Showing posts with label Oncor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oncor. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Berkshire News Briefs - 8/30/17

Happy 87th Birthday, Warren Buffett! (August 30, 1930)

The 2nd Quarter 13-F statement is out, showing what stocks Berkshire Hathaway bought and sold last quarter. Dataroma has the best format for visualizing the changes.

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway builds stake in Synchrony Financial, trims GE position

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett built a new position in consumer finance company Synchrony Financial and boosted his holdings of Bank of New York Mellon by more than 50% in the second quarter of 2017, according to a regulatory filing Monday from Berkshire Hathaway.

Buffett's financial moves are closely watched by Wall Street. In the April-thru-June quarter, Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway also dumped the rest of its stake in General Electric (GE), selling the rest of its roughly 10.6 million share position. [...]

Buffett Nears a Milestone He Doesn't Want: $100 Billion in Cash

It’s a milestone Warren Buffett probably wishes he weren’t approaching.

Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the conglomerate he’s run for more than five decades, reported Friday that it held just shy of $100 billion in cash at the end of the second quarter.

While that figure highlights the staggering money-making ability of the businesses he’s collected over the years, it’s also a burden. Because Berkshire doesn’t pay a dividend and rarely buys back its own stock, Buffett is on the hook to find ways to invest those funds.

Power transmission lines (High Tension) at Ranasthalam

Bankrupt utility company abandons $9 billion Warren Buffett deal

Bankrupt Texas utility Energy Future Holdings will abandon a deal to sell power transmission company Oncor to Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway for $9 billion and will accept a $9.45 billion bid for Oncor by Sempra Energy instead, people familiar with the matter said.

The development represents a rare blow for Buffett, who avoids bidding wars for companies and had swooped in two months ago to buy Oncor after two previous attempts by Energy Future to sell it were blocked by Texas regulators. [...]

Buffett wouldn’t negotiate for Oncor. He lost the deal — and a $270 million termination fee

Warren Buffett got oohs and aahs when people thought he’d bagged a $270 million breakup fee after his Berkshire Hathaway Energy was outbid for Oncor by Sempra Energy, which won the company with a $9.45 billion offer. [...]

But, it seems, Berkshire didn’t get far enough along in its bid for Oncor to qualify for the fee.

Even if Berkshire could have claimed the full $270 million, some of that would have been offset by the costs — think lawyers, accountants, analysts, bankers — incurred by pursuing Oncor in the first place. [...]

Buffet's Oncor Failure Is No Failure at All

Reading headlines such as, "Buffett's Latest Dealmaking Flop," and "Buffett Encounters Rare Miss," might make some Berkshire investors wonder if the Oracle of Omaha has lost his touch. Adding insult to injury, the deal fell through too quickly for Berkshire to qualify for its $270 million breakup fee, so Buffett and Berkshire will walk away with nothing. [...]

While Berkshire shareholders (and, I'm sure, Buffett himself) may be disappointed, they should take comfort in Berkshire sticking to its principle of not getting involved in a bidding war. Bending on that principle this time could cause potential acquirees to negotiate harder in the future -- and those could be even larger deals. One wonders if 2015's $32 billion acquisition of Precision Castparts -- a deal 3.5 times bigger than Oncor -- would have happened on attractive terms had Buffett not stuck to his "one offer" policy.

As longtime Berkshire shareholder Steve Walman said in a recent Bloomberg article, "the minute he starts negotiating, he becomes everyone's favorite stalking horse and ends up as 'bid 'em up Buffett.'" Since Berkshire is built on acquisitions, cultivating a reputation for bending on price is not something Buffett wants to do. As he himself once said, "The smartest side to take in a bidding war is the losing side." [...]

Warren Buffett Likes Solar, but Not the Price Tag

Warren Buffett has called global warming a “major problem” and put his company’s money where his mouth is, spending billions to develop solar and wind power. Yet he’s no hero to some renewable energy proponents. Their beef: They say the utility arm of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., his conglomerate, has been trying to undermine an almost 40-year-old law intended in part to promote the growth of cleaner energy. Berkshire, they say, is effectively stifling solar projects to protect utilities it owns, such as PacifiCorp, based in Portland, Ore. [...]

