Author: Darren Rickard

  • SHARE INVESTOR BLOG: Cadbury aquisition a good deal for Kraft

    I am still following the Kraft Inc [KFT.NYSE] acquisition of Cadbury PLC [CBRY.LSE] . A conditional deal for sale of Cadbury to Kraft has been approved by Cadbury management but it still needs the approval of both Kraft and Cadbury shareholders.

    Nearly 10% shareholder of Kraft, Warren Buffett, publicly came out against a deal on Jan 5 and today on CNBC indicated that he would have voted against the acquisition.

    The latest comment, if it isn’t just being made to blow off some steam, appears to suggest that Kraft is paying too much for the maker of Dairy Milk, Jaffas, Chrunchie , Moro and other well known brands but this is where Buffett and myself part company.

    Cadbury is a global brand and has dominance in the majority of the markets that it operates in, New Zealand is no exception.

    Because of its strong brand position globally, its potential to grow in all its markets – especially in Asia – and the largely untapped market for Cadbury in the United States -where Cadbury is a minor player – the price to be paid for full control of the company must show a healthy premium to its recent trading activity. Cadbury has a strong economic moat – good brands, with high cashflow with a reasonable barrier to entry by competitors.

    Warren Buffett seems to be ignoring this fact and it seems contrary to previous indications by him that in order to gain control of a company during an acquisition a premium is more often than not paid.

    The price being paid by Kraft for Cadbury isn’t the deal of the century but it is approaching fair price – on Kraft’s part – considering what Kraft are getting for their shareholders moola.

    Locally, New Zealand media have been speculating that Cadbury’s Dunedin factory maybe the subject of staff cuts and that local brands maybe for the cut. While this is of course possible because of Kraft’s high debt levels due to the acquisition and pre-deal debt levels, it would be folly on Kraft’s part to repeat the recent mistakes of Cadbury in New Zealand and in other global markets.

    I am having sugar overload over this deal. The Kraft acquisition of Kraft is not yet a fait a compli however, so there is still room for a diabetic attack. There is still time for other Cadbury tyre kickers like Hershey to make a higher bid for some of the sweet brown stuff.

    Cadbury @ Share Investor

    Bitter – Sweet Chocolate Business

    Cadbury could learn a thing or two from 1980’s Coca Cola Experiment

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  • CRIKEY.COM: Buffett’s Krafty take on merger maulings

    by Glenn Dyer

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    According to some academic research takeovers more than often destroy value or don’t achieve the claims made at the time of the tie-up.

    The above research paper identifies a dozen studies that have examined mergers and takeovers, some of which were positive, but quite a few found that between half and two thirds destroyed value and just didn’t work.

    Some studies seem to suggest that the bigger the deal, the more problems the merged company will have in generating the claimed higher returns.

    So is that why Warren Buffett, the billionaire investor who is the largest shareholder in Kraft, on Wednesday criticised the US food group’s $US20 billion ($A21.6 billion) agreement to buy Cadbury’s as “a bad deal”?

    Probably not. He seems to have been speaking from self-interest as his stake in Kraft will be watered down and he will find it hard to get more dividend income after Kraft boosted its debt by a third to a reported $US30 billion by buying Cadbury.

    That on its own is a sign that all those fears about the health of markets and debt a year ago have vanished.

    Buffett told CNBC, the US business television network, that he had doubts over the purchase of Cadbury and would have voted against it had Kraft sought shareholder approval for the deal.

    I have a lot of doubts,” Buffett said. But Kraft investors will not have the chance to vote on the deal, which involves the US group issuing 265 million new shares, or about 18% of its existing share capital, because that is below the 20% at which shareholder approval is required.

    The issue will dilute Buffett’s holding by more than 1%, taking his stake to about 8%, from the current 9.4% where he is the company’s biggest holder.

    Buffett said the company was worth more than its current stock price — down 2% at $US28.72 in Wall Street trading overnight, but added that the use of its shares in the takeover was “very expensive currency”.

    But he said he supported Irene Rosenfeld, Kraft’s CEO, and denied that he would sell down his stake in the group. “I like Irene,” Buffett told CNBC. “She has been straightforward with me. We just disagree.”

    Kraft finally secured Cadbury’s backing for its hostile approach on Tuesday after raising its offer to 850 pence a share by adding more cash to the offer (because Buffett had earlier indicated he would vote against any move to issue more shares than originally planned).

    The deal will prove more expensive for Kraft as its huge debt pile will become more expensive after the Fitch credit ratings agency downgraded Kraft by one notch to BBB minus, the lowest investment grade, saying “the anticipated increase in financial leverage of the combined Kraft/Cadbury”.

    Rival agency Standard & Poor’s has Kraft’s rating at A-minus but was keeping it on a negative cedit watch. Moody’s said it was likely to keep Kraft at investment grade, but the rating was under review for possible downgrade.

    The Cadbury deal will push Kraft’s debts from $US20 billion to more than $US30 billion once it has taken on $US9.5 billion of debt to fund the cash portion of the offer and assumed more than $US3 billion in Cadbury debt.

    Rosenfeld called the takeover “transformational”, but has to say something like that. After all, if the deal sours, she’s out on her neck (no doubt with a golden pile of compensation) and Warren Buffett will be poorer, but proven right.

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  • NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT: Berkshire Hathway’s Class B Share Sale

    Wednesday, January 20, 2010

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    SUSIE GHARIB: No more sticker shock for Berkshire Hathaway stock. At 9:30 a.m. Eastern time tomorrow, right here at the New York Stock Exchange, investors can buy Warren Buffett’s class B shares for about $70 each. That’s a lot more attractive than today’s $3,000-plus price tag. Berkshire shareholders voted yes today to split those class B shares 50 to one. Suzanne Pratt looks at whether the split really makes a difference.

    SUZANNE PRATT, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: It’s now a lot cheaper to own a piece of Warren Buffett. Today’s stock split sets the stage for Berkshire Hathaway’s planned purchase of railroad giant Burlington Northern. But, the split is also likely to attract new investors to the oracle of Omaha, particularly those previously put off by his company’s lofty stock price. Berkshire Hathway’s class B shares are already a top holding for the Wintergreen Fund, run by David Winters.

    DAVID WINTERS, CEO, WINTERGREEN ADVISORS: People for some reason don’t want to buy a stock at $3,000. But they are willing to pay $70 for a stock. But it may in fact attract more buyers and Berkshire could go up because of it. It doesn’t make sense, but it may happen.

    PRATT: The lower price should increase trading volume and that in turn may make it eligible for the exclusive S&P 500 index. Once included, index funds would then be forced to buy the stock. But, Morningstar analyst Bill Bergman says the anticipated pop for Berkshire is not enough of a reason to buy in.

    BILL BERGMAN, ANALYST, MORNINGSTAR: That’s already in the market price for Berkshire Hathaway. The things that really matter, stock splits normally don’t matter that much, going into the S&P 500 that’s an interesting development. But, what really matters for Berkshire Hathaway is the long-run viability of its business model.

    PRATT: Many experts say the Berkshire business model gets brighter daily as the U.S. recovery picks up steam. That’s because the conglomerate is in so many economically sensitive businesses.

    BERGMAN: They sell things like (INAUDIBLE) candy and paint, Benjamin Moore paint, the basics, the fabric of our lives. So, as I think the economy improves and with the split, the stock should go up a lot.

    PRATT: But, there’s still one more big issue for Berkshire Hathaway’s stock. Buffett is still mum about who will replace him if he ever retires. Suzanne Pratt, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, New York.

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  • BUSINESSWEEK: Kraft Bondholders Say Buffett Wrong on Cadbury: Credit Markets

    January 20, 2010, 11:23 PM EST

    By Bryan Keogh and John Detrixhe

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    Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) — Kraft Foods Inc. bonds are rallying as debt investors reject Warren Buffett’s assertion that the company’s 11.9 billion-pound ($19.4 billion) takeover of Cadbury Plc is a mistake.

    Kraft’s 6.875 percent notes due in 2039 climbed to a three- month high of 108.7 cents on the dollar yesterday, according to Trace data. The Northfield, Illinois-based food and beverage company’s bonds have returned 2.02 percent including reinvested interest this month, compared with 1.72 percent for an index of similar debt and 1.71 percent for the global corporate bond market, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data.

    While Buffett said Kraft is overpaying for Cadbury by using undervalued stock to fund part of the deal, bond investors are betting the acquisition won’t jeopardize its investment-grade credit rating. Shares of Kraft have risen 2 percent since early September, just before the offer was announced.

    “It’s not as bad on the bondholders as it is on the equity guys,” said Mirko Mikelic, a money manager at Fifth Third Asset Management in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he helps oversee $14 billion of fixed-income assets. “People in the bond market don’t think they’re going to want to jeopardize their BBB rating.”

    Elsewhere in credit markets, the extra yield investors demand to own corporate bonds globally instead of Treasuries is holding at about the lowest since December 2007 at 1.61 percentage points. Yields fell to 4.09 percent on average yesterday from 4.12 percent on Jan. 19. Credit-default swaps show investors are growing more concerned about the risk of companies failing to pay their debt.

    Kraft Bonds Rise

    Some Kraft bonds rose yesterday even after Fitch Ratings cut its default ranking to BBB- from BBB, citing the “the anticipated increase in financial leverage of the combined companies.” Kraft, the maker of Oreo cookies and Tang powdered drinks, said the deal will result in at least $675 million in annual savings and give it leading positions in India, Brazil and Mexico.

    “It’s obviously a good company to a bond investor in the sense that it’s a steady business,” said Jason Brady, a managing director at Santa Fe, New Mexico-based Thornburg Investment Management, which oversees about $55 billion, including Kraft bonds. “When you start levering up to do transformative things, I think bond investors start to get kind of nervous.”

    The takeover creates a company with about $50 billion in annual sales, displacing Mars Inc. as the world’s biggest candy maker, according to Euromonitor data. Kraft fell 63 cents, or 2.1 percent, to $28.78 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.

    “I think this deal was a mistake,” Buffett said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “Kraft was very undervalued before. I feel it’s less undervalued after doing this deal.”

    Investment Grade

    Kraft will likely keep its investment-grade ratings, Moody’s Investors Service said. Bonds rated below Baa3 by Moody’s and BBB- by Standard & Poor’s and Fitch are considered below investment grade. The company will “no doubt” sell bonds in the U.S. and Europe to help finance the purchase, Gary Jenkins, head of credit strategy at Evolution Securities Ltd. in London, said yesterday in a note to clients.

