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Buffett buys Berkshire shares as he bets on his own company’s prospects

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Warren Buffett is betting on brighter prospects for Berkshire Hathaway.

Berkshire spent a record $5.1 billion (Dh18.7bn) buying back its own stock in the second quarter and may have kept that higher pace going in July.

The billionair­e investor sought to seize on a bigger discount to the S&P 500 during a quarter when the conglomera­te’s operating businesses held up better than expected.

Mr Buffett said in early May that he was keeping cash high to be prepared for any direction the pandemic might turn and was not overly attracted to buybacks. But as he searched for undervalue­d assets to spend billions on, he gravitated to his own company’s shares.

“Even though we don’t know how long it’s going to be and how much it’s going to permanentl­y affect people’s behaviour, we think Berkshire Hathaway is in a really good position to survive,” said Bill

Smead, chief investment officer at Smead Capital Management, which oversees $1.5bn of assets, including Berkshire shares.

Jim Shanahan, an analyst at financial advisers Edward Jones, estimated that Berkshire repurchase­d about $2.4bn more of its own stock last month.

The company’s 10 per cent drop in operating profit was not nearly as precipitou­s as the 27 per cent decline expected by analysts at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, and results were better than a forecast from Mr Shanahan.

Earnings generated by Berkshire’s businesses exceeded $5bn for the ninth time in the last 10 quarters.

Mr Buffett piled into his company’s stock as Class A shares fell 1.7 per cent and Class B shares were down 2.4 per cent in the second quarter. He was not as bullish on broader equities as the S&P 500 rallied 20 per cent. Berkshire had its biggest net sales of stocks in more than a decade.

Berkshire’s Class A shares rose by 0.7 per cent at 9.34am in New York (5.34pm UAE time) on Monday. Its Class B shares were up 0.6 per cent.

Along with the buy-backs, purchases of Bank of America shares in recent weeks as well as a July deal for natural gas assets signal that Mr Buffett is not just waiting on the sidelines anymore. He is picking his spots: BoFA is a long-term Berkshire investment and Mr Buffett’s company is very active in the energy sector.

“All of those are really things he is comfortabl­e with,” said Paul Lountzis, who oversees investment­s including Berkshire shares as president of Lountzis Asset Management. “I don’t think he is stepping out of his comfort zone. He is still trying to be very careful and very conservati­ve.”

And with a record $146.6bn of cash on hand at the end of June, Berkshire said the company could weather the pandemic’s effects.

“Our operating business groups are preparing for reduced cash flows from reduced revenues and economic activity as a result of Covid-19,” Berkshire said on Saturday in a regulatory filing.

“We currently believe our liquidity and capital strength, which is extremely strong, to be more than adequate.”

Berkshire sold almost $13bn in shares, on a net basis, during the quarter. That included Mr Buffett’s decision to dump airline stakes, which was announced at its annual meeting in May. Another chunk of the divestment­s appears to come from Berkshire’s bets on financials. Berkshire and other investment companies are expected to report their current holdings by Friday.

Berkshire continued to feel the pain of the airline industry upheaval, even after dumping its holdings in four of the major US airlines. Mr Buffett’s company booked a $10bn impairment charge tied to its Precision Castparts business in the second quarter and said that it might take a vaccine to put that market back to more normal levels.

Operating profit slumped 10 per cent, hit by lower profits from the railroad BNSF and from Berkshire’s collection of manufactur­ing, service and retailing businesses.

BNSF reported reduced revenue across the variety of goods it carries on its rails, including agricultur­al products, consumer items, industrial cargo and coal, but the business was able to eke out more cost savings in the quarter.

Berkshire’s net earnings surged by about 87 per cent in the second quarter, driven by swings in its $207bn share portfolio. Unrealised gains in share holdings accounted for a $34.5bn gain.

Earnings generated by Berkshire’s businesses exceeded $5bn for the ninth time in the past 10 quarters

 ?? AFP ?? Berkshire Hathaway chief Warren Buffett’s search for undervalue­d assets led him to spend $5.1bn in buy-backs in the second quarter
AFP Berkshire Hathaway chief Warren Buffett’s search for undervalue­d assets led him to spend $5.1bn in buy-backs in the second quarter

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