USA TODAY US Edition

Buffett says he was ‘dead wrong’ on housing market

Annual letter brings up plans for successor, too

- By Josh Fund

OMAHA — Billionair­e investor Warren Buffett says he was “dead wrong” with a prediction that the U.S. housing market would begin to recover by now, but he remains optimistic about the nation’s economy.

In his annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholde­rs, Buffett said he is sure housing will recover eventually and help bring down the nation’s unemployme­nt rate. But he did not predict when that will happen.

Investors eagerly await the letter from Buffett, 81, called the Oracle of Omaha, who built a $44 billion fortune by following a steadfast, no-nonsense investing strategy.

Buffett said housing “remains in a depression of its own,” but he predicted, in typical plainspoke­n style, that the housing market will come back because some human factors can’t be denied. “People may postpone hitching up during uncertain times, but eventually hormones take over,” he wrote. “And while ‘doubling-up’ may be the initial reaction of some during a recession, living with in-laws can quickly lose its allure.”

Berkshire Hathaway owns more than 80 subsidiari­es, including the Geico insurance company and See’s Candy, and five of them rely heavily on constructi­on activity. Those businesses, which include Acme Brick, Clayton Homes and Shaw carpet, generated pretax profit of $513 million last year. That’s well off their $1.8 billion contributi­on in 2006.

Berkshire’s insurance companies took $1.7 billion in catastroph­e losses last year, including from the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Berkshire reported only $154 million in underwriti­ng profit, down from $1.3 billion the previous year.

But several of its larger noninsuran­ce businesses — Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad, Midamerica­n Energy, Marmon Group, Lubrizol and Iscar — generated record earnings in 2011.

That helped Berkshire generate $10.3 billion in net income, or $6,215 a class A share, last year, down from nearly $13 billion, or $7,928, in 2010.

Buffett reassured Berkshire shareholde­rs that the company has someone in mind to replace him but did not name the successor. He emphasized that he has no plans to leave.

Glenn Tongue, a managing partner at T2 Partners investment firm, said he was struck by the fact that Buffett chose to deal with the succession topic as one of the first items in his letter. “I think this was a forceful and stronger attempt to put this issue to bed,” Tongue said.

Buffett said the Berkshire board is enthusiast­ic about the executive it has picked and said there are two good back-up candidates. “When a transfer of responsibi­lity is required, it will be seamless, and Berkshire’s prospects will remain bright,” Buffett said.

 ?? By Nati Harnik, AP ?? Oracle of Omaha: Billionair­e investor Warren Buffett’s annual letter to shareholde­rs is highly anticipate­d.
By Nati Harnik, AP Oracle of Omaha: Billionair­e investor Warren Buffett’s annual letter to shareholde­rs is highly anticipate­d.

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