Monday, August 22, 2016

Berkshire News Briefs - 8/22/16

good luck, you know who you are, on making it you know where

Berkshire Hathaway's quarterly 13F statement was filed with the SEC last week, detailing the company's investment holdings. Visit Dataroma for a quick summary table of changes from last quarter.

Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Increases Bet on Apple (WSJ / MoneyBeat)

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway sharply increased its bet on Apple Inc. during the second quarter, bringing its stake in the iPhone maker to roughly $1.5 billion. [...]

Berkshire reduced its holdings in discount retailer Wal-Mart Stores by 27% and cut its stake in farm machinery maker Deere & Co. by 5.7%. The firm cut its stake in Suncor Energy, Canada’s largest crude oil producer by 26%.

Berkshire continued to build its stake in refiner Phillips 66, increasing its stake by 4.3% but left its stake in pipeline giant Kinder Morgan unchanged. [...]

Brooks Running is leading the charge against a controversial Olympics rule

Who’s behind the [@rule40 Twitter] account? The Berkshire Hathaway-owned sneaker company Brooks Running, based in Seattle, which sponsors 12 athletes competing at this year’s Olympics. Brooks CEO Jim Weber says Rule 40 must change.

In addition to the @rule40 Twitter handle, Brooks owns the rule40.com domain name, and is using both to wage a PR war against the USOC.

Under Rule 40 guidelines, non-official sponsors cannot refer to the Olympics in any marketing, advertising, or social media during a blackout period that begins nine days before the opening ceremony and ends three days after the closing ceremony. [...]

Berkshire Hathaway: The Lamest $1.2 Billion Haul (Fool)

Berkshire Hathaway earned about $1.2 billion in pre-tax income from the investment portfolios of its many insurance companies in the second quarter -- this represents a combination of interest and dividend income on investment assets of nearly $185 billion.

In dollars and cents, a billion dollars is something marvelous. Relative to Berkshire Hathway's massive investment portfolio, however, it's mere pocket change, and symbolic of a problem that plagues financial companies across the spectrum: Interest rates are simply too low to really move the needle. [...]

Warren Buffett Just Unloaded $195 Million Worth of These 'Weapons of Mass Destruction' (Fortune)

Warren Buffett, the famed CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, paid $195 million in June in order to terminate Berkshire’s final contract in which Buffett insurance and investing conglomerate sold protection against losses on bonds, according to a regulatory filing by the company Friday. That contract was initiated in 2008, and tied to municipal debt, with maturities ranging from 2019 to 2054.

The terminated contract gave Berkshire pre-tax earnings of $103 million in the second quarter and $89 million in the first six months of 2016. [...]

The Playbook Interview: Warren Buffett (Politico)

“There’s two things that make it [the economy] better: innovation and productivity, which are interlocked in certain ways. When you think of it, all of the products that you and I are using to make our lives better weren’t even around 30 years ago. It’s pretty extraordinary. And if you go back 100 years, every time I get in the dental chair, I think to myself, if this was 100 years ago, they’d be pouring whiskey down me and holding my arms. Now, I sit there and daydream about other stuff. So anything that improves experiences – what people want to do with the 24 hours in the day that they have. And secondly, what really counts is gains in productivity. If you go back 100 years … the farms around where I live here were producing 30 bushels of corn per acre. Now they’re producing 160 bushels of corn per acre. Well, that’s dramatic, and of course they take less people to do it as well, so, just up and down the line, you look at how many man-hours it takes to produce an auto now compared to 50 years ago. So, productivity – that’s the way the human race improves.” [...]

Berkshire Hathaway group firm Mouser to invest ₹90 crore in India over three years (Hindu Business Line)

Mouser Electronics, a subsidiary of TTI Inc and part of Warren Buffett’s Bershire Hathaway, is expected to invest ₹90 crore to ramp up its India presence.

