Business Standard

BUFFETT’S BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY POSTS NEARLY $50 BILLION LOSS

- JONATHAN STEMPEL

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway is being hit hard by the coronaviru­s pandemic, posting a record quarterly net loss of nearly $50 billion on Saturday and saying performanc­e is suffering in several major operating businesses.

Berkshire said most of its more than 90 businesses have faced “relatively minor to severe” negative effects from Covid-19, with revenue slowing considerab­ly in April even at businesses deemed “essential”.

The BNSF railroad saw shipping volumes fall, Geico set aside money for car insurance premiums it doesn’t expect to collect, and some businesses cut wages and furloughed workers. Retailers such as See’s Candies and the Nebraska Furniture Mart closed stores.

Buffett also allowed Berkshire’s cash stake to rise to a record $137.3 billion from $128 billion at the end of 2019. That reflected the 89-year-old billionair­e’s inability to make large, “elephant” size acquisitio­ns, now in its fifth year, and caution in buying more stocks. Berkshire repurchase­d $1.7 billion of its own stock.

Berkshire’s first-quarter net loss totalled $49.75 billion, or $30,653 per Class A share, reflecting $54.52 billion of losses from investment­s, mainly common stocks. A year earlier, net earnings totalled $21.66 billion, or $13,209 per share. An accounting rule requires Berkshire to report unrealised stock losses and gains with earnings. This causes huge swings in Berkshire’s net results that Buffett considers meaningles­s.

Quarterly operating profit, which Buffett considers a better performanc­e measure, rose six per cent to $5.87 billion, or about $3,624 per Class A share, from $5.56 billion, or about $3,388 per share.

Year-earlier results reflected a charge on investment­s linked to what prosecutor­s called a fraud at a solar company.

Operating profit at Berkshire’s business units fell three per cent, with lower profit from BNSF, utilities and energy, and manufactur­ing, service and retailing businesses.

Vice Chairman Charlie Munger told The Wall Street Journal last month that a few small Berkshire businesses might close altogether.

The earnings come ahead of Berkshire’s annual meeting presentati­on. Buffett and Berkshire Vice Chairman Greg Abel will address shareholde­rs on Saturday.

Investors have been disappoint­ed with Berkshire, whose stock price lagged the Standard & Poor’s 500 by more than 20 percentage points in 2019, including dividends.

While Buffett has said Berkshire’s own stock would outperform in down markets, it hasn’t this year.

Through Friday, its shares were down 19 per cent in 2020, compared with a 12 per cent drop in the S&P 500. US gross domestic product fell at a 4.8 per cent annualised rate in the first quarter, the Department of Commerce said this week in its advance estimate of economic growth.

Many economists expect a large double-digit percentage drop in GDP the second quarter. Nationwide jobless claims have since March 21 totalled about 30.3 million, or 18 per cent of the workforce, a level not seen since the Great Depression.

The S&P 500 slid 20 per cent in the first quarter, but many of Berkshire’s common stock investment­s fared worse, including American Express, Bank of America, Wells Fargo and four airlines — American, Delta, Southwest and United.

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