Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

BACK IN PERSON, BUFFETT SHARES A BIT ABOUT HOW BERKSHIRE SPENT BILLIONS

- BY JOSH FUNK

OMAHA, Neb. — Warren Buffett gave Berkshire Hathaway investors a few details Saturday about how he spent more than $50 billion earlier this year and again reassured them that the company he built will endure long after the 91-year-old billionair­e is gone.

Tens of thousands of investors packed an Omaha arena Saturday to listen to Buffett and Berkshire’s vice chairmen answer questions at Berkshire’s annual meeting that was back in person for the first time since the pandemic began, but the turnout was likely smaller than when it used to regularly attract more than 40,000.

Berkshire revealed in its earnings report Saturday morning that its mountain of cash shrank to $106 billion in the first quarter from $147 billion at the beginning of the year as Buffett invested $51 billion in stocks and repurchase­d $3.2 billion of its own shares.

Buffett told shareholde­rs that right after he told them in his annual letter on Feb. 26 that he was having trouble finding anything to buy at attractive prices, Berkshire spent more than $40 billion on stocks over the next three weeks.

Buffett didn’t reveal everything he bought but did mention several highlights, including boosting Berkshire’s stake in oil giant Chevron to $26 billion, up from $4.5 billion at the beginning of the year to make it one of the conglomera­te’s four biggest investment­s. Berkshire also spent billions buying up 14% of Occidental Petroleum’s shares in the first half of March, and added to its already massive investment in Apple stock.

Edward Jones analyst Jim Shanahan said that with the Chevron and Occidental investment­s combined Berkshire now has more than $40 billion invested in the oil sector.

Even before Saturday, it was clear Buffett was on the hunt because he agreed to buy the Alleghany insurance conglomera­te for $11.6 billion and made another multibilli­on-dollar investment in HP Inc. Buffett said Saturday that he also bought three German stocks but didn’t name them.

Buffett said Berkshire was able to take advantage of the fact that Wall Street is largely run like a “gambling parlor” with many people speculatin­g wildly on stocks.

“Occasional­ly, Berkshire gets a chance to do something, and it’s not because we’re smart. It’s because we’re sane.” Buffett said.

Both Buffett and his investing partner, Charlie Munger, reiterated their past criticisms of cryptocurr­encies like bitcoin because they don’t produce anything. Munger said cryptocurr­encies are “stupid because they’re likely to go to zero” and “evil because they undermine the Federal Reserve.”

Even though Berkshire is led by Buffett and the 98-year-old Munger, investors didn’t ask much about succession planning perhaps because Buffett said a year ago that Vice Chairman Greg Abel, who oversees all of the company’s non-insurance businesses now, will eventually replace him as CEO.

 ?? ?? People walk past a screen Saturday with a live view of Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett (left) and Vice Chairman Charlie Munger at the Berkshire Hathaway Shareholde­rs Meeting in Omaha, Nebraska.
People walk past a screen Saturday with a live view of Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett (left) and Vice Chairman Charlie Munger at the Berkshire Hathaway Shareholde­rs Meeting in Omaha, Nebraska.

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