Speaking to BusinessLine during the company’s opening of a new customer service and back office support centre on MG Road here, Mark Burr-Lonnon, Mouser’s Senior Vice-President of APAC and EMEA, said: “The India sales trend looks good as customer traction is up 45 per cent. A major part of that demand comes from Bengaluru, followed by Hyderabad, Delhi and Pune. Online sales from Indian customers which was 57 per cent in 2015 has grown to 62 per cent in January-July 2016. Therefore, we have decided to ramp up our India team, to increase the levels of local support we offer to customers here.” [...]

Berkshire Hathaway Travel Protection Teams Up With TripInsuranceZone (Digital Journal)

Berkshire Hathaway Travel Protection (BHTP) is now teaming up with TripInsuranceZone to bring BHTP’s suite of travel insurance products to the online travel insurance comparison website TripInsuranceZone.com. [...]

Using TripInsuranceZone’s unique comparison engine, travelers can research, quote, compare and purchase travel insurance from most major travel insurance providers in the United States. [...]

How Risky Is Berkshire Hathaway Inc.? (Fool)

No stock is without risk, and Berkshire certainly isn't an exception. Here are just a couple of the reasons Berkshire's share price could go down. The stock market could drop significantly. [...] Interest rates could stay low. [...]

Either of these things could cause Berkshire's stock to plunge in the short term, and there are plenty of other economic and company-specific issues that could hurt Berkshire. It has happened before: Berkshire lost nearly half of its share price in 1974 and more recently took a 32% haircut in 2008. So, if you buy Berkshire, do it for the long term. Thanks to the incredible diversity of Berkshire's revenue stream, any weakness should be temporary. [...]

Richard Holland, who helped launch Buffett-Munger partnership, dies at 95 (Washington Post)

Richard Holland, the Nebraska advertising executive who helped link up one of the great partnerships in business history — between Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett and his deputy, Charles Munger — died Aug. 9 at his home in Omaha. He was 95. [...]

As one of Buffett’s earliest investors, Mr. Holland reaped gains that made him and his wife, Mary, among Omaha’s wealthiest people and most generous philanthropists. Although their net worth wasn’t public, their private charitable foundation reported assets of $158.8 million in 2014. [...]

Wanted: Help handing out Warren Buffett’s fortune (Boston Globe)

Each year, Buffett, the billionaire investor, receives thousands of letters from people asking whether he would pay their mortgages, medical bills, credit card debt, and more. Through a unique sibling partnership, Buffett forwards the letters to his older sister, Doris, who decides which ones to fund. Over the past decade, at least 22,000 letters have crossed their collective desks, and they have given away more than $12 million.

And now, in what might be Boston’s most unusual volunteer opportunity, Doris Buffett — who moved to the city last fall — is looking for people in Greater Boston to help her read a backlog of those letters, as well as new batches that continually arrive. [...]

Friday, August 5, 2016

Berkshire News Briefs - 8/5/16

Wells Fargo Center Sign

Berkshire Said to Draw Fed Scrutiny Over Wells Fargo Investment (Bloomberg)

Berkshire has asked the Fed for approval to maintain and even increase its 10 percent stake in Wells Fargo, saying in a June application that it may seek to “purchase additional shares.” If the Fed denies the request, Berkshire might have to dial back the holding of about $24 billion that Buffett described in a recent shareholder meeting as “our largest marketable security."

Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire probably wouldn’t have to sell anything if it can persuade regulators that its stake in AmEx doesn’t mean it exerts any control over the credit-card company. Berkshire has successfully made the argument in the past to banking agencies. [...]

Warren Buffett’s Short-Term Hit and Run Transactions (Insider Monkey)

The examples in the article are Express Scripts (ESRX), Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), Intel (INTC), CVS Health (CVS), and Exxon Mobil (XOM).

Warren Buffett is known for his highly successful value investing approach. [...] However, over the past few years, his fund, Berkshire Hathaway, has disclosed some short or medium-term stakes, positions it did not maintain for more than a year.

In many occasions, these stocks were picked by one of Buffett’s hedge fund managers, Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, and not by himself. [...] As readers will notice, it seems like Combs and Weschler’s strategy is all about profit taking, acquiring stocks at low prices and selling when they surge, instead of keeping them for long periods of time. [...]

