Calgary Herald

Buffett takes profit in Suncor and moves on to airline stocks

Investor owned 30 million shares before final sales in third quarter

- GEOFFREY MORGAN Financial Post With files from Bloomberg

When legendary investor Warren Buffett first revealed holdings in Suncor Energy Inc. in 2013, shares in the oilsands major jumped.

On Tuesday, they jumped again — a day after Buffett’s regulatory filings showed he had sold his remaining 22 million shares in the company. But the latest stock movement was more a result of a collective jump in energy shares as oil prices surged the most in seven months.

Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett’s company, has been reducing its holdings in Suncor throughout the year — and selling other holdings in the energy sector over the course of the third quarter, while opting to build up large positions in U.S. airline companies, a sector he once shunned.

Berkshire owned 30 million Suncor shares at the beginning of the year before selling eight million shares in the second quarter and then liquidatin­g its remaining position in the third.

Suncor shares traded between $34.06 and $37.23 during the third quarter, which is a roughly 17 per cent premium over the company’s share price range when Buffett first started building up his stake in the oilsands producer in the second quarter of 2013.

Buffett owned Suncor when the company was aggressive­ly growing its production through acquisitio­ns, including the purchase of Canadian Oil Sands Ltd., the acquisitio­n of Murphy Oil Corp.’s stake in Syncrude Canada Ltd. and other smaller deals.

Suncor president and CEO Steve Williams said during the company’s third-quarter earnings call that the window of opportunit­y for more acquisitio­ns was closing, and the company would instead focus its capital on potential dividend hikes and share buybacks.

While Berkshire has been selling shares in Suncor, data compiled by Bloomberg shows San Franciscob­ased investment management firm Dodge & Cox bought 20 million shares in the energy company, and Capital Group Companies Inc. has recently purchased 12.7 million shares.

More than two-thirds of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg have a “buy” rating on Suncor’s shares, with an average 12-month target price of $45.45.

Suncor shares added almost four per cent Tuesday, closing up $1.56 to $41.34 in Toronto trading. The TSX energy group climbed 3.4 per cent as oil prices bounced back from multi-month lows on expectatio­ns that OPEC will agree this month to cut production to reduce a persistent glut.

In addition to selling its Suncor shares, Buffet’s company also trimmed its position in pipeline giant Kinder Morgan Inc., but retained an interest in Houstonbas­ed oil refiner and gasoline retailer Phillips 66.

Berkshire’s portfolio shifted instead toward airline stocks — a surprising move given Buffett had called airlines a “death trap for investors” as recently as 2013, when he was beginning to build up his stake in Suncor.

Berkshire purchased 21.8 million shares of American Airlines Group Inc., worth US$800 million by the end of the third quarter. It also bought 6.33 million shares in Delta Air Lines Inc., 4.53 million shares of United Continenta­l Holdings Inc., and CNBC reported that Berkshire added a position in Southwest Airlines Co. after Sept. 30. The company’s purchases in the airline industry follow a year of record profitabil­ity in 2015.

 ?? MARK RALSTON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILES ?? Warren Buffett owned Suncor shares when the company was growing through acquisitio­ns, such as the purchase of Canadian Oils Sands Ltd. Above, excavators load trucks with bitumen-laden sand at the Suncor mine near Fort McMurray.
MARK RALSTON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILES Warren Buffett owned Suncor shares when the company was growing through acquisitio­ns, such as the purchase of Canadian Oils Sands Ltd. Above, excavators load trucks with bitumen-laden sand at the Suncor mine near Fort McMurray.
 ??  ?? Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett

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