    Credit-default swaps on the Markit CDX North America Investment-Grade Index Series 13, which is linked to 125 companies and used to speculate on creditworthiness or to hedge against losses, increased 0.5 basis point to 85 basis points yesterday, according to broker Phoenix Partners Group. A rise in the index signals a decline in investor confidence.

    The Markit index rose for the sixth day, its longest stretch of gains since August, according to CMA DataVision prices, after China asked banks to cut lending following a record $1.4 trillion of new loans last year. Asian bond risk rose to a one-month high today, with the Markit iTraxx Asia ex- Japan index reaching the highest since Dec. 18, according to CMA.

    Investors are concerned that a premature tightening of credit will crimp economic growth worldwide, said Charles Himmelberg, chief credit strategist at New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

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  • WALL STREET JOURNAL: Buffett Says Cadbury Deal Leaves Bad Taste

    By ILAN BRAT

    JANUARY 20, 2010, 5:39 P.M. ET

    CNBC VIDEO: Becky Quick One-On-One with Warren Buffett -21/01/10

    Warren Buffett, whose Berkshire Hathaway Inc. is Kraft Foods Inc.’s biggest shareholder, on Wednesday said the maker of Oreo cookies paid too much to clinch a deal for Cadbury PLC.

    Mr. Buffett, on the CNBC cable channel, expressed confidence in Kraft Chief Executive Irene Rosenfeld but said, “I’ve got a lot of doubts about the deal….If I had a chance to vote on this, I’d vote no.”

    Mr. Buffett’s comments came a day after Cadbury’s board recommended that the British candy maker’s shareholders sell the company to Kraft Foods after it increased the value of its original offer to $19.1 billion, or about 850 pence a share, from about 745 pence. About 60% of the offer is cash, the rest in Kraft stock.

    “We respect Buffett’s opinion,” a spokesman for Kraft said in a statement. “We think this is a good deal for us. It transforms our portfolio for better long term growth.”

    Kraft faced a Tuesday deadline to raise its offer for Cadbury. Hershey Co. had been planning to top Kraft’s original offer, and the Pennsylvania chocolate maker’s board last week authorized a bid of as much as 825 pence, with 40% in cash, according to several people familiar with the matter.

    In the first days of January, Kraft said it would sell its fast-growing pizza business to Nestlé SA for about $3.7 billion and use some of the proceeds for a sweetened bid.

    Mr. Buffettsaid Kraft sold the business at too low a price and also said that while Kraft shares are undervalued, they aren’t as valuable without the pizza business.

    He indicated that he believes Kraft executives became too wrapped up in winning Cadbury to carefully consider the prices at which they would be buying Cadbury and selling the pizza business.

    “There’s a deal momentum that gets created in any transaction,” he said. Kraft executives “want the deal. If you really want the deal, you’ll have all the people who work for you telling you, ‘Do it.’ “

    Warren Buffett on the brink of doing what he said he’d never do — a stock split. Berkshire Hathaway Inc. is expected to approve a 50-to-1 share split of its Class B shares on Wednesday, a move tied to its planned purchase of the railroad giant Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp.

    When asked whether he plans to sell his nearly 10% stake in Kraft, Mr. Buffett paused a moment, then said, “That gets expensive.” He added: “If I don’t like what’s going on in government, it doesn’t mean I have to leave the country.”

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  • THE STREET.COM: Berkshire Hathaway Volume Spikes

    By Eric Rosenbaum 01/20/10 – 05:01 PM EST

    OMAHA, Neb. (TheStreet) — Berkshire Hathaway(BRK.B Quote) was up more than 4.3% on Wednesday afternoon, on close to 7 times its average level of daily trading — with 233,000 shares traded versus an average of 34,000.

    On Tuesday, Berkshire traded at a level of 100,000 shares, which was itself the highest trading level in the Warren Buffett stock since November.

    Why all the fuss? It wasn’t that Warren Buffett was on CNBC saying one of his investments, Kraft (KFT Quote), had made a bad deal for Cadbury(CBY Quote). Or that Buffett berated President Obama for the bank tax.

    No, the real reason: Berkshire Hathaway shares are going to $66 on Thursday.

    Shareholders of Warren Buffett’s investment company approved on Wednesday a plan to split Berkshire’s B shares 50-to-1, bringing the share value down from near $3,300 to the S&P 500-worthy level of $66.

    While S&P has not commented on the potential addition of Berkshire to the famed index, analysts who cover Berkshire stock believe it is likely. What’s more, economists that track S&P 500 additions have noted that a stock like Berkshire Hathaway can receive a big bump from inclusion in the index.

    The 4.3% spike in Berkshire Hathaway’s share price on Wednesday was equal to $144, raising the share’s value to $3,476.

    Other than the one day in November — Nov. 4 — when Berkshire traded above 100,000 shares, Warren Buffet’s stock hasn’t seen a level of activity above 100,000 shares in one day since last March. Two days in a row with elevated trading, and two consecutive days during which trading has more than doubled, is notable for Berkshire Hathaway stock.

    Maybe investors are preparing for the S&P 500 bump.

    — Reported by Eric Rosenbaum in New York.

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  • BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY: Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Shareholders Approve 50-for-1 Split of Its Class B Common Stock

    BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY INC.
    NEWS RELEASE
    Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Shareholders Approve 50-for-1
    Split of Its Class B Common Stock
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 20, 2010

    Omaha, NE (BRK.A; BRK.B)—Berkshire Hathaway Inc. announced that at a Special Meeting of
    Shareholders held earlier today, its shareholders approved amendments to Berkshire’s certificate of incorporation that provide for a 50-for-1 split of its Class B Common Stock. As a result each existing outstanding share of Class B Common Stock will be exchanged for fifty shares of New Class B Common Stock. There will not be a record date or a payable date. The New Class B Common Stock will begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange as of the opening of the market tomorrow and the existing Class B Common Stock will cease trading as of the close of the market today.

    Berkshire’s Class A Common Stock is not being split. However as a result of the amendments to
    our certificate of incorporation, beginning tomorrow each share of Class A Common Stock will
    be convertible into 1,500 shares of New Class B Common Stock.

    Berkshire Hathaway and its subsidiaries engage in diverse business activities including property
    and casualty insurance and reinsurance, utilities and energy, finance, manufacturing, retailing and services. Common stock of the company is listed on the New York Stock Exchange, trading
    symbols BRK.A and BRK.B.

    — END —
    Contact
    Marc D. Hamburg
    402-346-1400

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  • NEW YORK TIMES: Berkshire Holders Approve 50-to-1 Stock Split

    January 20, 2010, 1:37 pm

    Berkshire Hathaway said Wednesday that its shareholders had approved splitting the company’s class B shares 50-for-1 as part of the company’s $26.3 billion acquisition of Burlington Northern Santa Fe, the nation’s second-largest railroad.

    The stock split, supported by Warren E. Buffett, Berkshire’s chief executive and controlling shareholder, will enable the company to offer Berkshire stock to smaller shareholders of Burlington Northern as part of the takeover.

    Mr. Buffett said at a shareholders meeting in Omaha that the stock split was needed to make the transaction easier for small investors. “If we hadn’t done this, there would have been justification of the criticism that a big shareholder got a different deal that a small shareholder,” he said, according to Reuters.

    The 50-to-1 stock split will make Berkshire’s class B stock much more affordable at roughly $68 a share, based on Wednesday afternoon’s price of $3,430.75. But the Berkshire class A shares, which remain the most expensive American stock at nearly $103,000 on Wednesday, will not be split.

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  • BLOOMBERG: Buffett’s Gen Re Settles U.S. Claims Over AIG, Prudential Deals

    By David Voreacos and David Scheer

    Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) — General Re Corp., the reinsurer owned by Warren Buffett’sBerkshire Hathaway Inc., agreed to pay more than $92 million to settle U.S. investigations and investor claims over its role in sham transactions with American International Group Inc. and Prudential Financial Inc.

    The company will pay $19.5 million to the U.S. Postal Inspection Service Consumer Fraud Fund, $12.2 million to the Securities and Exchange Commission and $60.5 million to AIG shareholders in a class-action settlement, the SEC said in a statement today. Gen Re previously forfeited $5 million in fees linked to the AIG scheme, the SEC said. The deal lets Gen Re avoid prosecution by the Justice Department and resolves an SEC civil lawsuit filed today.

    General Re was involved in sham transactions with AIG in 2000 and a Prudential division from 1997 to 2002 that helped those two companies manipulate financial statements, the SEC said in a complaint in federal court in Manhattan today. The AIG dealings helped AIG overstate loss reserves, a key indicator of an insurer’s health, by $500 million, according to the claim.

    “Gen Re and its senior management were aware that the true purpose of the transactions was to permit AIG to record and report phony loss reserves to calm analysts’ criticism,” the agency wrote in the complaint.

    The U.S. probe led to criminal convictions of four former Gen Re executives, including ex-Chief Executive Officer Ronald Ferguson, 68, and one from AIG. The fraud cost AIG shareholders from $544 million to $597 million, ruled a federal judge in Hartford, Connecticut. Two other Gen Re executives pleaded guilty.

    Misled, Faked and Cheated

    Attorneys representing Gen Re didn’t immediately return calls seeking comment. Gen Re was cooperating with government investigators, Berkshire Hathaway said in a Nov. 6 regulatory filing.

    New York-based AIG, once the world’s largest insurer, agreed to pay $1.64 billion in 2006 to resolve government claims it misled investors, faked bids, and cheated workers’ compensation programs.

    AIG shareholders have reached other legal settlements to recover money. In October 2008, AIG’s accounting firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, agreed to pay $97.5 million to settle litigation led by Ohio public pension funds claiming it helped mislead investors. In February, Stamford, Connecticut- based Gen Re agreed to pay $72 million to settle litigation, also led by the Ohio funds, claiming it helped mislead AIG investors. A judge has not given final approval yet to that deal, court records show.

    Two Years

    After the criminal trial in Hartford, U.S. District Judge Christopher Droney sentenced Ferguson to two years in prison. Former AIG Vice President Christian Milton was sentenced to a four-year term, and ex-Gen Re Chief Financial Officer Elizabeth Monrad got 18 months. Former Gen Re Senior Vice President Christopher Garand and ex-Gen Re Assistant General Counsel Robert Graham each got a one-year prison term.

