National Post (National Edition)

U of A cheers promotion

- ABEL

Continued from FP1

Berkshire Hathaway’s A shares on the New York Stock Exchange rose 1 per cent to US$307,600.

While Buffett stopped short of singling out either Jain or Abel, the promotions seem to indicate a preference for Abel, St. Louisbased Edward Jones analyst James Shanahan said.

Shanahan said Wednesday’s announceme­nt is a bigger promotion for Abel than it is for Jain, who will continue to oversee Berkshire’s insurance business.

Abel had previously been head of Berkshire Hathaway Energy but will now be responsibl­e for all of the company’s business operations outside of its insurance division, which Jain oversees.

Abel, who joined the company in 1992, built the company’s energy division into a powerhouse that includes significan­t coal, renewables and electric transmissi­on businesses through a series of mergers that honed his skills as a deal-maker, which would come in handy as Berkshire Hathaway reportedly has a US$100 billion cash hoard that can be deployed for acquisitio­ns.

He will now oversee operations such as Berkshire’s wholly-owned BNSF Railway, which is a significan­t promotion.

Shanahan said it also seems to rule out another potential Buffett successor, BNSF president and CEO Matthew Rose, and further elevates Abel.

“He will now be responsibl­e for all these other operations, including the railroad, the financial products, retailing, manufactur­ing businesses that they own — it’s a far larger, more diverse and significan­t group of companies than insurance at this point,” Shanahan said, adding that Abel also has the advantage of being younger than Jain and has developed more of a profile with analysts, investors and the press.

Berkshire Hathaway did not respond to a request for comment.

The appointmen­t was also cheered at the University of Alberta, where business professors have closely followed Abel’s career during his rise through Berkshire.

“I’m tickled, as I always am, when one of our alumni is successful in their career,” UofA School of Business dean Joseph Doucet said, adding that Abel had “very generously given of his time” to his alma mater by giving speeches to students and other alumni at the university.

Not everybody is convinced Abel will be the eventual successor.

In recent years, responsibi­lity for some of Berkshire’s insurance businesses, like General Reinsuranc­e Corp., have been consolidat­ed under Jain.

Vancouver-based Odlum Brown analyst Benjamin Sinclair thinks it’s a bit premature to speculate on who, between Abel and Jain, is the front-runner for Buffett’s job once the 87-year-old billionair­e departs the company.

“Ajit Jain has been singled out for praise in the annual letters ” more often in recent years, Sinclair said, which itself could be a signal that Buffett is leaning toward Jain rather than Abel.

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