Showing posts with label Berkshire Hathaway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Berkshire Hathaway. Show all posts

Monday 17 January 2011

Understanding Intrinsic Value

Intrinsic Value versus Market Price

Buffett's core investment measure is finding the intrinsic value of a company and being certain the price he pays for the company is justified by that intrinsic value.  The definition of intrinsic value is the discounted value of the cash that can be taken out of a business during its remaining life.

The key secret there is that the way to calculate intrinsic value is not precise.  It's based on a lot of assumptions, and those assumptions can be easily adjusted based on anticipated interest rate.

Buffett never gives investors the intrinsic value he has calculated for a company, but he will give details in his annual reports relating to the facts that he and Munger used to determine the intrinsic value of a company.

Buffett believes Berkshire Hathaway's book value far understates its intrinsic value because many of the businesses Berkshire Hathaway controls are worth much more than their carrying value.

Also read:

Fair Valuation of Berkshire Hathaway

Saturday 8 January 2011

Fair Valuation of Berkshire Hathaway

http://www.tilsonfunds.com/BRK.pdf
  • Cheap stock: 75-cent dollar, giving no value to recent investments and immense optionality
  • Extremely safe: huge cash and other assets provide downside protection
  • Strong earnings report should act as a near-term catalys

Saturday 6 November 2010

Buffett built Berkshire through four decades of stock picks and takeovers.

Buffett built Berkshire into a $US200 billion company through four decades of stock picks and takeovers. The billionaire, also Berkshire's chairman and biggest investor, oversees the CEOs of more than 70 units including car insurer Geico, power producer MidAmerican Energy Holdings and Dairy Queen. In February, Buffett bought Burlington Northern Santa Fe, the second-biggest US railroad by 2009 revenue, for $US27 billion.

Berkshire hired hedge-fund manager Todd Combs last month to help with investments as Buffett, the company's chief executive officer, prepares the firm for his eventual departure. Buffett, who manages stock and bond holdings as well as derivatives, hired Combs ``to handle a significant portion'' of Berkshire's investments, the company said on Oct. 25.

http://www.smh.com.au/business/world-business/berkshire-profit-buffeted-20101106-17hvf.html

Saturday 7 August 2010

The numbers speak for themselves: Keeping an eye on the holdings of Warren Buffett is a good idea.

Although the name Berkshire Hathaway is not synonymous with its chairman and CEO, Warren E. Buffett--the greatest investor of all time--it definitely should be. Despite Berkshire’s origins in the textile industry it was not until 1964, when Buffett stepped into the driver’s seat of this holding company, that Berkshire really started to post astonishing gains year in and year out.

Buffett’s investing ideals are by no means original. He is the prodigy student of Ben Graham, the father of value investing, but Buffett's educational influences did not stop there. He combined what Graham taught with the investment principles of Philip Fisher. Fisher focused on what a company did and how it made money, stressing the qualitative fundamental characteristics of companies. By combining the teachings of both Graham and Fisher, Buffett, through his Berkshire investing vehicle, has been able to post unfathomable annual returns.

In adhering to the principles of value investing, Buffett is the personification of patience and discipline, two characteristics often in short supply in money managers. His buy-and-hold strategy had proven extremely profitable over the last 40 years. Berkshire’s so-called “bread and butter” is the insurance business, and amongst other insurance companies, Berkshire wholly owns the GEICO Corporation. The reveune from this stream of business was over $1.5 billion in 2004. But do not let this mislead you; Buffet shows little hesitation to invest in other sectors of the economy, as long as he feels he is getting a good deal. View Buffett's holdings now - click here.

Some of the most important factors value investors analyze are such things as ROE, debt-to-equity and price-to-book ratios, all in an effort to determine a company’s intrinsic value. If Buffett deems a company’s intrinsic value to be higher than its current price, and its management and business operations to be sustainable, he will almost certainly invest. However, based on his staple of only about 30 stocks, it is fairly apparent that very few companies pass the Warren E. Buffett invest-ability test.

Although we can talk all about Buffett’s accolades over the past 40 years, the numbers speak for themselves. Suffice to say that keeping an eye on the holdings of Warren Buffett is a good idea. If you are not watching the best investor in the world, who are you watching?