    The trial featured testimony about Buffett, chairman of Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire Hathaway. Buffett wasn’t charged with a crime and denied any wrongdoing.

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  • WALL STREET JOURNAL: Can Warren Buffett Derail the Kraft-Cadbury Deal?

    By Michael Corkery

    January 20, 2010, 12:09 PM ET

    CNBC VIDEO: Becky Quick One-On-One with Warren Buffett -21/01/10

    No.

    But he can use his bully pulpit to talk up the value of Kraft shares.

    This morning Buffett told CNBC that he had “doubts” about the Kraft-Cadbury tie-up and said he feels “poorer” because of it. Buffett did not go into much detail but the move has Buffett watchers scratching their heads to figure out what the Oracle of Omaha is up to.

    In reality, Buffett cannot derail the deal because Kraft’s offer does not require a shareholder vote. (Cadbury shares are down just 1%)

    So what is Buffett really trying to say?

    Perhaps he’s just doing some guerilla marketing, talking up the value of Kraft shares. He mentioned on the CNBC appearance that Kraft shares were “undervalued.” Oddly, he did so while praising Kraft CEO Irene Rosenfeld, even making the bizarre observation that he would make her a “trustee” of his will.

    How much did he hate transaction? Not as much as the rhetoric may suggest. He said he would not sell his shares in Kraft partly because –yes — they were “undervalued.”

    Buffett ’s Kraft advertising campaign began a few weeks ago when he protested Kraft’s plan to issue new shares to pay for the deal. “What we know with certainty, however, is that Kraft stock, at its current price of $27, is a very expensive “currency” to be used in an acquisition,’’ according to Berkshire Hathaway’s statement.

    Of course, Buffett’s comments did not have their desired effect today. The stock happens to be down nearly 3%. But he keeps signaling that the company is a great value. Is this disciplined shareholder stewardship or high-class marketing pitch?

    Share Investor Links

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  • BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY: Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Meeting Saturday, May 1, 2010

    Berkshire Hathaway
    Annual Shareholders Meeting
    Saturday, May 1, 2010
    Qwest Center Omaha
    455 North 10th Street
    Downtown Omaha
    www.qwestcenter.com

    Shareholder activities will begin on Friday evening, April 30, with a cocktail reception at Borsheims and conclude with dinner at two local steakhouses, Gorat’s and Piccolo’s on Sunday evening, May 2.

    The 2009 Annual Report will be mailed to shareholders mid to late March. Attached to the proxy statement, which accompanies the annual report, is a postcard that shareholders will need to complete and mail back to the company to obtain annual meeting credentials.

    American Express Travel has been assisting with hotel reservations:

    [email protected]
    1-800-799-6634
    Or
    402-697-5314 (outside the U.S.)

    There are a limited number of commemorative stamps still available from the
    2007 Annual Meeting. The special edition 20-stamp collection may be purchased for
    $20 per sheet.

    Send your check payable to:
    BerkshireHathaway
    1440 Kiewit Plaza
    Omaha, NE 68131

    EWB will have full coverage of the Berkshire stockholders meeting.

    Share Investor Links

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  • CNBC: Berkshire Shareholders Approve Stock Split, With Paper Cutout of Charlie Munger Looking On

    Published: Wednesday, 20 Jan 2010 | 11:23 AM ET

    By: Alex Crippen
    Executive Producer

    Berkshire Hathaway shareholders have approved the company’s proposed 50-for-one stock split of its Class B shares.

    About 150 people gathered in Omaha for the special shareholders meeting, with most holders voting by proxy.

    The outcome was never in doubt.

    CNBC producer Lacy O’Toole is in the auditorium. She reports Buffett took some questions while sitting at a table on stage.

    Charlie Munger is not present, but there is a paper cutout with his photo. Buffett also has a recording of Charlie saying, “I have nothing to add” that’s been played a few times after Buffett answers a question.

    Buffett concedes that Berkshire’s acquisition of Burlington Northern Santa Fe is “not cheap.” And while the stock split is designed to faciliatate that deal, Buffett says even if it doesn’t go through (which is very unlikely) Berkshire would still split its stock now for “the next time.”

    Current Berkshire stock prices:

    Berkshire Portfolio

    Class A: [BRK.A 101150.00 1120.00 (+1.12%) ]

    Class B: [BRK.B 3374.70 42.70 (+1.28%) ]

    Share Investor Links

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  • CNBC: Full transcript of Warren Buffett’s ‘Stock Split’ Interview

    Published: Wednesday, 20 Jan 2010 | 11:08 AM ET

    CNBC VIDEO: Becky Quick One-On-One with Warren Buffett -21/01/10


    By: Alex Crippen
    Executive Producer

    In a live interview on CNBC’s Squawk Box this morning (Wednesday) ahead of a special Berkshire Hathaway shareholders meeting, Warren Buffett made news by strongly criticizing Kraft’s planned acquisition of Cadbury.WARREN BUFFETT TO CNBC: I WOULD HAVE VOTED AGAINST KRAFT-CADBURY DEAL

    He also told us Berkshire Hathaway’s proposed split of its Class B shares does not mean that he has dropped his overall dislike of stock splits and share issuances, comparing the process to “preparing for a colonoscopy.”

    This is the full transcript of the entire one-hour interview conducted by Becky Quick.

    BECKY QUICK: I don’t know how much you heard of the Wells Fargo (earnings) numbers that we were just —

    WARREN BUFFETT: I heard a little bit.

    BECKY: What was your immediate takeaway, and I know all you heard is —

    BUFFETT: I didn’t get the earnings at all. But I got the charge-offs at 5.4 billion. That’s exactly what I would have expected. I think they expect them to peak toward the end of 2010, but that number is exactly what I would expect.

    BECKY: What other headlines would you like us to pull up? What else would you be interested in hearing about?

    BUFFETT: Well, my guess is that the revenue and all of that is more or less like I expected. I mean, Wells, right straight through this period has done pretty much exactly what they said they would do and they’ve made money consistently through it. They’ve run into much larger losses than anybody anticipated three or four years ago but they can handle them very easily. Last year we talked about ’em having 40 billion of pre-provision income in 2009, and you know, they had it, and that easily handles 20 billion, roughly, of losses.

    BECKY: They also issued a lot more shares though, to pay back the government. What did you think of that?

    BUFFETT: I didn’t like it. (Laughs.) No, I mean, the government forced them to issue the shares. The government’s done a lot of good things for the economy and net I’m a beneficiary and Berkshire Hathaway is a beneficiary of the things overall they’ve done. But they cost us real money at Wells Fargo.

    BECKY: But was it the right move by the government or not?

    BUFFETT: Well, it was the right move by the government to enter – to show that they were willing to act very promptly and decisively. The key actions by the government actually were in September and October of 2008. At that point, if the government had showed any hesitation about stepping in and doing whatever it took to get us past a financial panic, you know, things would be a lot different today. So the government did the right thing in acting – They didn’t have to do this A, action A or action B or action C perfectly. What they did have to show is that it was not going to be a Herbert Hoover type situation and that they were going to jump in and do whatever it took.

    BECKY: Before we get to a lot of the other questions, because this brings us to a jumping off point about many things the government is doing right now. I want to talk a little bit about why we’re here today. And that’s for Berkshire Hathaway’s special shareholders meeting. This is a very unusual event. The idea of splitting the Class B shares 50-for-1. Why are you doing this?

    BUFFETT: It shows you what happens when you get to be 79. (Laughs.)

    BECKY: Some people are asking if you are completely changing your stance on a lot of different issues.

    BUFFETT: No.

    BECKY: Some people are saying, ‘Is this going to mean a dividend’s coming soon, too?’

    BUFFETT: No, I don’t think it means that. It made sense in terms of the Burlington Northern acquisition, because otherwise – We wanted to give a stock and cash option to their shareholders and to really effectively give it to the smaller shareholder we had to have something with a lower denomination in our Class B shares which were in the three-thousand dollar-plus range. The big shareholder would have gotten a different deal than the small shareholder otherwise. So it was an easy decision, actually.

    BECKY: Do you think this is going to be an easy vote as well?

    BUFFETT: Yeah, I’m sure of that. (Laughs.) I’m like a politician in Chicago. I’ve got the votes. (Laughs.)

    BECKY: So you’re going into this today knowing you have the votes. There are some people who say, hey, this could mean that Berkshire Hathaway could now become a member of the S&P 500. What do you think of that?

    BUFFETT: Well, I don’t know. I’ve never talked to S&P about it. I do know that we’re probably four times as large in market cap as any company that isn’t in it. And we will have – when we get through with this we could have like 700,000 shareholders or something of that sort. We’ll have a lot of trading volume. But that’s up to S&P.

    BECKY: Would you like to be in?

    BUFFETT: Well, I think probably for our shareholders it’s a net plus, yeah.

    BECKY: I know Joe’s got some of those numbers that you were asking about for Wells Fargo. Joe?

    JOE KERNEN: Berkshire could be a Dow component. I don’t – don’t stop at the S&P. We’ll get rid of Alcoa or something, ah, I know – that would be great. Hey Warren, the revenue number on Wells was 22.7 and the estimate was I think 21.9. So unlike any of the other banks, I think that’s the first one, I mean I didn’t look at US Bancorp, but the major ones that we reported on, this is the first one that’s beat on the revenue and it was also a profit of eight cents with the TARP repayment, even though the Street was looking for a loss of a penny. So, seems to be a little bit better and the stock is now 29, it’s almost up a dollar at this point.

    BUFFETT: Wells runs a terrific bank. They’re a very customer-oriented bank. They’re almost like thousands of community banks when you get right down to it. They have a lot of services they sell for each customer. So their revenues are going to come through. And actually when the stress test was done in the spring of last year, that’s where the people evaluating them were way off, was on the revenue number. Wells did not disagree with them on the possible losses number, but they felt that the people just didn’t understand the revenue potential, that were looking at them, and I agreed with them. But unfortunately they had to issue a lot of shares in conjunction with that stress test. I don’t think Wells was ever going to disappoint on revenue. They have a lot of customers and those customers do a lot of business with them.

    JOE: We’ve got so many things to go over, I’ve got – I don’t even know where – I think of Wells and I think about the bank tax. Is that a good idea to pay for the GM bailout with a bank tax, Warren?

