Waterloo Region Record

Unilever unfriendly, so Buffett walks away

- Zeke Faux

Warren Buffett is so good at deal making that bankers and salespeopl­e study his musings endlessly for clues on how he does it. But even he doesn’t always get his way. And he has advice on that, too.

On Sunday, Kraft Heinz withdrew its Buffett-backed bid for Unilever, which would’ve created the world’s No. 2 food and beverage company. It adds to a list of proposed transactio­ns involving Buffett or his partners that weren’t completed, like reported attempts to buy Yahoo’s core assets or take over Avon Products, the cosmetics maker.

The decision to back off so quickly after Unilever said it’s not interested might seem illogical. Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has roughly $80 billion in cash that’s barely earning anything. And the proposed deal would’ve invested some of that in partnershi­p with the private-equity firm 3G Capital, which has already made him a lot of money.

But it illustrate­s one of Buffett’s favourite investing principles: There’s no need to chase deals. Buying companies, he has observed, is like hitting a baseball. Don’t swing at one that’s out of your comfort zone.

“The trick in investing is just to sit there and watch pitch after pitch go by and wait for the one right in your sweet spot,” Buffett said in the HBO documentar­y “Becoming Warren Buffett.” “And if people are yelling, ‘Swing, you bum!’ ignore them.”

Unilever, which makes Lipton teas, Knorr soup and Axe deodorant, met many of the criteria for acquisitio­ns that Buffett lays out in Berkshire’s annual reports. It’s a large, simple business, with consistent earnings. But Buffett doesn’t do hostile takeovers. He says it’s not that he’s against them, he says, they’re just not his specialty.

“Certain hostile offers are justified,” Buffett wrote in his 2015 annual letter. “We, though, will leave these ‘opportunit­ies’ for others.”

The appeal of buying Unilever was clear. With 3G, co-founded by Brazilian billionair­e Jorge Paulo Lemann, Buffett financed the 2013 buyout of H.J. Heinz and then the 2015 merger with Kraft. The combined company fired workers, cut costs and boosted margins. Berkshire’s 27 per cent stake in Kraft Heinz, which cost about $9.8 billion, has more than tripled in value.

When news of the potential deal leaked on Friday, Unilever was quick to put out a strongly worded statement denying interest. The $50-per-share offer, an 18 per cent premium, “fundamenta­lly undervalue­s Unilever,” the firm said, adding that it had “no merit, either financial or strategic” and that there was no reason to talk more.

Two days later, the companies issued a joint statement with a genial tone saying that Kraft Heinz “amicably” withdrew its offer. Berkshire and 3G, which together own about half of Kraft Heinz, had decided that Unilever’s response made a friendly transactio­n impossible, people with knowledge of the situation said.

“Kraft Heinz’s interest was made public at an extremely early stage,” spokespers­on Michael Mullen said Sunday in an emailed statement. “Our intention was to proceed on a friendly basis, but it was made clear Unilever did not wish to pursue a transactio­n.”

Jeff Matthews, an author of books on Berkshire, says Buffett isn’t afraid to walk away from deals. “Buffett pays what he thinks something is worth and rarely stretches,” Matthews said.

“People tend to want to sell to him so he usually gets his price.”

The most unusual thing about Kraft Heinz’s abortive bid for Unilever is that it became public. Most of the time, no one hears about the takeovers that Buffett opts not to pursue. In 2012, Buffett said he stepped away from a potential acquisitio­n for about $22 billion because of the price. He didn’t identify the target.

“There is a steady pipeline of deals that get presented to Berkshire,” says Cathy Seifert, an analyst at CFRA Research. “They are kept quiet.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada