Qatar Tribune

Berkshire bought $51 bn in stock as Buffett combats supply chain

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WARREN Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc dove into equity markets in the first quarter, spending more than 51 billion on stocks including a much larger stake in Chevron Corp.

Berkshire, which Buffett has run since 19 5, also said on Saturday quarterly operating profit was little changed from a year earlier, with some businesses able to fend off supply chain disruption­s. Geico, the car insurer, posted an underwriti­ng loss.

The Omaha, Nebraskaba­sed company also said it repurchase­d 3.2 billion of its own stock in the quarter, but none in the first three weeks of April.

Berkshire’s disclosure­s suggest that Buffett has finally found large new uses to dispose of Berkshire’s cash pile, which shrank more than 40 billion to about 10 billion.

The Chevron stake grew to 25.9 billion as of March 31 from just 4.5 billion three months earlier, as oil prices surged higher following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

That came on the heels of Berkshire’s purchase of well over billion of stock in Occidental Petroleum Corp, where it already had a 10 billion preferred stock stake.

Buffett has also committed 11. billion to buy insurance company Alleghany Corp, and bought 4.2 billion of HP Inc stock.

Berkshire ended March with 391 billion of stocks, more than half of the company’s 12 billion overall market value.

Other businesses include the BNSF railroad, Berkshire Hathaway Energy, and a variety of manufactur­ing and retail operations including See’s

Candies and Dairy Queen ice cream.

First-quarter operating profit edged up to .04 billion, or about 4, per Class A share, from .02 billion a year earlier.

Berkshire’s net income fell 53 to 5.4 billion, or 3, 02 per Class A share, to 11. 1 billion, or , 3 per Class A share, a year earlier.

Net results included 1.5 billion of gains and losses from stocks including Apple Inc, as well as Chevron.

An accounting rule requires Berkshire to report unrealized gains and losses with net results, and Buffett urges investors to ignore the resulting volatility.

Berkshire released results ahead of its first in-person annual shareholde­r meeting since 2019 in Omaha.

In its quarterly report, Berkshire alluded to the

Ukraine invasion, without mentioning it specifical­ly, and the spread of Omicron variants of COVID-19 in discussing the supply chain issues that many businesses now face.

“Significan­t disruption­s of supply chains and higher costs have persisted in 2022,” it said. “Further, the developmen­t of geopolitic­al conflicts in 2022 have contribute­d to disruption­s of supply chains, resulting in cost increases for commoditie­s, goods, and services in many parts of the world.”

Berkshire businesses that took hits included Precision Castparts aircraft parts, Clayton Homes mobile homes and McLane food distributi­on.

Chip shortages were also a problem, dampening consumer shipping volume at BNSF and reducing sales volume at Berkshire Hathaway Automotive car dealership­s.

Revenue neverthele­ss rose at both, with BNSF benefiting from higher fuel prices and surcharges, and car and truck sales revenue growing because vehicles are getting more expensive.

Rising used car prices and shortages of replacemen­t parts also weighed on the Geico auto insurer, which posted an underwriti­ng loss because loss claims are increasing.

Profit from Berkshire Hathaway Energy, one of Berkshire’s largest businesses and a steady earnings generator, rose , helped by higher electric utility margins and tax benefits at its MidAmerica­n Energy unit.

Berkshire’s stock has withstood recent market volatility far better than many other large U.S. stocks. Its Class A shares are up more than this year, while the Standard Poor’s 500 has fallen 13 .

 ?? ?? Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett rides on a golf cart through the exhibition hall as investors and guests arrive for the first in-person annual meeting since 2019 of Berkshire Hathaway Inc in Omaha, Nebraska.
Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett rides on a golf cart through the exhibition hall as investors and guests arrive for the first in-person annual meeting since 2019 of Berkshire Hathaway Inc in Omaha, Nebraska.

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