    BUFFETT: No, I don’t understand that. If it’s some kind of a guilt tax or something of that sort because banks were among the whole United States that were saved back in 2008, everybody was taken care of then. And the banks, basically, somebody like Wells, it’s cost them a lot of money to be in the TARP and it was basically forced upon them. (They) didn’t want to take the money, but really had no choice. So that’s cost Wells a lot of money. The government’s made a lot of money off Wells. They’ve made a lot of money off Goldman. They’ve made a lot of money off J.P. Morgan. And where they’re going to lose money, at least where its possible they’ll lose money, is in the auto companies. So if you’re going after the people you saved, you might say GM shareholders didn’t get saved, the GM bondholders didn’t get saved. What happened there is they kept employment. I’m the last guy to suggest that you should go and put a special tax on autoworkers. (Laughs.) If you’re really looking for the people who benefited from government losses, you’d have to look there. Or if you look at Fannie or Freddie. Are you going to go and tax the members of Congress who ran Freddie and Fannie —

    JOE: That’s what I said! I can’t believe you just said that. That’s exactly what I – You could almost tax any company that was in business that wasn’t going to be able to float any commercial paper, you could tax them too. Because they were saved – –

    BUFFETT: Absolutely. In September of 2008 —

    JOE: Don’t give them any ideas! Warren, don’t give them any ideas! They will, that’ll be next.

    BUFFETT: (Laughs.) No, what was done in the fall of 2008 was designed to save the American economy. It wasn’t designed to save the banks, it wasn’t designed to save me. It was designed to 309 million Americans and a good job was done. But the banks are the ones, you know, particularly I just named a few, they paid it back with huge interest. The government’s made a lot of money on that. And to say that they should be paying for the fact that the government lost a lot, or may lose a lot of money in Freddie and Fannie and perhaps with the auto companies, it just doesn’t make any sense to me.

    BECKY: What about AIG, though? Goldman Sachs and a lot of the other banks did make a lot of money back from AIG. Is that a different category?

    BUFFETT: Well, they got paid what they were owed, but so did millions of policy holders. I mean, if you look at AIG, AIG, primarily through its subsidiaries, but they had contracts with millions of people who were counting on getting paid on their life insurance, getting paid on annuities, getting paid on property and casualty claims. And the government’s actions enabled AIG to live up to millions of contracts. And it makes them mad that they lived up to a good contract with Goldman Sachs, although Goldman was very protected. But I’m just not sure why – Goldman paid, I think, a billion-one for the warrants to buy them back. They are not the problem. The banks have generally done a pretty good job.

    CARL QUINTANILLA: AIG, other insurance companies, Warren, likely to fall under that taxing category, people worry that the real fear is not just the feel-good measure that the tax will take but the distraction it will create in dealing with financial reform in a real way in this country.

    BUFFETT: Yeah, and it’s a popular tax to propose now, obviously. The American people love the idea of Goldman or AIG or anybody like that, those are bad names. They don’t think so much about Freddie or Fannie which are that expensive and which Congress ran. But I just think a tax that’s enacted with the idea that the headlines will be appealing and that a certain amount of vengeance will be achieved, I don’t think that’s the greatest form of tax policy.

    BECKY QUICK: In terms of going after a debate with Massachusetts, the President went up and actually campaigned for (the Democratic Senate candidate Martha) Coakley and started saying things about the banks. About how (Republican candidate Scott) Brown is for the Wall Street banks and she’s not.

    WARREN BUFFETT: Well, banks – Maybe if I was running for office today I’d be chewing out banks, too. But basically the government is going to get back its money overwhelmingly for banks. The FDIC, which is funded entirely by banks, is taking care of the failed banks. There were 140 banks that failed last year. Most of them were small community banks which everybody, you know, the hero of things generally. And in the end, that’s been taken care of by the FDIC and the FDIC is funded by the banks. The banks are cleaning up their own mess, in effect, on that. Like they say, the banks have come through this very strongly. But they’re not earning – they talk about obscene profits – well let’s just, J.P. Morgan, you know, their earnings on equity were less than the average of the last ten years last year. You take Wells Fargo, their earnings on equity were less than the average of the last ten years. B of A and Citi, I mean if you want to call their profits obscene you may be thinking of a different sort of obscenity. (Laughs.)

    BECKY: At the same time, though, compensation is coming back to the levels that we haven’t seen in the past.

    BUFFETT: Compensation at the investment banks. I don’t think that if you look at the commercial banks that you will find their compensation practices are significantly different than a few years back. I would love to have no compensation at banks because we own some banks and then it would all go to the shareholders. (Laughs.) I mean, the choice isn’t the Federal government or bonuses, the choice is the stockholders or bonuses.

    BECKY: But people say that the real difference is should the government be backstopping, not just the safe banks that are doing loans, doing things that need to be done, but also the investment banks at the same time. Should they be in the same house, and should the government be backstopping the investment banks as well when they can turn around and pay out these high compensations.

    BUFFETT: I don’t think they should be backstopping them.

    BECKY: But how do you split them, short of doing something like Glass-Steagal?

    BUFFETT: Well, if you look at Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, the two big investment banks, independently, I don’t think they should be backstopped, backstopping them. Incidentally, in September of 2008, Goldman went out to raise their own money. They saw the situation that was developing and they raised 12 billion dollars there in September of 2008, which we participated in. They felt that they needed capital because they didn’t know if the world was going to come to an end or not and they went out and raised it. They were a participant then in the TARP subsequently, but they were given no choice.

    BECKY: I don’t want to put words in your mouth, though. When you say the government shouldn’t be backstopping those investment banks, how do you get around this idea of if the commercial bank is with the investment bank, how do you get around backstopping that if these are so important to our nation and we have to keep them supported, this notion of too big to fail?

    BUFFETT: I think, and I’m not even sure how you draft this into statutes, but the banks that got into big trouble, it was management at the top. And a number of those went away rich. They didn’t go away as rich as they were earlier, but I think that’s terrible. I think, if I were on the board of directors of a bank, and you do this in conjunction with the government, but I think you should have something so that if a bank ever has to go to the Federal government, not to the FDIC because that’s a form of insurance, but if they have to go to the Federal government to be saved, the CEO and any CEO of the previous two years before that, and his wife, they sign something so that they are essentially wiped out. If an institution that’s so important to this country really causes the country great difficulty, I think the CEO, I want that CEO’s equation to be that if this place goes down or needs government help, I’m busted. And I can’t put it all in my wife’s name and she’s busted, too. And then I would have strict penalties for directors, probably five times their average compensation or something. I think that would do more to change behavior, the kind of behavior that gets us into trouble, then anything else you could do.

    BECKY: So you’re talking about the guys like Chuck Prince –

    BUFFETT: Yeah –

    BECKY: – and others who walked away?

    BUFFETT: When they walk away I don’t want – We’ve got unemployment insurance. Millions of people are on it now and certainly anybody that causes that kind of trouble, and I would have it extend for two years after they left or something of the sort. And like I say, if they want to sign, I would just, as a member of the board of some super-large institution like that, I would just say that’s part of taking the deal. If you can’t keep this place away from needing the Federal government for help, you’re going to be broke.

    BECKY: But back to this idea, and I’m sorry to keep harping on this, but back to this idea of the investment banks teamed up with the regular boring bank side of things, should there be a split there that’s forced by Congress, or do you think this idea of attaching it to the CEOs and directors would handle that problem?

    BUFFETT: I think – Well, I would like what I just suggested but I do think that – I think when very large banks that are really, if anything happens to them they have to go to the government, I think they should be reined in on leverage and I think they should be reined in on some of the kind of activities they’ve engaged in, yes.

    BECKY: What do you like that you see in the proposals for national financial reform right now and what do you think is missing?

    BUFFETT: Well, I think the hard part is to restrict leverage. I mean, leverage is what gets people into trouble. And the trouble is you can’t measure it by a single ratio. There’s all kinds. I mean you can have a lot of leverage on government bonds and then you can do other things where 2-for-1 leverage is too strong. I think you do need a regulator that can draw up some kind of sensible regulations as to different kinds of instruments, and maybe prohibit some in terms of the activities of commercial banks.

    BECKY: You need a new regulator or the existing ones?

    BUFFETT: I think I would trust the Fed.

    BECKY: You would trust the Federal Reserve? But there are a lot of movements in Congress right now, both from the right and the left, to go after the Federal Reserve and strip some of its powers.

    BUFFETT: I think that’s a mistake. I think that an independent Fed is incredibly important to the economic future of the country.

    BECKY: Ben Bernanke is looking for this reconfirmation. They say a vote could come as early as this Friday. Should he be reconfirmed?

    BUFFETT: If I could vote twice, I would. He should be, I mean, he did a magnificent job over this period. Now, everybody can do it somewhat better. We could sit here and armchair quarterback him, but when I look back at particularly September and October of 2008, he took some extraordinary actions that, if they hadn’t been taken, willingness to act like that, and even stretch his authority some. But he did what you do, and we talked about it being an economic Pearl Harbor, he did what should have been done in response to that Pearl Harbor. And I think he’s done a stellar job.

    BECKY: What happens if he’s not reconfirmed? What’s at risk?

    BUFFETT: Well, just tell me a day ahead of time so I can sell some stocks. (Laughs.)

    BECKY: You think there would be a strong selloff?

    BUFFETT: Oh, I think so, sure.

    BECKY: Across the board?

    BUFFETT: Yeah. I think it’d be justified.

    BECKY: You do?

    BUFFETT: Yeah, I think – I think one of the – I think Congress generally is the worry of the American people, particularly what they’ve seen over the last 12, 18 months. If Congress essentially said we can do this better then a Ben Banana, and we think we know, I would get very worried.

    BECKY: You mentioned Americans’ frustration with Congress. Do you read this vote in Massachusetts last night as some sort of a referendum on the job Congress is doing right now? The job the White House is doing right now? On the health care reform bill? Or something else?

    BUFFETT: No, it’s those three things plus the economy. I mean, it’s some mix. Who knows what goes on in someone’s mind when they enter a ballot box. Somebody said the word ‘motivation’ should never be used in the singular, because you get these things all mixed up in your mind. But certainly, people generally in the country do not like the health bill. Whether it’s a good thing or not. But they don’t like it, and they don’t feel good about Congress and they feel less good about the Administration than they did a year ago, clearly. And they feel like the economy is dragging on for a long time. So all of those factors converged, and probably to some extent the particular candidates, you know. If Vicki Kennedy had been the Democratic candidate I don’t think there’s any question she would have won, probably three-to-two or something. But it was referendum of sorts, sure. It was a big one.

