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Buffett: United made ‘terrible mistake’ with dragged passenger — CNBC

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NEW YORK: Warren Buffett said on Monday United Airlines made a “terrible mistake” in handling the fallout of a recent incident when a man was forcibly dragged off a United flight, which drew widespread outrage and sparked Congressio­nal hearings.

But the billionair­e, whose Berkshire Hathaway Inc. is the largest investor in the carrier’s parent United Continenta­l Holdings Inc, acknowledg­ed on CNBC television that flying has become less comfortabl­e for passengers packed in tighter seats and on fuller flights.

The April 9 episode caught on video showed David Dao, a doctor, being forcibly pulled off his seat on the aircraft to make way for United staff, and left him with a broken nose and concussion.

It brought wide criticism to the airline and its Chief Executive Oscar Munoz, who initially defended the carrier’s employees and was later called to testify in Congress.

“Obviously it was a terrible mistake,” Buffett said. Munoz has since “apologized many times, but your first reaction is going to get a lot of attention.”

Berkshire is also one of the largest investors in United rivals American Airlines Group Inc, Delta Air Lines Inc. and Southwest Airlines Co.

Buffett said this reflects his belief that the industry has become much more efficient, even if makes passengers grumble. He said the Dao incident would not change that.

“One of the things they found is that a very high percentage of people are very price conscious,” he said. “They may become like cattle cars, ... but a significan­t percentage would rather be treated that way and fly for X than have far more leg room (and other benefits) and fly for X plus 25 percent.”

“High load factors mean a fair amount of discomfort,” he added, referring to the percentage of seats filled. “It’s a job I don’t want, running an airline.”

Berkshire ended March with more than $96 billion of cash, equivalent­s and Treasuries, and Buffett addressed their low yields.

He said the stock market looked “dirt cheap” for anyone who believed interest rates will stay low for 10 to 20 years, and that Treasuries were a “big, big, big drag” on returns.

“It is ridiculous in my view for people to buy 30-year bonds ... at these rates, in preference to buy stocks,” he said. “Bonds are a terrible choice against stocks.... It’s just dictated by mathematic­s.”

Buffett also mounted a fresh defense of 3G Capital, its controvers­ial partner on multiple transactio­ns, saying the firm follows a “standard capitalist formula” in slashing thousands of jobs and cutting costs in the companies it buys to make them more efficient.

 ??  ?? Warren Buffett talks with a reporter before the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska last Saturday. (Reuters)
Warren Buffett talks with a reporter before the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska last Saturday. (Reuters)

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