Berkshire Hathaway
Average Annual Return
3-Year
5-Year
Common Stock (BRK.a/b)
21.9%
8.48%
9.48%
S&P 500(Benchmark)
10.4%
17.17%
0.64%



Company Name:Berkshire Hathaway
Portfolio Manager:Warren Buffett
Focus:Value
Updates:Shares Held, Change in Shares, and Position Change as of 9/30/08 - all other information 15 minutes delayed



TickerCompanyShare Value x1000Change in Value x1000Current Value x1000Shares HeldChange in Shares% of PortfolioPosition Change
COPConocoPhillips$5,710,262$5,710,262$4,438,02477,955,80077,955,8008.17%Increase
PGProcter & Gamble Co.$5,592,762($843,794)$4,816,72580,252,000(25,595,000)8.00%Decrease
KFTKraft Foods Inc.$3,930,416($3,436)$3,643,586120,012,700(18,259,800)5.62%Decrease
WFCWells Fargo & Co. Del$2,481,957($4,421,097)$1,835,18066,132,620(224,522,248)3.55%Decrease
WSCWesco Finl Corp.$2,036,002($145,429)$1,919,0895,703,08702.91%No Change
USBUS Bancorp$1,781,615($132,505)$1,148,50449,461,826(19,169,200)2.55%Decrease
JNJJohnson & Johnson$1,703,512($2,269,769)$1,474,34524,588,800(37,165,648)2.44%Decrease
MCOMoody's$1,632,000($21,120)$1,129,44048,000,00002.34%No Change
WMTWal-Mart Stores, Inc.$1,194,464$73,595$1,032,91519,944,30001.71%No Change
BUDAnheuser Busch Cos. Inc.$898,264$38,213$727,69313,845,00001.29%No Change
AXPAmerican Express Co.$893,546($4,817,626)$1,097,07225,220,034(126,390,666)1.28%Decrease
UNPUnion Pacific Corp.$633,751($38,652)$686,1188,906,00000.91%No Change
MTBM & T Bank Corporation$584,530$110,850$569,0086,549,360(165,700)0.84%Decrease
WPOWashington Post Co.$580,487($433,538)$393,6501,042,615(685,150)0.83%Decrease
NKENike Inc.$511,183$55,703$565,1287,641,00000.73%No Change
USGUSG Corporation$437,048($67,777)$205,03717,072,19200.63%No Change
COSTCostco Wholesale Corp.$341,142($27,374)$297,0615,254,00000.49%No Change
KMXCarmax Inc.$258,217($44,030)$383,63718,444,100(2,855,900)0.37%Decrease
CMCSKComcast Corp$236,640$11,520$210,72012,000,00000.34%No Change
GEGeneral Electric Co.$198,336($9,256)$127,9477,777,90000.28%No Change
IRIngersoll-Rd Company LTD.$175,674($35,281)$211,8805,636,60000.25%No Change
BACBank of America Corp.$175,000($42,217)$69,8005,000,000(4,100,000)0.25%Decrease
ETNEaton Corporation$163,411$0$230,2242,908,70000.23%No Change
UNHUnited Health Group Inc.$161,986($6,014)$213,4086,379,900(20,100)0.23%Decrease
LOWLowes Companies Inc.$153,985$8,735$131,8206,500,000(500,000)0.22%Decrease
STISun Trusts Banks Inc.$144,175$28,105$82,8393,204,60000.21%No Change
NSCNorfolk Southern Corp.$127,984$6,843$110,2971,933,00000.18%No Change
NRGNRG Energy, Inc.$123,750$0$114,9505,000,00000.18%No Change
KOCoca Cola$115,067($10,280,933)$123,4882,176,000(197,824,000)0.16%Decrease
SNYSanofi Aventis$111,253($18,474)$102,7913,384,633(519,300)0.16%Decrease
WBCWabco Holdings Inc.$95,958$0$104,8682,700,00000.14%No Change
HDHome Depot Inc.$95,793($2,126)$106,1163,700,000(481,000)0.14%Decrease
UPSUnited Parcel Service Inc.$89,882$2,029$95,3281,429,20000.13%No Change
IRMIron Mountain Inc.$82,315($7,217)$78,3363,372,20000.12%No Change
GSKGlaxoSmithKline$65,646($1,148)$55,1631,510,50000.09%No Change
GCIGannett Inc.$58,299($16,410)$45,3363,447,60000.08%No Change
TMKTorchmark Corp.$31,532($134,088)$28,083527,279(2,296,600)0.05%Decrease
CDCOComdisco Holding Co.$14,466($220)$13,0821,521,162(16,704)0.02%Decrease