    BECKY: You say American people are less happy with the Administration, they’re frustrated with Congress, they don’t like the health care bill. What about you? You’re a big supporter –

    BUFFETT: Well, going back to the American people, I think their expectations were probably too high on the economy. And I think, incidentally, to President ABM’s credit, he tried to dampen those. Every time I heard him speak, he would say we didn’t get into this in a short period and we’re not going to get out of it in a short period. But, he’s attempted to do that, but when it grinds along, you know, people are hurting. A lot of people are hurting and they, perhaps unreasonably, I would say it would be unreasonable, but they expected better things by this point and that wasn’t in the cards.

    BECKY: You talk a little bit about what has happened with the economy. Is there anything different the Administration could of, or should have, done?

    BUFFETT: It’s, you know, probably if you’re going to spend close to 800 billion on a stimulus, I think it could have been done in a way that had more immediate impact. But, you know, what we saw with the stimulus bill, 8000 earmarks or something. I mean, that is the sort of thing that is depressing to the American public. It’s depressing to me. That is old-style Washington squared. And so I think in a sense even on the stimulus bill, some of the benefits of the stimulus were lost by the fact that it was Washington as usual.

    JOE: Hey, Warren.

    BECKY: Joe, you have a question as well?

    JOE: I did. I ask it in the converse, Warren. OK, that’s something that they did do that maybe could have been done differently, but are there things that were done that actually hurt the economy? We hear it all the time, about the uncertainty of a lot of the pending legislation. Tax policy, cap and trade, health care, down the line. There are people who say that is causing corporate managers not to hire and that we’re actually lengthening the slowdown. Is that your view, too?

    BUFFETT: Well, I hear that, Joe. I would say this. At Berkshire we’re down 25-thousand, maybe, or something in employment from 245-thousand.

    BECKY: Off what base?

    BUFFETT: Off a base, in the last year, year and a half. Take our carpet business. Our carpet business is down 65-hundred people and that’s concentrated in a fairly small, not all of it, but a lot of it is concentrated in a small area of Georgia. We will hire people when the orders come in. I get the orders every day, the incoming orders. I look at them. And we want to hire people but we’re not going to hire people just to stand around. So, we’re not reluctant to hire people in Georgia at our – or at ACME Brick in our brick business, which ran up the worst year in many, many decades. We’ve got a thousand people, perhaps from the peak, that we’re down at the brick business. It’s not because we’re losing share of market. We’re gaining share of market in these cases. But we’re not reluctant to hire at ACME Brick or Shaw Carpet because of what’s going on in Washington. We’re worried about hiring there because of what’s going on in our order book. If we get orders for brick, if we get orders for carpet, we’re going to put people back to work tomorrow, but we’re not getting orders yet.

    JOE: But it’s possible to bite off more than you can chew. And maybe a lot of Americans would have been content with economy, security. The economy and security. Maybe that would have been enough.

    BUFFETT: You’re not going to have people feeling good until jobs come back. I mean, it’s that simple. And jobs haven’t come back. And one of the problems we have is that we have these people who are dropping out of the workforce. Normally you need about 100,000 a month in jobs just to stay even in unemployment. We’ve got people dropping out of the workforce. But those people may very well come back in, in addition to the normal gain, in the year or two, in the next two years to come. So unemployment is going to be a tough figure. That’s going to determine the mood of the American people.

    CARL: Warren —

    BUFFETT: The mood of the American people is going to be – Go ahead.

    CARL: Warren, Joe talks about economy, security, and those are really our short-term concerns. But you’ve talked a lot about the longer-term structural issues the government needs to address. And when you can’t get health care reform through, will you have the White House, a majority in the House and a supermajority in the Senate, how in the world do you think we’re going to tackle things like Medicare, Social Security?

    BUFFETT: Well, that’s one of the things that bothers the American people, when they see how government is functioning, not just in the last year but prior thereto. But I think people who are expecting a year ago with the new administration that you were going to see a different style of behavior in Congress, probably have become pretty disillusioned in the last year. Incidentally, over the longer term, it’s going to work extraordinarily well. I mean, we have not come close to fulfilling the potential of this country or our people. But we are going through a rough patch now and it ties in very directly with what you said in terms of jobs. Until you get jobs, a better jobs picture, you’re not going to have a happy American public.

    JOE: As a Cornhusker, did you not like that, what did they call it, the Cornhusker Husk or whatever it is? Were you embarrassed by that as well?

    BUFFETT: I don’t think it was that popular out here. I think the whole idea, if you look at that, you can call that a special form of earmark. And people don’t like the idea that if you pass a bill like the stimulus bill that various Congressmen and Senators find 8000, or whatever it was, items that they want to stick on it. I mean, this Christmas tree approach, and of course, bad behavior begets bad behavior. After a while even the guys who say I don’t want to do this sort of thing on principle, they feel kind of silly facing their constituents when everybody else is doing it. So if the other guy’s doing it, that becomes an argument for it and it gets to be, you know, it gets to be that K Street and lobbyists get terribly important and sticking little special items on bills as they go along. And I think our Cornhusker thing was one example of that. But it wasn’t the only example. As I remember, Louisiana, Massachusetts, it —

    JOE: Union.

    BUFFETT: It’s not – What you’ve seen in the last year has not been encouraging, I’ll put it that way.

    BECKY: You know, you mentioned that there’s more the Administration maybe could have done even though the American people had expectations that are out of whack. Paul Krugman wrote this week in the New York Times that all of these bad things happened, the failure of the Democratic candidate in Massachusetts, it all because they didn’t spend more on the stimulus. Is that something you agree with?

    BUFFETT: I don’t think it would have made that much difference. People talk about the stimulus having created a million-and-a-half, or saving a million-and-a-half. I generally am very skeptical of figures that economists talk around, or even sometimes even projections of CEOs that they toss around. (Laughs.) We have a lot to work through. It really goes back to what we talked about almost two years ago. This country got very, very leveraged-up in a lot of respects. It got leveraged at the individual level and housing and the government levels, everyplace. And deleveraging is a painful project, process. And it takes a long time and we’re not done.


    BECKY QUICK:
    We haven’t even gotten a chance to talk about one of the issues that people really have been waiting to hear from you on. Kraft [KFT 28.78 -0.63 (-2.14%) ] yesterday raising its bid for Cadbury [CBY 54.37 -0.72 (-1.31%) ] and Cadbury accepting that raised offer. You voted ‘no’ when they asked you if they could be issuing more shares. But what do you think about the bid now?

    WARREN BUFFETT: I feel poorer. (Laughs.) Kraft, in my judgment, well just in the past two weeks there’s been two things that caused me to feel poorer. They sold a very fine pizza business and they said they got 3.7 billion for it. But, because it had practically no tax basis, they really got about 2.5 billion. They sold a business for 2.5 billion that Nestle is willing to pay 3.7 billion. Now can Nestle run it that much better than Kraft? I doubt it. But that business that was sold for 2.5 billion earned 280 million pre-tax last year. But they sold that at less, right around nine times pre-tax earnings in terms of their own figure. Now they mentioned paying 13 times EBITDA for Cadbury, but they’re paying more than that. For one thing, EBITDA is not the same as earnings. Depreciation is a very real expense. But on top of that, they’ve got a billion-three they’re going to spend of various rearrangements of Cadbury. They’ve got 390 million dollars of deal expenses. They are using their own stock, 260 million shares or something like that, that their own directors say is significantly undervalued. And when they calculate that 13, they’re calculating Kraft at market price, not at what their own directors think the stock is worth. So, the actual multiple, if you look at the value of the Kraft stock, is more like 16 or 17 and they sold earnings at nine times. So, it’s hard to get rich doing that. And I’ve got a lot of doubts about the deal.

    BECKY: You are the largest shareholder at 9.9 percent of the company. You don’t get the chance to vote this deal up or down. What do you do?

    BUFFETT: (Laughs.) They took that away. They needed the vote originally but if they get a consensual arrangement sort of thing with Cadbury, and that may be, you know, if they paid up enough they were going to get it. So, who knows whether the last 20 pence or something – What it did was eliminate my chance to vote on it.

    JOE: There’s another way to vote, Warren, and that’s with your feet. Is that what you’re telling us you’re going to do.

    BUFFETT: That gets expensive. (Laughs.) Well, if I don’t like what’s going on in the government, that doesn’t mean I have to leave the country either, Joe.

    JOE: Fine. But I can’t believe what I just —

    BUFFETT: But, it’s —

    JOE: It was a peak — I know —

    CARL: We’ve got to stop you because we have breaking news to bring you, and it is almost eight-thirty.

    ——————-

    CARL: Warren, Joe and I, our jaws are agape at the comments you just made about Kraft. We’re watching —

    JOE: The stock’s down

    CARL: We had (Bill) Ackman on in the past couple of hours and we talked about the deal and assumed because it would appear to be going through pretty well, that it had your tacit consent. That’s clearly not the case.

    BUFFETT: No. If I had a chance to vote on it, I’d vote no, but I don’t have a chance. One of the things particularly interesting for the people that pay attention to corporate governance, Kraft issued a 78-page proxy statement close to a month ago. And the sole issue was the issuance of 370 million shares of Kraft stock. That was the only thing to be voted on. And in 78 pages, they told you about a deal that wasn’t going to happen, and they told you a lot of other things about how the directors recommended this and everything else. There’s one thing that they didn’t tell you. They didn’t tell you what the directors — how the directors felt about the value of Kraft stock. Now, after I came out and said Kraft stock was significantly undervalued, the directors immediately came out and said they thought it was significantly undervalued, too. What point could possibly be more important when asking shareholders to vote on issuing 370 million shares is the director’s views on whether they were going to get fairer value for these shares? In other words, if the directors thought those shares were significantly undervalued, when they issued that proxy statement, I think they had the duty to tell shareholders that they felt that way. Otherwise, you know, the shareholders could assume that they were getting fairer value for the shares.