Berkshire Hathaway Energy says it’s not so simple. The company, which owns several utilities using conventional and renewable power sources, is the second-largest owner of clean-energy assets in the U.S. But along with other utilities, it argues that the law is outdated, often raises costs for its customers, and forces utilities to buy more electricity than needed.

The law is called the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act, or Purpa. Congress enacted it after the 1970s OPEC oil embargo to draw new players into the utility-dominated business of generating power. It required some utilities to buy power from certain power providers if doing so was less expensive than building new plants themselves. The idea was to boost the then-emerging natural gas industry—and perhaps spur renewables including solar.

The act worked—too well, from the standpoint of the utilities. As solar panel prices plunged in recent years, developers deluged utilities with projects to sell them power. Utilities complain the law is producing a surplus of power. Moreover, utilities say the contracts with developers, whose terms are generally set by state utilities regulators, often lock them in for years at high prices that don’t necessarily reflect the current market. [...]

Home Capital had two PE suitors but chose Buffett's bid to secure 'greatest acceptance' from markets

Alternative mortgage lender Home Capital Group Inc. fielded acquisition offers from two different private equity firms in June — one of which raised its bid even after the Toronto company decided to take Warren Buffett’s white-knight deal, according to a proxy circular released on Friday.

The two firms were not named in the document released ahead of a special meeting of shareholders next month, but sources familiar with the process say Home Capital’s two suitors were Onex Corp. and Brookfield Business Partners. [...]

After some consideration, Home Capital’s board rejected the sweetened offer, it said.

“The Board determined that the revised acquisition proposal was inferior to the (Berkshire) Transaction and that the Transaction was in the best interests of the Corporation and continued to provide Shareholders with the best combination of transaction certainty and the potential for enhanced Shareholder value, while meeting the need for strong sponsorship and lower cost standby debt financing,” it said. [...]

Larsen & Toubro sells unit to IMC International for Rs174 crore

(Larsen & Toubro is based in Mumbai, India. Rs174 crore is equivalent to around $27.2 million USD.)

Engineering major Larsen & Toubro Ltd (L&T) on Wednesday said it has agreed to sell its entire stake in its unlisted unit L&T Cutting Tools Ltd to IMC International Metalworking Companies BV, owned by Berkshire Hathaway Inc., for Rs174 crore.

L&T Cutting Tools, incorporated in 1952, manufactures fabricated metal products. [...]

Salton Sea geothermal plant canceled by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Energy

It's been 14 years since California officials first approved the Black Rock power plant, which would have tapped a powerful geothermal reservoir along the shore of the Salton Sea and generated enough climate-friendly electricity to power about 200,000 homes. [...]

CalEnergy, which is owned by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Energy, asked the California Energy Commission earlier this summer to terminate the license for Black Rock. The company had requested and received extensions of the construction start deadline in 2007, 2011 and 2014, but this time decided to move on rather than pay a $27,678 annual compliance fee that would have been due at the end of June. [...]

"Berkshire Hathaway is big. They've got a lot of wind, they've got solar, they've got other areas. (Geothermal is) a complicated thing to do," Kaspereit said.

Warren Buffett’s Best Advice...and Why He Doesn’t Own Gold

On what he looks for in businesses: "I want a very valuable castle, with a duke in charge of it who is very honest and hardworking and able. Then I want a moat around that castle."

On what he looks for in managers: "We look for three things: intelligence, energy, and integrity. If they don’t have the latter, then you should hope they don’t have the first two either. If someone doesn’t have integrity, then you want him to be dumb and lazy."

On why he doesn’t invest in gold: "You could take all the gold that’s ever been mined, and it would fill a cube 68 feet in each direction. For what that’s worth at current gold prices, you could buy all—not some—of the farmland in the U.S. Plus, you could buy 16 Exxon Mobils, plus have $1 trillion of walking-around money. Or you could have a big cube of metal. Which would you take? Which is going to produce more value?" [...]

Billionaire Warren Buffett serenades Gold Jacket Dinner

Warren Buffett and Paul Anka did it their way.

The billionaire investor and the crooner serenaded this year’s class of Pro Football Hall of Fame enshrinees with Anka’s song, “My Way,” at the Gold Jacket Dinner Friday night.

Anka sang a few lines of the song he wrote for Frank Sinatra before pausing to bring his friend, Buffett, to the Memorial Civic Center stage. [...]

