairs of the company. He added that Warren Buffett, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, will make an appearance at the private opening ceremony on Dec. 10.
Tianjin explosions cost Berkshire Hathaway $130 million in reinsurance losses (Canadian Underwriter)
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. reported Friday its estimated losses from the Tianjin, China explosions last August were $130 million, though the Q3 underwriting gain for the Berkshire Hathaway Primary Group increased 31% year over year. [...]

On Aug. 12, explosions in Tianjin originated from a warehouse storing 700 tons of sodium cyanide, which can form a flammable gas on contact with water, the Associated Press reported at the time. As of Sept. 11, AP reported 173 were dead and eight persons were still unaccounted for. Guy Carpenter & Company LLC said at the time that the blast damaged shipping containers and vehicles, while windows several kilometres away were blown out. [...]

Former NetJets executive joining private equity firm (Washington Post)

Four months after Jordan Hansell resigned in the midst of NetJets’ contract dispute with its pilots’ union, he took a job as president of Rockbridge Holdings.

While at NetJets, Hansell had appeared alongside Buffett in interviews to discuss the cost-cutting turnaround he led from 2011 until June. But near the end of tenure, Hansell became the focus of the union’s ire over concessions the company sought in prolonged talks.

“Ultimately, it became a little bit about me as a leader, and I thought it was probably best if I got out of the way to see if they could come to a conclusion in those arrangements,” Hansell said about why he left NetJets. [...]

Howard Buffett Is Getting His Hands Dirty (Bloomberg)

To date, the Howard G. Buffett Foundation has given away $775 million to combat global hunger—efforts include teaching sustainable farming techniques and improving access to clean water—especially in the world’s conflict zones. The Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda top his list of countries where he intends to spend a total of more than $700 million during the next decade. They’re about as far away as you can get from Omaha, Nebraska, the site of Buffett’s quiet, humble upbringing. [...]

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