    JOE: Warren, I know at management, you go into a company and you talk about you’re comfortable with management, you love the company’s business, things like that. This is the hallmark of (CEO) Irene Rosenfeld’s stewardship of Kraft. You’re just saying it’s a bad deal. Is that not going to cause you to reevaluate your stake in Kraft down the road if the manager, in the most significant decision she makes, goes directly against what you think is the right thing to do?

    BUFFETT: Well, I think — I think Kraft has got a wonderful portfolio of businesses including their pizza business which Nestle now has, having paid $1.2 billion more for it than we received in terms of cash. I think the products — you know, I’d love to own Oreo cookies or A-1 Sauce or whatever it may be personally. And I think Irene has done a good job in operations. I like Irene. I mean, she’s been straightforward with me. We just disagree. She thinks it’s a good deal. I think it’s a bad deal. I think she’s a decent person. She could be a trustee under my will. I just don’t want her making this particular deal.

    BECKY: We called Ackman the activist investor today. Hello.

    BUFFETT: I’ll go back into my shell. This may be Groundhog Day or something. Who knows?

    JOE: I told you about that pizza deal, but with me it was, Kraft makes cheese. Pizza has cheese. Then there’s chocolate. And it just didn’t seem to be this, you know, Smucker’s with Jif peanut butter. I understood that one, peanut butter and jelly.

    CARL: I said your analysis was a little more astute than based on what flavors go well together.

    JOE: You talk multiples and all this other stuff and pre-tax. But, I mean, it is telling that selling a very good business to be able to do it, you know, looks like a good idea unless you look closely, right?

    BUFFETT: Well, when you look closely, you find $3.7 billion becomes $2.5 billion. And it was an enormously tax inefficient way to get rid of it. If you wanted to sell it, it was tax inefficient. Back when Kraft got rid of Post cereals, they did it in a tax-efficient way. It’s not that they don’t know how to do it, but in this case, they did it in an enormously tax-inefficient way. When you have a business with virtually no basis, Procter & Gamble’s gone through this, Kraft, other people. There are ways to handle spinoffs that avoid cutting the government in for almost one-third ownership of the business. And unfortunately they headlined the $3.7 billion. I don’t think I’ve read anyplace about the fact that they’re only getting $2.5 billion. And it was Nestle that pointed out that this business does $2.1 billion in sales and makes $280 million. And giving up $280 million of earnings in a business that’s been growing over the years for $2.5 billion of cash, I think, is a big mistake and I think it’s a bigger mistake when you’re paying — probably counting all of the costs involved including the undervaluation of the Kraft shared given, you’re probably paying in the range of maybe 17 times earnings for Cadbury, I think is a big mistake.

    BECKY: You said at this point you don’t have a vote in this. The only way you can vote is with your feet to sell the shares. You said that gets expensive. Does that mean you’re staying in this despite the fact that you hate the deal?

    BUFFETT: I think Kraft is still undervalued. I just don’t think it’s as undervalued as three weeks ago.

    BECKY: We showed a bid/ask, the shares are off by more than 2%. Based on your comments today, people will think you’re off your rocker. You’re shooting yourself in the foot.

    BUFFETT: No, Kraft is, in my view, and probably Bill Ackman’s view, Kraft was significantly undervalued. It’s just less undervalued because it’s issuing a bunch of stock at a cheap price, and it’s paying a full price and it’s sold a good business. That hurts the value. Now, how much it’s hurt the value? Does it hurt at the $2, $3 a share? I thought it was worth a lot more than $27 or $28.

    JOE: How does the Cadbury valuation measure up with the Wrigley Mars valuation, Warren?

    BUFFETT: Well, the Wrigley Mars valuation was a very high valuation. We were a financing partner in that. There’s no question that the Wrigley valuation was a high valuation. Mars —

    JOE: That’s the difference, though, as a financing partner.

    BUFFETT: But that is no reason — that is no reason to pay the same price for something else. I mean, I have investment bankers come around me all the time and say this thing sold at 14 times earnings and therefore you could pay 13. I say, you know, we set our own standards for what makes sense.

    BECKY: Why does Burlington northern make sense? If you’re going to be splitting the stock and paying for part of the deal in stock which you traditionally hate doing.

    BUFFETT: I hate it. I’ve written the annual report and I say that I enjoy issuing shares at Berkshire about as much as I enjoy prepping for a colonoscopy. This is not my idea of fun. And truthfully, Burlington shares — shareholders are receiving $100 a share. It’s costing us somewhat more than that because I do consider Berkshire at selling lower ratios to book value than it has in many years. We are giving up something that I don’t like to give up in which I think is somewhat underpriced. So it’s costing us a little more. On the other hand, we already own 22.6% which we bought for cash. We gave the minimum amount of stock we can do in this. We’re getting $22 billion deployed in cash that I like overall. But it was a very, very close thing. If we had to give any more stock, we wouldn’t have done the deal. I’ve never said this is a bargain deal. I think it’s a great long-term asset for us to own. And I think it’s something where we’ll get a chance to use cash intelligently over the next century. But it is no bargain deal. I wish I would have bought the pizza business at nine times pretax earnings. But one doesn’t preclude the other.

    BECKY: Wow! Does Irene Rosenfeld — you said you’ve had conversations with her. She knows exactly how you feel?

    BUFFETT: Sure, I know how she feels. It’s very cordial. She’s a very decent person. And she is saying exactly what she believes. There’s no question about that. I’m saying what I believe, as you can tell, too. It’s a difference of opinion. You know, they may evaluate money. Of course, you get investment bankers in the picture. Everybody basically, there’s a deal momentum that gets created in any transaction. That’s not unique to Kraft. I’ve seen that — I’ve been on 19 boards. I’ve seen it for 50 years. Maybe I’m susceptible to it, too. Maybe when I hear that choo choo, I get carried away myself. We did pay right up to the absolute hilt for Burlington, no question.

    BECKY: Have you heard from any of you other companies you own major stakes in, once they see you taking this activist bent, does that worry them?

    BUFFETT: They figure I’ve gotten it out of my system so they don’t have to worry, and they’re right. No, we feel good — I feel good about Irene as an operator. She will do as good a job with this as can be done. It’s just what was paid for.

    BECKY: You recognize the irony that when you came out and voted no against the issuance of stock for Kraft so that they could go ahead with this deal, you drove up Kraft’s share value. People thought, okay, they’re not going to overpay for this. And that, in turn, allowed Kraft to go ahead and make this higher bid without having to ask your permission on stuff.

    BUFFETT: It’s worked out that way. I mean, I guess they would have gone up anyway.

    BECKY: They would have.

    BUFFETT: I don’t know that and nobody knows. Clearly, they want the deal, you know. I’ve seen this so many times. If you really want the deal, you know, you’ll have all the people that work for you telling you to do — you know, it’s team spirit. It’s winning. It really isn’t a win. Whenever a company makes a deal, I go to the store and I buy a congratulations card and I buy a sympathy card. And then five years later I decide which one to send.

    BECKY: Let’s talk about a couple of your other holdings. There was some news, I think it was yesterday, POSCO, the Korean steel company, put out a press release and said Warren buffett plans to buy more shares in the future. Is that true?

    BUFFETT: I think I have to brush up on my Korean a little bit. I said that I like the company a lot. I said I wished I had bought more when it was a lot cheaper within the past year. It got way down in terms of price. It’s a wonderful company, but I don’t have plans to buy more. If it went down significantly, I might very well buy more. Certainly I have no plans to sell any. But no, we have no buy orders in.

    BECKY: So that could be lost in translation?

    BUFFETT: I think it was, yeah.

    BECKY: Another deal that was a big talk this week was Swiss Re, your taking on a little over $1.25 billion worth of business for them?

    BUFFETT: Over time, that contract will probably result in perhaps $50 billion of premiums. It’s the largest — to my knowledge, it’s the largest insurance contract ever written.

    BECKY: The largest insurance contract ever written.

    BUFFETT: I wouldn’t be surprised. I can’t prove that.

    BECKY: I read the Swiss release, and it said that they are doing this because they think that they can get more for their money in other arenas. I think their goal is to get more than 14 times. Right, 14%., 14% for the investment they’re putting in. What’s your reason for why you take it on?

    BUFFETT: I think we’ll make money. It’s very simple. Now, if there’s something terrible, pandemic or if there were some incredible terrorist attack that resulted in mortality in the United States, increasing by a dramatic amount because this is U.S. life business, it’s spread all over. I t’s not just a few policies. It’s millions of policies. Probably hundreds of thousands, certainly. But anything that would change the mortality rate of the United States dramatically upward for any sustained period would be bad for us on this. But if mortality is more or less normal, and particularly if there’s some improvement due to medicine over the years and so on so that mortality improves in the country, then we’ve got a decent, long-term deal. But they’ve got their own reasons in deploying capital in other areas. It can be a good deal for both sides.

    BECKY: We talked with Dave Sokol before you came on about an hour ago. He was talking a little bit about what he sees in the housing market. Obviously, Berkshire has a pretty good feel from a number of its different businesses on where things are headed.

    BUFFETT: It was interesting. I heard Rich a few minutes ago talk about the housing numbers — housing starts being a bad number. You want a bad number for a while. The only way you clean up an excess inventory is to have more demand than supply. We had more supply than demand for three or four years in housing. We produced 2 million housing units a year. We created 1.3 million households. Result: trouble. And the longer you do it, the more overhang in inventory you have. The only way to clean it up, one way, you can start getting 13-year-olds to start co-habiting and create more households that way. I’m sure we’d get a lot of volunteers among 13-year-olds. But if you’re going to have normal household formation, you’ve got to have subnormal housing production to work off the inventory. The lower the number is temporarily, the better. It’s bad for our brick business. It’s bad for our carpet, it’s bad for our insulation business, all kinds of things.

    BECKY: It’s bad for jobs and that presents a problem for the administration.

    BUFFETT: We created the problem. We could have a cash for clunkers program on houses. If we would blow up 3 or 4 million houses today the housing shortage would be over, it would be in the right place. It wouldn’t be my house or your house. But if you have an inventory overhang, you have to have demand be greater than supply for a significant period of time to work it out. And we’re well on the way to that. A lot of the housing problem is behind us. The commercial real estate problem is not behind us. But the housing is.

    BECKY: But are you saying that the administration should not have put in some of these programs to try and ease the pain along the way? Like a cash for clunkers, like the mortgage tax deduction that you can get?