Saturday, July 15, 2017

Berkshire News Briefs - 7/15/17

Manufactured House by Clayton Homes

With Bank of America's dividend hike, Warren Buffett gets his chance at a $11 billion windfall

[...] Berkshire has warrants to buy 700 million common shares of Bank of America at $7.14 each, or about $5 billion. And Bank of America just did what Berkshire was waiting for: after passing the second of two annual stress tests by the Federal Reserve, it got the go-ahead to hike its annual dividend to 48 cents a share, or 12 cents a quarter, a 60 percent increase.

That is enough for Berkshire to consider exercising those warrants rather than waiting until just before their expiration in 2021. At Bank of America's current share price, the stake would hand Berkshire a tidy $11.7 billion profit, at least on paper. [...]

Berkshire Hathaway makes deal to win PUC approval of Oncor acquisition

Berkshire Hathaway has tentatively agreed with regulators and customer advocates to wall off Dallas-based utility Oncor from risks and debts of its parent company, a step that could help the conglomerate win approval for the $9 billion deal to acquire the largest utility in Texas and Oncor's bankrupt parent.

The move is aimed at protecting ratepayers from incurring costs not related to the distribution of electricity and ensuring that Oncor has the resources to maintain its transmission lines and the reliability of the system. Such concerns led the state Public Utility Commission to reject two earlier bids to buy Oncor and its parent, Energy Future Holdings, out of bankruptcy.

Late Thursday, Berkshire Hathaway Energy, a subsidiary of billionaire investor Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, said it would pay $9 billion to acquire Energy Future Holdings and Oncor, which provides electricity to 10 million Texans. Oncor owns and operates the grid for most of North Texas. Energy Future Holdings has been in bankruptcy for three years as it has worked to restructure its $40 billion debt.

Berkshire said it values Oncor at $11.25 billion. Another group may bid for Oncor, Bloomberg News reported Friday, citing unnamed sources. [...]

Berkshire Hathaway's Clayton Buys Oakwood Homes

Clayton Properties Group buys Oakwood Homes in a deal that closed Monday, July 3.

Oakwood is Clayton's 4th acquisition of a site-build home building operator, and the largest by far, of the deals, as well as the first one outside the Southeast region. [...]

Oakwood owns 3,000 to 4,000 lots, but has control of 18,000, which allows for continued accelerated growth with the capital access the Clayton deal will provide.

In Oakwood, and with Pat Hamill and his team continuing to run and grow the company, Clayton sees a strong cultural fit as well as a company that can help it on its strategic mission to expand its buyer universe with a price-range sweet spot between its $150,000 top price for its manufactured homes, and prevailing entry-level single-family price points, which tend to exceed $225,000. [...]

Clayton Buys Birmingham's Harris Doyle Homes

Clayton Properties Group will announce today the purchase of home building operator, Birmingham, Ala.-based Harris Doyle Homes.

The Clayton acquisition is the fifth site-build company added to the nation's largest manufactured home builder, whose market share is 50% of the category, which accounts for seven in 10 homes priced below $150,000.

Clayton's Harris Doyle announcement follows last week's closing of a deal to purchase Oakwood Homes, the Colorado-Utah home builder known as one of the most technologically progressed large enterprises. [...]

Sprint executives have engaged Warren Buffett about investment

Sprint Corp. Chairman Masayoshi Son has engaged Warren Buffett and cable mogul John Malone in discussions about participating in a deal with the wireless company, people familiar with the situation say.

The Japanese billionaire met separately with the Berkshire Hathaway Inc. boss and Mr. Malone, whose Liberty Broadband Corp. is one of Charter Communications Inc.'s biggest investors, this week at an annual gathering of CEOs in Sun Valley, Idaho, the people said.

The contours of the deal the parties are discussing are unclear. The talks are at an early stage and may not result in an agreement, the people said, but one possibility would see Berkshire put more than $10 billion into a transaction. [...]
Warren Buffett casts big shadow in banking world
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway is now the largest single shareholder of Bank of America — but that’s not the only piece of Wall Street he owns.

Buffett, 86, is also the biggest shareholder of Wells Fargo, with a little under 10 percent of the San Francisco bank, and US Bancorp, a Minneapolis bank that’s among the largest in the country.

In addition to those holdings, he’s also the seventh biggest owner of Goldman Sachs and Bank of New York Mellon — and the eighth largest shareholder of M&T Bank, a Buffalo bank with $16.5 billion in assets. [...]

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Berkshire News Briefs - 7/14/16

'Wells Fargo' -- Clarendon (VA) September 2014

Berkshire applies to boost Wells Fargo stake above 10 percent (Business Insider)

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc has applied to increase its ownership stake in Wells Fargo & Co above 10 percent, the Federal Reserve said on its website on Friday.

Boosting the stake above 10 percent could mean increased federal scrutiny over the investment. [...]

CEOs relish 'unique' benefits of being a Buffett-owned business, despite some downsides (Omaha World Herald)

Donegan, during a visit to Omaha this spring for the annual meeting of Berkshire shareholders, estimated that since he became a Berkshire CEO, he can devote 15 percent more of his days to actually running Precision Castparts.

That’s a substantial gain in perhaps the most valuable of economic commodities — time — and an example of how business life inside Berkshire is different from business life outside. [...]

Billionaire Warren Buffett doing energy pilot program in Hawaii (Pacific Business News)

Warren Buffett’s energy company has started doing a pilot program for a residential property manager in Hawaii, a spokeswoman for one of his companies confirmed to Pacific Business News this week.

Iowa-based MidAmerican Energy Services LLC, a Berkshire Hathaway Energy company which was recently registered as a new business in Hawaii, is doing an energy management pilot that uses a technology platform to help clients manage the performance of the heating, ventilation, air conditioning and electric water heater systems at their property sites.[...]

Buffett may be interested in buying Hawaiian Electric Co. if Florida-based NextEra Energy Inc.’s proposed $4.3 billion deal to purchase the Honolulu utility falls through. A decision by Hawaii regulators on the NextEra-HECO sale is expected to come soon.

Precision Castparts neighbors sue, demand company to stop polluting (Oregon Live)

Four Southeast Portland residents who say their homes have been smothered with heavy metals and other pollution by a nearby Precision Castparts manufacturing plant are asking a judge to order the parts maker to stop polluting.

In a suit filed last week, the residents also are asking a Multnomah County Circuit judge to force Precision Castparts to clean up millions of pounds of nickel, chromium, arsenic and other toxic pollutants that they say have settled upon their neighborhoods and increased their chances of cancer and other health problems -- and even put children at risk of lower IQs. [...]

Gen Re Seeks to Add Brokerage Business Through Hookup with TransRe (Insurance Journal)

General Re, the unit of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. that appointed a new chief executive officer in May, struck a deal with a rival reinsurer to help revive sales.

Alleghany Corp.’s TransRe will share revenue and risks on property/casualty reinsurance business that it underwrites through brokers and intermediaries for the next five years, the companies said Tuesday in a statement. The partnership gives TransRe, with the backing of Gen Re, the ability to take on twice as much risk for clients, the Alleghany unit said in a separate document listing facts about the deal.

Gen Re CEO Kara Raiguel is seeking new sources of premium revenue after being named to take over for Franklin “Tad” Montross. [...]

Buffett's Brooks branches out to attract gym generation (Channel NewsAsia)

Brooks, the running brand owned by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc, believes that the U.S. marathon boom has peaked and it is looking to broaden its appeal to a younger gym generation.

Founded in 1914, the Seattle-based firm was close to bankruptcy when Jim Weber took over as chief executive in 2001. Weber decided to concentrate solely on running, a strategy Buffett bought into when he acquired the brand in 2006.

Brooks is now the market leader in the U.S. specialty running shoe market with a 29 percent share. It had total sales in 2014 of US$548 million, still only a fraction of overall leader Nike's sales of US$32 billion in the year to May 31. [...]

Berkshire Hathaway Said to Be Among Leading Oncor Bidders (Bloomberg)

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. submitted a bid for Energy Future Holdings Corp.’s Oncor Electric Delivery Co., people familiar with the talks said, joining NextEra Energy Inc. as a top contender to buy Texas’ biggest transmission operator.

Energy Future is mulling offers that value Oncor at about $18 billion, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. The process is fluid and the leading bidders have switched places several times, the people said. [...]

25 Years of Learning and Laughter (Gates Notes)

I don’t remember the exact day I first met most of my friends, but with Warren Buffett I do. It was 25 years ago today: July 5, 1991.

