Business Standard

Berkshire needs 'huge’ deals to bolster results: Buffett

- TREVOR HUNNICUTT & JONATHAN STEMPEL

“OUR SMILES WILL BROADEN WHEN WE HAVE REDEPLOYED BERKSHIRE'S EXCESS FUNDS INTO MORE PRODUCTIVE ASSETS” WARREN BUFFET, CEO, Berkshire Hathaway

Warren Buffett on Saturday lamented his inability to find big companies to buy and said his goal is to make “one or more huge acquisitio­ns” of non-insurance businesses to bolster results at his conglomera­te Berkshire Hathaway.

In his annual letter to Berkshire shareholde­rs, Buffett said finding things to buy at a “sensible purchase price” has become a challenge and is a major reason Berkshire is awash with $116 billion of low-yielding cash and government bonds.

Buffett said a “purchasing frenzy” binge by deal-hungry chief executives employing cheap debt has made that task difficult. Berkshire typically pays all cash for acquisitio­ns. “Our smiles will broaden when we have redeployed Berkshire’s excess funds into more productive assets,” Buffett wrote. “Berkshire’s goal is to substantia­lly increase the earnings of its non-insurance group. For that to happen, we will need to make one or more huge acquisitio­ns.”

The letter was considerab­ly shorter than in recent years, a little over 8,000 words compared with more than 14,000 last year, and did not discuss major Berkshire stock holdings such as Apple and Wells Fargo & Co. Buffett often invests in stocks when he cannot find whole companies to buy.

It was also short on faulting excesses of Wall Street and Washington, and said nothing about Berkshire’s plan to create a healthcare company with Amazon.com and JPMorgan Chase & Co. At age 87, “he doesn’t want to make any enemies,” said Bill Smead, chief executive of Smead Capital Management in Seattle, a Berkshire investor.

Berkshire also posted a record $44.94 billion annual profit, though $29.1 billion stemmed from the slashing of the U.S. corporate tax rate, which reduced the Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomera­te’s deferred tax liabilitie­s. Book value per share, measuring assets minus liabilitie­s, rose 23 percent in 2017.

It has been more than two years since Buffett made a major purchase, the $32.1 billion takeover of aircraft parts maker Precision Castparts Corp, and his advancing age gives him less time to find more of the “elephants” he prefers.

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