    BUFFETT: Well, cash for clunkers, the idea is if you destroy a bunch of cars, people will need to buy more cars. You could have cash for cream puffs. Bring in your brand-new car you bought yesterday and blow it up, destroy it, and then you’d have demand for one more car. You can always create demand in something like cars, you know, just say half the cars in the United States have to be destroyed tomorrow morning. You’d have the biggest car deal you’ve ever seen. So those kind of programs — and we did some of that in the New Deal. You do it when you force farmland to become fallow for a while. You decrease the output of crops. All kinds of ways of interfering with, you know, with changing the supply/demand situation. But overall, I think particularly if you go back to the fall of 2008, overall, our government has warded off something that would have been very, very, very much worse. I mean, I give the government credit overall. I can knock this program or that program. But overall, the government’s done a good job.

    JOE: Warren, we’ve come back — the market’s come back a long way, as you know. And you’ve commented, and I know on any given day you’re not going to say whether it’s expensive or cheap or whatever. But have we fixed enough of what got us into the mess to warrant being back at 10,700, or is this a bit of a bubble from all of the Fed accommodations and in all the things that the extraordinary measures we’ve taken? Do you have a feeling for whether this is real and supported?

    BUFFETT: Well, I have no feeling at all, you know. As you’ve said, I don’t know where the market’s going to be in a day, week, month or year. I do know that if I had a choice between holding cash or 30-year bonds or owning equities, I wouldn’t hesitate for a second to own equities. You know, the market is up quite a bit from march. But it’s down a lot from three or four years ago. And if I were going to buy a farm, Joe, and somebody said, well, with great certainty, they said, you know, this is going to be a terrible year in terms of weather, I wouldn’t say, well, I’ll only pay $1,100 an acre, but I’ll pay $1,500 an acre if you’ll give me a favorable forecast if I am going to own a farm for 50 years. I am going to have a few lousy years in terms of weather. I’ll have a few good years and a lot of pretty good years. And the idea that you try to time purchases based on what you think business is going to do in the next year or two, I think that’s the greatest mistake that investors make because it’s always uncertain. People say it’s a time of uncertainty. It was uncertain on September 10th, 2001, people just didn’t know it. It’s uncertain every single day. So take uncertainty as part of being involved in investment at all. But uncertainty can be your friend. I mean, when people are scared, they pay less for things. We try to price. We don’t try to time at all. And pricing, I would rather own equities today —

    JOE: People say all the toxics — people say all the problems that we had in March at 666 on the S&P that nothing’s changed. Toxic assets are still somewhere. We’re still overleveraged. You hear that all the time. That nothing’s changed, and here we are 70% higher than where we were. They say it’s just not supportable.

    BUFFETT: Well, I would say they’re making a mistake in terms what they were selling for in March. I mean, you know, if, like I say, if I buy a farm near here, you know, and it turns out to be a terrible year and pests come in and there’s no rain and all that sort of thing, am I going to sell it for half the price it was selling for a year earlier when I know over the next 100 years there’s going to be 90 years that are pretty good and a few bad ones? It doesn’t make any sense to try and time things that way. Nobody knows what’s going to happen tomorrow, ever. The only thing is they get very apprehensive about it at certain times, particularly when other people are apprehensive. When people get scared, they get scared as a group. The confidence comes back sort of one at a time. There has been a lot of things that have been cleaned up in the economy in the last 18 months. A lot of the toxic assets are in better shape. There are going to be 4.5 million homes or thereabouts sold in year. There are 80 million homes roughly in the country. 25 million don’t even have a mortgage. Of the 4.5 million homes that are sold, the people that are buying those are putting down reasonable down payments in many cases, buying much more cheaply, covering it better with their income, so the liars’ loans have just disappeared to a great extent, so every day those homes are going into better hands. 4.5 million homes will be in better, stronger hands, people that can handle payments better at the end of the year than the start of the year. So the system is cleansing itself but it doesn’t do it in a day, a week, a month, or even a year.

    CARL: Warren, there are those out there who argue that the economy is being held together in a way with tape and glue,right? With NBS purchases and stimulus measures and cash for clunkers. Bill Dudley of the New York Fed is out this morning and he says the prospect of another financial collapse, in his words, sort of a reiteration of what he said before, is extremely remote. Do we have the cushion to withstand another big shock or would you side with what Dudley is saying this morning?

    BUFFETT: Well, I think we have the conditions in place to take care of any normal shocks. If you talk about some, you know, major terrorist activity that is carried off or something, I mean, there are exogenous factors that could cause problems now just like they could have five or ten or 20 years ago. And we didn’t know them ahead of time. But if you’re talking about a world where there is nothing of an extraordinary nature, I think the chances of a second financial panic are extremely low.

    BECKY: Warren, when you talk, people listen and people are watching right now. In fact, Jamie Dimon wrote in. He is watching. He says he agrees with most of what you’re saying. He wrote in when you were talking about Washington.

    BUFFETT: I feel good. Jamie is a very smart guy and he has run a bank the right way.

    BECKY: Well, when you start talking about some of these issues, do you talk to other CEOs, especially who are involved in the financial institutions? What’s their take on what’s happening in Washington and how much of this, I guess, political rhetoric and the back and forth about the enemies on Wall Street, how big of a concern is that?

    BUFFETT: Well, they don’t like it, obviously. But Washington doesn’t like them– I mean, it’s, you know, bankers get pointed at, whenever there are problems bankers get pointed at and there are some things to point to but I don’t think, you know, that’s affecting jobs now. I mean, people say, you know, I don’t think anybody is not hiring. If Wells Fargo needs people they’re going to hire people, you know. If they have five or six more percent customers this year than last year, they’ll need more people. They’ll need more people in their mortgage department because it’s increased their share of market. Businessmen make self-interested decisions, you know, just like all of us, and they’re not going to expand if they don’t see demand. On the other hand, if the orders come in, and they will at some point, I mean, I will guarantee you that our brick business and carpet business will be doing a lot better five years from now. I won’t guarantee five months from now. I don’t know when it will change. When it does we’ll be employing more people.

    BECKY: Are banks lending money or is it simply what you’re saying, people aren’t looking to take more money out because they don’t see the demand?

    BUFFETT: Yeah, well, there are relatively few businesses that need more capital now to support more business. Now, there certainly is an economy where that wouldn’t be true, but the people that need business, that need loans to take care of operating losses are — that’s a mistake to lend them money in most cases and there’s all kinds of people that are having financial troubles that would like to borrow money to get their way out of financial troubles. Most of the time that doesn’t work. There are times when it does but most of the time it doesn’t. People wanting money for expansion, where they’ve got profitable businesses, I don’t think are having any trouble getting — but there are — you do not want to go around lending money to people using it to cover operating losses. And there are plenty of people that want you to do it. I — the bankers I talked to are dying to get loans. I mean, the last thing they want to do is sit around with money at Fed Funds rates or Libor. There is no money in that. They want loans. But they want loans where they’re going to get paid back. They took out a lot of loans a few years ago that weren’t so good. I do not think there is a general reluctance at all among banks to lend.

    BECKY: Short of an extreme act like a terrorist act, what’s your biggest concern when you look out over let’s say the next year and the economy?

    BUFFETT: Well, that would be my biggest — it’s going to take time. You know, next day — these things take their way to work through. I mean, people don’t have to buy carpet tomorrow. They don’t have to buy brick from us tomorrow. They don’t have to buy insulation from us tomorrow. Now we’re doing business but not the kind of business we will be doing when things get back to normal. And that will happen, but we are working off excesses. And huge excesses in the leveraging field and it was the first thing I talked about when this happened, that the world was going to deleverage and the only party that could really leverage help was the U.S. government. Thank God it did. I mean, Ben Bernanke has taken on a trillion of mortgages, you know, I mean, he’s got a great hedge fund now. I mean, he’s got these 5% assets and no cost on the liability side of it. He should have negotiated a better deal. He had to buy that trillion. I mean, things are getting righted. Balance sheets are cleaning up. You can take a Goldman Sachs or, you know, the leverage ratio is in half. Their capital is like it’s never been before. So it’s getting righted but, you know, it goes through the wringer and State Farm does wonderfully. The world will go on and we will have a better world five and ten years from now, but five months from now who knows what it’ll be?

    CARL: Warren, there is a — there is a school of thought along those lines that you could have stubbornly high unemployment and could have consumers reluctant to spend but you have companies in the sweet spot of the profit cycle where margins are going up and cash levels are high and productivity is through the moon and you could have the markets diverge somewhat from the overall economy over the next 12 months, don’t you think?

    BUFFETT: Well, I think markets frequently will diverge from the economy. That’s why I think it’s a big mistake for people to start when they think about buying a stock, I think it’s a big mistake to start, to think about what’s going to happen in the next 12 months or the next six months either to the company or to the — or to the economy generally. I do not — if I’m buying XYZ company I am not concerned about what they’re going to earn in the next year. The next year is going to be over and then people are going to be looking at the year after that. If I’m right about where they’re going to be in five or ten years we’ll make a lot of money but I can’t time stocks based on what they’re going to do this quarter and next quarter. I don’t know anybody else that can, but maybe they can.

    BECKY: You know, we are just about out of time today, but you’ve got the shareholders that are going to be coming in here in just about an hour, hour and a half, this morning. This meeting today, you say you think you already have the votes.

    BUFFETT: We have the votes, yeah.

    BECKY: You feel pretty confident about that. Will the shareholders be asking other questions?

    BUFFETT: No. This meeting is just about the split because we didn’t want to turn this into a second annual meeting. We’ll have the annual meeting on May 1st. We’ll have so many people here you won’t be able to believe it and we’re going to take questions even a half-hour longer than normal and go from 9:30 to 3:30 even and then, you know, the press the next day and all of that sort of thing. So this is — limited today.

    BECKY: This vote, you say you have the votes going into it. Burlington Northern shareholders vote next month.

    BUFFETT: Right. Their vote is tougher because they need — because we own the shares we do already — they need 66-2/3% of all shares not owned by Berkshire, not just the ones at the meeting. So they have a pretty high hurdle right now. But the vote is coming in well, but this vote is a lot easier.

    BECKY: There’s been some legislation proposed in Congress that would regulate more of the railroads. Do you have any concerns?