Warren Buffett Made a Big Bet On an 'In-Your-Face' CEO (Bloomberg)

[Precision Castparts CEO Mark] Donegan, 60, a former Villanova University football player who devoted most of his career to Precision, shares many qualities with other Berkshire managers: He’s a low-profile CEO with a great track record, relentless about staying ahead of the competition. During the 13 years he led Precision as a publicly traded company, its stock climbed 20-fold, annual revenue quadrupled to $10 billion and he bought dozens of businesses, consolidating a position as a key supplier to Boeing Co., Airbus Group SE and General Electric Co. It helped him attain a cult status among investors. [...]

Behind the numbers, though, something more brutal is going on. For years, Donegan has traveled the globe, sometimes bullying staff during quarterly reviews at Precision plants. Bloomberg News spoke with 15 current and former employees—some at the most senior levels of the organization—as well as half a dozen people with knowledge of how the company is run. Those who know the CEO best describe a manager who’s highly effective but at times strains basic decency. [...]

Book Review: Inside The Investments Of Warren Buffett (Investing-dot-com)

I have no idea how many books have been written about Warren Buffett, but sometimes I have the feeling that he is giving George Washington a run for his money. The latest addition to the literature is Yefei Lu’s "Inside the Investments of Warren Buffett: Twenty Cases" (Columbia Business School Publishing, 2016).

Lu examines 20 investments Buffett made over the course of his career that, in Lu’s opinion, “had the largest material impact on his trajectory.” He puts himself in the shoes of imaginary investment analysts “studying the businesses at the same time … Buffett did.” Why would an ordinary analyst either recommend or, as would often have been the case, argue against investing in a company to which Buffett eventually opted to commit funds? [...]

The DQ® System Announces Plans to Develop 24 Locations in Five Caribbean Countries in the Next Five Years (Business Wire)

If you read these News Brief posts the whole way to the bottom every time, you know that I have a thing for these recurring, formulaic Dairy Queen press releases. They mean almost nothing to Berkshire Hathaway's bottom line in the grand scheme of things, but I love to see DQ expanding to all the corners of the globe anyway.

Plans call for the development of DQ Grill & Chill® locations in Trinidad and Tobago, DQ Grill & Chill and DQ Treat locations in Jamaica, and DQ Treat locations in St. Lucia, Grenada and St. Maarten. Currently, there are eight DQ Treat locations in Trinidad, the first of which opened in 2012. [...]

Royal Treats Ltd. signed the multi-unit, multi-country agreement with American Dairy Queen Corporation (ADQ) to develop the new locations. They currently operate eight DQ Treat locations throughout Trinidad and Tobago [...] With their new agreement, they will introduce DQ Grill & Chill locations to fans in Trinidad and Jamaica.

Berkshire Hathaway 2nd Quarter Earnings

Berkshire Hathaway released its 2nd Quarter earnings this afternoon. Click for the full earnings statement.

Berkshire profit up 25 percent as insurance helps, BNSF weighs (CNBC)

Berkshire Hathaway on Friday said second-quarter profit rose 25 percent, helped by improved results from insurance underwriting and investments and the purchase of Precision Castparts, Warren Buffett's largest-ever acquisition.

But operating results fell short of analyst forecasts, as depressed oil prices and coal demand weighed on volume at the conglomerate's BNSF railroad unit.

Net income for Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire rose to $5 billion, or $3,042 per Class A share, from $4.01 billion, or $2,442, a year earlier.

Operating profit rose 18 percent to $4.61 billion, or $2,803 per Class A share, from $3.89 billion, or $2,367. [...]

Revenue rose 6 percent to $54.46 billion. Book value per share, Buffett's preferred measure of growth, rose 1.7 percent from the end of March to $160,009.

That makes the current Price/Book Value 1.36 based on today's closing price. The threshold for stock buybacks is below a P/BV of 1.2.