http://www.coattailinvestor.com/members/default.aspx

Tuesday 27 July 2010

7 Reasons Not to Buy Berkshire Hathaway


I am a big fan of Warren Buffett. However, I believe it is more advantageous to follow Buffett’s stock picks than own Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) for the following reasons:
1. Portfolio Concentrated in US Dollars
Berkshire has a portfolio of 41 stocks. The total portfolio value is $48,025,404,085 as of May 15, 2009, according to CNBC. The top 6 holdings: The Coca-Cola Company (KO), Wells Fargo & Company (WFC), Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. (BNI), Procter & Gamble Co. (PG), American Express Company (AXP) and Kraft Foods Inc. (KFT) account for almost 70% of it.
Paul Krugman, the recipient of the 2008 Nobel Price in Economics, in his new, greatly updated edition of The Return of Depression Economics,defines that failures on the demand side of the economy – insufficient private spending to make use of the available productive capacity – have become the clear and present limitation on prosperity for a large part of the world. The quintessential economic sentence is supported to be “There is no free lunch”; it says that there are limited resources, that to have more of one thing you must accept less of another, that there is no gain without pain.
With US government’s huge stimulate package, the deflated US dollar is unavoidable. With few exceptions, such as POSCO, Sanofi-Aventis (SNY), Swiss Re and Tesco plc, majority of Berkshire’s portfolio and operations are based in US and tired to US Dollar. That’s why I rather own iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index (EEM) or Vanguard Emerging Markets Stock ETF (VWO).
2. Troubled Derivative Bets
Berkshire is big into the derivatives market, which made more complexity to the already black-box-like conglomerate’s balance sheet. The company as of March 31 had $13.85 billion of paper losses on derivatives, according to Reuters. Contracts tied to junk bond defaults mature between 2009 and 2013, and Buffett admitted they may lose money. S&P said the U.S. junk bond default rate rose to 5.42 percent from 3.96 percent at year-end.
1st quarter 2009 operating earnings, which exclude investment and derivatives gains and losses, came in at $1.705 billion. In other words, Berkshire’s paper loss in derivatives would wipe out 2 years operating earnings.
3. Buy What You Know
Berkshire is an insurance-focused conglomerate and owns more than 60 subsidiaries including insurance, clothing, furniture, candy, restaurants, natural gas and corporate jet firms. As you can see from the chart I compiled, from its 1st quarter 2009 report, 34% of revenue was from insurance.
I never understand insurance companies’ financial statements. The only thing I know about insurance is about projections, assumptions, probabilities and promises for future delivery, typically at a far-off date. Most of the products are highly intangible. Every year when I read Warren Buffett's annual letters, I always skipped the insurance portion, otherwise I would have had to reach for some aspirin.
4. Low Margins
Buffett said many of Berkshire's nearly 80 businesses were hurt by the recession and lower consumer spending, including housing-related units that make bricks, insulation and paint. Even if the rescue of the financial system starts to bring credit markets back to life, we might still face a global slump that’s gathering momentum. The only bright spots coming in are its utilities and insurance companies, which include Geico and General Reinsurance.
The 2nd biggest operation, McLane, is marked by high sales volume and very low profit margins and has been subject to increased price competition in recent years. The gross margin rate was 6.95% in 2009. Approximately one-third of McLane’s annual revenues are from Wal-Mart. A curtailment of purchasing by Wal-Mart (WMT) could have a material adverse impact on the earnings of McLane.
Out of Berkshire's total $260 billion assets, only $48 billion is in equity. In other words, majority continue earnings are still need to come from operational business.
5. Downgrade By Moody's
Two credit rating agencies took away Berkshire's "triple-A" ratings in 2009, including Moody's Investors Service. The global credit crisis might be temporary, but the company could face significant pressure if it persists.
According to CFA ( source: cfapubs.org), between 1980 and 2000, banking sector accounted for 4% of the Japan Nikkei in 1980, peaked at 22%, and then came back to about 4% again. If the same happens to US, then we could still have a long way to go.
6. No Dividend
Berkshire didn’t pay any dividend.
7. “Warren Buffett Premium”
The average Price/Book for Property & Casualty Insurance company is 1.05, while Berkshire’s is 1.35. If anything happens Buffett, the stock might drop 30% instantly. Even something happens to Charlie Munger…
On Jan 2, 2008, Berkshire (BRK.A)’s price was 139,300. By the year-end on Dec 31, 2008, it was 96,600: it dropped over 30%. Though it still performed better than S&P, it was certainly not the loss of 9.6% reported by the Main Street media, which looked at book value only. We need to compare apples to apples.
Last Friday, May 15, 2009, the Wall Street Journal reported that the Treasury department will make $22 billion federal bailout funds available to a number of life insurers. This will certainly help insurance industry as a whole. In addition, as Donald Guloien, new President and Chief Executive Officer of Manulife Financial Corporation (MFC) stated in his memo to Manulife employees on May 4, 2009, “We would expect that global financial regulators may require higher levels of capital, and this will favor the stronger and more conservative companies.” People are looking for reliable, strong and trustworthy companies, and there will be a “flight to quality” that will favor Berkshire as well. However, you can always buy ETFs such as Financial Select Sector SPDR (XLF), if you like the financial sector.
By not owning Berkshire, you are not benefiting from deals and terms that are only available to it, such as Harley Davidson's (HOG) 15% and Tiffany's (TIF) 10% debt offerings, GE and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s 10% preferred stock, etc. To make that up, you might check into iShares S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index (PFF) that might give you something in comfort.