Author Topic: Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway makes big...  (Read 524 times)

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Offline ironglow

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Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway makes big...
« on: May 05, 2012, 12:58:30 AM »
  Warren Buffet's (Buffet Rule) Berkshire Hathaway made big bucks this past year.  Here, they hold a party to celebrate this 1% windfall.
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    Cathy Baron Tamraz, (C) president and chief executive officer of Business Wire, and Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett (Center-Right) ring the opening bell with guests at the New York Stock Exchange September 30, 2011.
Credit: Reuters/Brendan McDermid   By Ben Berkowitz
OMAHA, Nebraska | Fri May 4, 2012 6:54pm EDT  OMAHA, Nebraska (Reuters) - Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway more than doubled its profit in the first quarter, as the conglomerate's insurance business was spared from the devastating natural disaster losses that hit the company a year earlier. The company also benefited from much higher gains in its derivatives portfolio, offset in part by a substantial write-down on one of its bond holdings. The results come one day before the conglomerate's annual shareholder meeting, a festival-like event dubbed the "Woodstock for Capitalism" that draws nearly 40,000 investors to Omaha. Even before the results came out, though, one Berkshire investor said his fellow shareholders were much more likely to focus on succession issues for the 81-year-old Buffett than other questions like the quarterly report. "If you boil it down, most people say: 'who's the replacement going to be,'" said Harvey Eisen, chairman of Bedford Oak Advisors. Net income attributable to Berkshire shareholders more than doubled to $3.25 billion, or $1,966 per share, from $1.51 billion, or $917 per share, last year. First-quarter operating profit rose to $2.67 billion, or $1,615 per Class A share. Analysts expected operating profit of $1,780 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Revenue rose 13 percent to $38.15 billion, and Berkshire ended the quarter with $37.83 billion of cash and equivalents, up around $500 million from the beginning of the year. Berkshire posted a $54 million insurance underwriting profit in the quarter. That compared with a year-earlier $821 million loss, when results were hurt by costs for earthquakes in Japan and New Zealand and floods and a cyclone in Australia. Within the insurance group, underwriting gains at auto insurer GEICO fell sharply, in large part on accounting changes related to how insurers recognize the cost of acquiring customers. Losses narrowed in the reinsurance business as well. Berkshire said profit from railroad operations, including the former Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp, rose 15 percent to $701 million. Meanwhile, profit from manufacturing, service and retailing operations rose 53 percent to $854 million. That in part reflected Berkshire's $9 billion acquisition of the chemical company Lubrizol Corp. Berkshire also saw a nearly four-fold increase in the gains on its portfolio of derivatives, to $650 million. Those derivatives are largely contracts related to stock market performance, a bet Buffett has said would pay off handsomely over time despite his usual disdain for such instruments. BOND LOSSES Results were hurt, though, by a $337 million loss on Texas Competitive Electric Holdings bonds, according to Berkshire's quarterly report. The bonds issued by the former TXU were "a big mistake," Buffett told Berkshire shareholders in his annual letter earlier this year. Berkshire has roughly 80 operating units, including many consumer-oriented businesses that sell such things as apparel, furniture, ice cream and paint. Earlier Friday, senior Berkshire executives said they were seeing signs of slow but steady economic growth as consumers increase spending. The company's Class A shares closed Friday up $150 at $121,950, and its Class B shares closed down 32 cents at $80.94. Berkshire released quarterly results after U.S. markets closed. The company also noted that it did not buy back any stock during the first quarter. Earlier Friday, noted investor Mario Gabelli, a prominent figure at the Berkshire annual meeting, said he thought the shares were at least 50 percent undervalued. A number of analysts have also said Berkshire shares were trading near historical lows. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York and Ben Berkowitz in Omaha; Editing by Bernard Orr)
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     There was no mention of Warren Buffett travelling to Washington, bearing a check for 35% of those profits...perhaps he will do that next week..
 
  Can Berkshire Hathaway expect the OWS crowd to be setting up their tents and drug stores in the lobby of BH offices?
 
  I don't suppose any of that windfall money came from our pockets, through the "stimulus money" boondoggle...obviously, Buffet probably wouldn't stoop to profit from such ill-spent tax monies.
If you don't want the truth, don't ask me.  If you want something sugar coated...go eat a donut !  (anon)

Offline BUGEYE

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Re: Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway makes big...
« Reply #1 on: May 05, 2012, 01:51:03 AM »
LOL.  I doubt if old Warren gives up anything..... this shows that "at this time" insurance contracts are a good investment.  may not last though.

If I had to guess, I'd guess that Warrens mind is coming and going...
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Offline Empty Quiver

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Re: Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway makes big...
« Reply #2 on: May 06, 2012, 07:05:43 AM »
Without nitpicking too much about your analysis TMZ.


