Boston Herald

Financial gurus urge cos. to stop making earnings forecasts

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OMAHA, Neb. — Investor Warren Buffett and JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon are encouragin­g public companies to stop predicting their quarterly earnings and focus on longterm goals.

The two executives said on CNBC yesterday that companies that focus on hitting their quarterly numbers may do things that hurt them in the future, such as delaying investment­s or changing when certain gains are recorded.

“When companies get where they’re sort of living by so-called ‘making the numbers,’ they do a lot of things that really are counter to the long-term interests of the business,” Buffett said.

Dimon, who also leads the Business Roundtable group, and Buffett co-wrote an article about why they think quarterly profit forecasts are hurting the economy.

Dimon said companies might forgo investment­s they should make in their business, such as marketing, hiring or research, in order to hit short-term goals. Dimon said he could generate hundreds of millions of revenue for the bank by agreeing to some interest rate swaps.

“It can put a company in a position where management from the CEO down feels obligated to deliver earnings, and therefore may do things that they wouldn’t otherwise have done,” Dimon said.

Buffett has never provided profit forecasts and doesn’t even have an investor relations department at his Berkshire Hathaway conglomera­te. In the past, Buffett has said that he could record some of Berkshire’s unrealized investment gains at almost any time if he wanted to make a quarter or year look good, but that wouldn’t help the company succeed in the long run.

“I’ve never seen a company whose performanc­e has improved by having some forecast out there by the CEO that we’re going to earn X,” Buffett said.

Both men said they still want companies to release detailed quarterly and annual financial data, so investors can evaluate them.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTOS ?? DATA, NOT PREDICTION­S: Warren Buffett, above, and JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, left, want companies to focus on long-term goals, not quarterly earnings.
AP FILE PHOTOS DATA, NOT PREDICTION­S: Warren Buffett, above, and JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, left, want companies to focus on long-term goals, not quarterly earnings.
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