I think the date stands out in my mind so clearly because it marked the beginning of a new and unexpected friendship for Melinda and me—one that has changed our lives for the better in every imaginable way.

Warren has helped us do two things that are impossible to overdo in one lifetime: learn more and laugh more. [...]

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Berkshire News Briefs - 10/1/14

The wrath of Warren Buffett: How Benjamin Moore almost broke his promise (Fortune)
Benjamin Moore is on its third CEO in 2 years, and a combination of strategic zigzags and the dealers’ feelings of betrayal has caused the company to fall behind its main rivals. Moore’s revenues rose a cumulative 40% between 1999 and 2013, while competitors Sherwin Williams and Valspar boosted their revenues, 104% and 196%, respectively. Moore’s revenues declined in the first half of 2014 [...] Buffett says he’s comfortable with the no-big-box stance, even if it means lower sales volume for now. He emphasizes the fact that Moore is a high-end product, what he calls “the best paint out there.” As he puts it, “They’re not the paint for everybody. We’re not in, and we won’t be in, the low-priced paint set… We will not be the top ever in market share. The mass market is going to be bigger than the high-end market. But there will always be a high-end market.”

Buy Like Buffett: A Love Story (Forbes - Video)

Buy Like Buffett: A Love Story is the journey of a young couple expressed through the lens of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. companies, because what says “I Love You” better than a box of See’s candy?

Warren Buffett’s Energy Company Says Net Metering Should Be ‘Eliminated’ (Green Tech Media)

In a strategy document written by SVP Brent Gale for a legal conference in July, Berkshire Hathaway Energy outlined its position on net metering, saying it should be scrapped in favor of a system that recognizes utility fixed-grid costs and utilizes distributed generation at times when it's needed most. [...] Berkshire Hathaway owns a number of regulated utilities, including NV Energy and PacifiCorp. NV Energy and Rocky Mountain Power, a power company run by PacifiCorp in Utah, are both lobbying to make changes to net metering and add fixed charges to the bills of customers getting credited for their solar power.

Similar Story: Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Energy wants to get rid of net metering (Utility Dive)

NetJets gets OK to begin serving China (Columbus Dispatch / AP)

NetJets said yesterday that its new joint venture soon will begin offering private charter flights in China now that regulators there have granted the company an operating certificate. NetJets, which sells partial ownership interests in business jets in the United States and Europe, has been working since 2012 to gain approval to set up operations in China.

Berkshire Expands in Company-Crime Insurance With New AIG Hire (Bloomberg)

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s specialty insurance business, created last year to expand into new niches, is adding sales of coverage to protect employers against misdeeds by their staffs. Brian O’Neill was hired from American International Group Inc. (AIG) to lead the push into the fidelity and crime insurance market, the unit of Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire said today in a statement.

AIG And Berkshire Hathaway Had Secret Non-Compete Agreement (ValueWalk)

Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and American International Group Inc had a secret non-compete agreement in place over hiring employees for a year that has now ended, according to a recent Bloomberg TV interview. The interview revealed that American International Group Inc threatened legal action in order to encourage Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. to agree not to hire additional AIG’s executives for one year. Berkshire had poached AIG executives Peter Eastwood, David Fields, Sanjay Godhwani and David Bresnahan in 2013 for what Buffett described as a “big time” expansion into business insurance coverage. [...] Benhosche didn’t indicate exactly what the executives may have done wrong, but made references to stealing intellectual property and poaching client business.

Berkshire Hathaway invests in Northwoods values (Stevens Point Journal)

The name of the company is fairly new, but the presence of a travel insurance company led by John Noel in central Wisconsin is anything but. [...] Noel, now president of BHTP, founded Noel Group in 2006 after selling Travel Guard, a travel insurance company he founded in his basement in 1985. Today, Berkshire Hathaway Travel Protection employs about 230 people in Wisconsin and Florida and is expected to grow to about 2,000 workers over the next five years. Noel said in an interview that the majority of those jobs will be located in central Wisconsin, and that he's happy to continue to provide an opportunity for people to live and work in the region.

FlightSafety’s pilot training center at Port Columbus costing $110M (Columbus Business First)

FlightSafety International’s new pilot training facility at Port Columbus International Airport clearly is a major project at 55,000 square feet and the potential to add 90,000. But new information made public by JobsOhio shows just how big the Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK.B) subsidiary’s investment is - $110.5 million. [...] FlightSafety’s $110.5 million capital investment will help it retain 137 jobs and create another 18, adding $1.2 million to its local payroll, according to JobsOhio’s report. The sister company to Columbus-based NetJets declined to breakdown those costs, but industry sources in May said its six flight simulators will run into the millions of dollars.

Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway among possible bidders for Oncor Electric (Ft. Worth Star-Telegram)

CenterPoint Energy, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway and Hunt Consolidated of Dallas are among companies that signed confidentiality agreements to explore bids for Energy Future Holdings’ Oncor electricity distributor, people familiar with the matter said. [...] Dallas-based EFH, which was taken private in a record leveraged buyout seven years ago, filed for bankruptcy in April with a plan to split off the side of the company that owns the profitable Oncor business. In July, the company — which also operates TXU Energy and Luminant — bowed to pressure from lender groups to gather bids for Oncor. [...] Oncor, which operates the largest distribution and transmission business in Texas, delivers electricity to more than 3 million homes and businesses and serves Dallas-Fort Worth. The company is prized because it’s poised to take advantage of population growth in the state and it has said it plans to invest $1 billion annually in power lines through 2018.

Redundancy costs push Fruit of the Loom further into the red (Irish Independent)

New accounts filed by Dublin registered FOL International - which is owned by the Warren Buffet controlled company Berkshire Hathaway - show that the firm recorded a pre-tax loss last year of €6.78m and this followed pre-tax losses of €23.49m in 2012. FOL International represents clothing manufacturer Fruit of the Loom's European operations. The accounts show that the loss last year occurred after restructuring costs of €6.35m. At its peak, iconic US brand Fruit of the Loom employed 3,500 people in six plants on the island of Ireland. Last year's restructuring comes almost a decade after the company announced in 2004 that it would shut its remaining two factories with the loss of 650 jobs in Donegal and Derry.

Warren Buffett's $750 million grocery bill (WSEE-12)

Warren Buffett may be feeling rotten after investing in a British grocery chain that's gone bad. His famed investment company, Berkshire Hathaway, is the third biggest Tesco shareholder, with a stake of almost 4%. Tesco is the U.K.'s leading supermarket operator. Berkshire is now nursing losses of about $750 million on the investment after the shares plunged by about 43% this year. It paid about $1.7 billion for the stake.

Similar story if you want to read more about Tesco:

The Rise and Fall of U.K. Grocer Tesco That ‘Owned The World’ (Bloomberg)

Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Vice Chairman Charles Munger recently summed up the past seven years of Tesco Plc, Britain’s biggest grocer, in a beat. “Tesco owned the world,” said Munger, whose firm last disclosed a 3.7 percent stake in the company. And “one day, it stopped working so well.”

An alternative take on Buffett and Burger King (MarketWatch)

What really made this deal come together was the financing provided by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway. He was more than eager to do so. On the surface it may be because of the generous preferred financing that was packaged together by Buffett for Burger King, $3 billion of which yields 9%. However, when I look at the deal, Buffett is providing financing at a cheaper rate than what Burger King currently borrows for long-term financing. Why would he do that, as the company is riskier after the acquisition than before? One could argue that the convertibility factor of the preferred stock has some benefit to Buffett. However, is Burger King a company which would normally fit his investment criteria?

How Warren Buffett Plans to Make You Money (Fool)

While the headline news will always be about what stocks Berkshire Hathaway buys and sells, it's critical to understand Buffett doesn't see those investments as the driving forces which will deliver shareholder returns. His first two points indicate as much, and instead he wants us to see that the things which will propel the value of Berkshire Hathaway forward into the future will come from the collection of operating businesses which now make up Berkshire itself.

ATCO lawyer argues verbal cross-examinations needed around sale of AltaLink (Calgary Sun)

Competitor ATCO continues their effort to derail the BH Energy purchase of AltaLink. I thought this story was over, but apparently not.

The impending sale of AltaLink to business mogul Warren Buffet’s energy arm should be subject to an oral cross-examination to protect Alberta consumers from runaway electricity rates, an ATCO lawyer argued Friday. [...] But SNC-Lavalin lawyer Bernette Ho said the reviews have already been fairly handled and accused ATCO of not being fully forthcoming during the process. AltaLink officials say ATCO has tried unsuccessfully to purchase their company.