The world is in a financial meltdown, reasons be damned, it is what it is.  Whether or not you caused it or have any control over, it business is tough right now. If as the CEO of a corporation you have been weathering this storm you deserve some kind of recognition. A hearty handshake and a pat on the back are well and good, but it is not what makes a multi millionaire CEO get outta the sack in the morning.


G. E., Ford, Berkshire Hathaway, G. M., Dupont, Monsanto, you pick the conglomerate. CEO pay is a pittance to what it would cost for that company to go tits up. How much would it have cost the average Kodak employee to have hired a CEO with solutions and vision? It is admirable that they did not just throw more money at the problem, they did not seek out a new leader. Nope they got behind the bosses ideas and rode them till they arrived at the bottom of the cliff. Would a greater salary gotten better ideas? Who knows, but had the ideas worked would it not be prudent to keep the master happy by lining his pockets?


Any thoughts on this line of thinking ?
**Concealed Carry...Because when seconds count help is only minutes away**

Offline SwampThing762

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Re: Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway makes big...
« Reply #3 on: May 06, 2012, 05:30:13 PM »
All the major Corps are doing quite well...record profits, low taxes, record CEO pay...all this in an environmnet of unemployment, foreclosures,
perpetual war, deregulation, and RECESSION....
.
I guess RECESSION is good for some rarified entities...but not so good for the 99%. Oh well, its the 99% and union thug's fault.... ::)
.
..TM7

Record profits?  TM7, your post neglects to account that the record profits stem from record printed dollars in circulation, and thus is devalued, meaning it takes much more devalued dollars for that same profit.     

Also, the union thugs have nothing to do with this thread.   Another conspiracy theory, perhaps?

BTW,  I AM the 99%.

ST762
We learned the true nature of Islam on 11 Sept 2001.

Show your appreciation for Islam....eat more bacon.

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Offline ironglow

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Re: Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway makes big...
« Reply #4 on: May 07, 2012, 12:05:06 AM »
  Funny, we haven't heard from the OWS clowns...screaming for Warren Buffett to make good on his word..
If you don't want the truth, don't ask me.  If you want something sugar coated...go eat a donut !  (anon)

Offline mannyrock

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Re: Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway makes big...
« Reply #5 on: May 07, 2012, 04:07:30 AM »
 
  Well, I guess this board has gone Communist?
 
  Berkshire Hathaway is a private company, that invests money by researching and buying publicly traded and privately issued stock.  It gets the money to invest from private investors, who put their money into the company to risk it on the stock market.  It takes huge investment risks with the money, often losing substantial funds when the stock it buys goes south.
 
   It doesn't ask for or take government bailouts or government guarantees.  It is private people risking their money in the market and in private ventures.  When they lose it, they actually suffer the loss and take it like a man.  They don't go crying to the government.
 
   This is the absolute essence of the capitalist system.
 
   And you guys are ticked off that they made a profit this year?  (By the way, either last year or the year before, they lost a ton of money.)
 
  Each and every one of you have the same opportunity to research public and private stocks, and risk your money by investing in them. But no, you are too chicken.   Instead, you sit and act like its a crime to make money risking your money in the market.  Why don't you write a letter to Obama, and ask him to take their profits away? 
 
 Mannyrock
 
 
 
  And you guys are ticked off because
 

Offline Empty Quiver

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Re: Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway makes big...
« Reply #6 on: May 08, 2012, 10:47:09 AM »

.
.
..TM7

 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
EQ...just curious.  Aside from the robber baron era,, American CEOs have always operated at about 5 to 200 times the average base workers pay, and this during the great industrial build up and creation of the middle class.  At what point do you think CEO pay becomes obscene...200 times, 1000 times, or 5000 times woker pay, or not at all.
 
Secondly, if you believe in maximized CEO pay and value, do you believe their assets should be the first on the line when a company falters?
.
.
.TM7
It is a conundrum. Do you as a shareholder allow your company to fail, do you take a chance on an unproven leader, or do you bow to the extortion of a proven leader? I'm not so smart as to understand high finance. It seems to me that the major amount of payout for the tycoon class comes as stock dividends. Hopefully those stocks rose because the company was legitimately worth it not through stock price manipulation.


I liken it to Major League sports stars. Now who deserves the scorn? The player for asking, whining, demanding, a huge salary, or the owners for caving?  In the end it is simple supply and demand economics. Too much money is chasing after to little product in this case it is management talent.


I believe there is nothing short of my own drive keeping me from being on the top of this heap. I believe it should stay that way. Fair would be we all take a bullet in the gourd at the age of 30, fair ain't always fair is it.
**Concealed Carry...Because when seconds count help is only minutes away**