    BUFFETT: Well, the railroads are regulated, should be regulated. On the other hand, it should be what I would call enlightened regulation. The country needs both our utility business and our railroad business to make investments for the future. We should earn a decent return on the capital employed. We shouldn’t earn a fabulous return. We’re not entitled to it, but we should earn a decent return and I think regulation over time will provide that and we’ll do our share. We’ll invest billions and billions and billions to have our facilities prepared for the society of tomorrow.

    BECKY: All right. Well, Warren, thank you very much for joining us this morning. We’ll be here through the day talking a little bit more about what happens at the meeting today but, again, thank you for being so generous with your time.

    BUFFETT: Thanks for having me.

    Current Berkshire stock prices:

    Berkshire Portfolio

    Class A: [BRK.A 104200.00 4170.00 (+4.17%) ]

    Class B: [BRK.B 3476.00 144.00 (+4.32%) ]


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  • CNBC VIDEO: Bill Ackman: How Warren Buffett Convinced Me to Buy Kraft

    Published: Wednesday, 20 Jan 2010 | 10:59 AM ET

    By: JeeYeon Park
    CNBC News Associate

    Kraft did an “excellent job” and paid a fair price in regards to the Cadbury deal, said William Ackman, managing partner at Pershing Square Capital Management.

    “As a result of the Cadbury [CBY 54.30 -0.79 (-1.43%) ] deal, because of fear that the company would overpay, because of the arbitragers shorting the stock, the stock we thought was quite cheap,” Ackman told CNBC.

    Ackman said billionaire investor Warren Buffett — whose Berkshire Hathaway is Kraft’s largest shareholder — was the catalyst for Pershing Square’s decision to buy Kraft [KFT 28.67 -0.74 (-2.52%) ] shares.

    “[Buffett] said Kraft shouldn’t issue too many shares—that was the big risk,” he said. “Once he said that, we thought the likelihood of that happening was very small and we started building our stake in the company.”

    “You’re buying Kraft at less than 15 times earnings at over 4 percent dividend yield and they’re buying one of the greatest businesses of all times.”

    Ackman’s firm Pershing Square has a 2 percent stake in Kraft as of last week and plans to purchase more shares.

    “These are very high margin businesses,” he said. “What Kraft gets is an improved global distribution…If you look at the Kraft brand, it’s an incredible collection of the best brands.”

    “The other opportunity is, we have two businesses, both are underearning, they’re both not achieving what they should be in terms of margins…and I think the combined business has synergy as well.”

    In the last few months, Ackman said his firm bought shares of Nestle, ADP [ADP 41.81 -1.10 (-2.56%) ], McDonald’s [MCD 63.00 -0.48 (-0.76%) ].

    Kraft-ing a Sweet Deal, Pt. 2

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  • YAHOO NEWS INDIA: Fitch downgrades Kraft, Cadbury on takeover plan

    Wed, Jan 20 07:32 PM

    Kraft Foods Inc and Cadbury Plc saw their credit ratings slashed by ratings agency Fitch to the lowest investment grade after Kraft won Cadbury’s backing for its $19.6 billion takeover bid.

    Fitch said on Wednesday it had downgraded its issuer default rating on both companies one notch to BBB-.

    Late Tuesday, rival ratings agency Moody’s said Kraft’s credit ratings would likely remain investment grade following the deal, but were under review for a possible downgrade.

    Separately Standard & Poors said it would keep an A- long-term corporate credit on Kraft, creditwatch negative, and a BBB rating on Cadbury, creditwatch with “developing implications”.

    In a statement Fitch said its downgrades “reflect the anticipated increase in financial leverage of the combined Kraft/Cadbury”.

    The deal will result in Kraft paying 500 pence in cash plus 0.1874 of a new Kraft share for each Cadbury share. The cash portion of around $11.2 billion will be financed with debt.

    Fitch said it expected the combined company’s leverage to reduce to around 3 or 3.5 times EBITDA from 4 times within two years, through growth of earnings and repayment of debt through free cash flow.

    “This level is considered commensurate with the ‘BBB-‘ rating,” it said.

    At 1232 GMT, shares in Cadbury were little changed at 836-1/2 pence, slightly outperforming a weaker FTSE 100, while Kraft shares traded in Frankfurt were up 1.2 percent at 20.6 euros.

    (Editing by Hans Peters and David Holmes)

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  • FINANCIAL TIMES: Buffett hits at Kraft’s ‘bad’ Cadbury deal

    By FT Reporters

    Published: January 20 2010 15:32 | Last updated: January 20 2010 15:32

    CNBC VIDEO: Becky Quick One-On-One with Warren Buffett -21/01/10

    Warren Buffett, the billionaire investor who is the largest shareholder in Kraft, on Wednesday criticised the US food group’s £11.6bn agreement to buy Cadbury as “a bad deal”.

    Mr Buffett told CNBC, the US business television network, that he had “a lot of doubts” over the Cadbury purchase. He said he would have voted against the deal had Kraft sought shareholder approval.

    Kraft investors will not have the chance to vote on the deal, which involves the US group issuing 265m new shares, equivalent to about 18 per cent of its existing share capital, because that is below the 20 per cent level at which shareholder approval is required.

    Mr Buffett, who holds more than 9 per cent of Kraft, said the company was worth more than its current stock price – down 2 per cent at $28.72 in early Wall Street trading on Wednesday – and that its use of stock in the Cadbury deal was “very expensive currency”.

    However, the legendary investor – known as the Sage of Omaha – dismissed a suggestion that he sell his Kraft stake to show his unhappiness with the Cadbury deal. He described Irene Rosenfeld, Kraft chief executive, as a ”good operator” and a ”good person”, adding that has ”cordial relations” with her despite their ”difference of opinion”.

    Mr Buffett had earlier this month called on Kraft investors to oppose Kraft’s plan to issue as many as 370m shares to fund its hostile takeover of Cadbury.

    In the event, Kraft avoided such a large share issue by agreeing to sell its pizza business to Nestlé of Switzerland for $3.7bn to help fund its cash-and-stock bid for Cadbury. But Mr Buffett also questioned that deal, saying it had been done in “an enormously tax-inefficient way”.

    Ms Rosenfeld on Tuesday said the Cadbury deal would “transform our portfolio and accelerate long-term growth from 4 per cent to 5 per cent.” It would also help Kraft increase its long-term earnings per share growth from the 7-9 per cent range to the 9-11 per cent range, she said.

    The US food group finally secured Cadbury’s backing for its hostile approach on Tuesday after raising its offer to 850p a share, ending five months of hostile relations after Kraft made an unsolicited bid in late August. The combined company would rank alongside privately-held Mars as one of the world’s biggest confectionery groups.

    Separately, Fitch, the credit ratings agency, on Wednesday downgraded Kraft by one notch to BBB minus, the lowest investment grade, citing “the anticipated increase in financial leverage of the combined Kraft/Cadbury”.

    Rival agency Standard & Poor’s had earlier said it was maintaining Kraft’s rating at A-minus but was keeping it on on Creditwatch Negative, holding out the possibility of a cut. Moody’s said it was likely to keep Kraft at investment grade, but the rating was under review for possible downgrade.

    The Cadbury deal will push Kraft’s debt pile from $20bn to more than $30bn once it has taken on $9.5bn of debt to fund the cash portion of the offer and assumed more than $3bn in Cadbury debt.

    Ms Rosenfeld said on Tuesday that she did not expect Kraft to be downgraded, given that the expected strong cash flow from the combined businesses would lower its leverage ratio to three times within 18-24 months.

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  • WALL STREET JOURNAL: Bank of America, Wells Fargo Post Better Results

    JANUARY 20, 2010, 10:17 A.M. ET

    Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. reported improved fourth-quarter results — with Bank of America coming closer to the black and Wells swinging to a profit — joining peers that have also posted better results a year after the depths of the financial crisis.

    Bank of America posted a loss of $194 million in the fourth quarter after its mammoth consumer-loan books showed signs of stabilizing, but its once-frothy revenue from trading fell sharply. Still, its results are an improvement over a year ago, when the Charlotte, N.C., bank and its peers were battered by the financial crisis.

    Bank of America’s Chief Executive Brian Moynihan said Wednesday during a conference call that losses from soured loans have slowed.

    “There were several positive trends in the quarter. First, credit quality appears to be stabilizing, if not improving,” he said. Trends this quarter are “supporting our comments in October that overall credit costs were peaking.”

    “Although we believe we saw the peak in the third quarter, net loss levels remain elevated for the next several quarters,” Mr. Moynihan said.

    bofa0120

    Reuters

    Bank of America’s loss narrowed from $1.78 billion. Including preferred-stock dividends and the cost of repaying the federal government its $45 billion in aid, the per-share loss widened to 60 cents from 48 cents.

    Revenue jumped 60% to $25.1 billion because of its purchase of Merrill Lynch a year ago.

    Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had most recently forecast a loss of 52 cents a share on $26.84 billion in revenue.

    In the global markets business, which includes Merrill, Bank of America swung to a $7.18 billion profit from a $4.92 billion loss a year earlier.

    Credit losses rose to $10.11 billion from $8.53 billion a year earlier, while the net charge-off rate was 3.71%, compared with 2.36% a year earlier and 4.13% in the third quarter.

    Bank of America rose 1%, or 17 cents, to $16.49 in recent trading. The stock had gained 8.4% in January through Tuesday.

    Bank of America has a strong investment bank, thanks to its Merrill Lynch acquisition. But the company’s overall performance is heavily dependent on consumers and the economy, especially unemployment, which has a direct effect on borrowers’ ability to make their monthly loan payments.

    In the past week, both J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. reported improved results from a year earlier, when the U.S.’s financial turmoil was at its worst.

    Meanwhile, Wells Fargo swung to a profit of $2.82 billion, or eight cents a share, from a year-earlier loss of $2.73 billion, or 84 cents a share. The San Francisco company said its earnings were reduced by 47 cents for preferred-stock dividends related to the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

    Revenue rose 4% to a record $22.7 billion.

    Analysts had most recently forecast a one-cent-per-share loss on $22 billion in revenue.

    Net charge-offs rose to 2.71% of average loans from 2.5% a quarter earlier and 2.11% a year earlier.

    Wells Fargo added 0.7%, or 20 cents, to $28.48 in recent action.

    —Matthias Rieker contributed to this article.

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  • REUTERS: Buffett sour on Kraft’s candy deal

    Wed Jan 20, 2010 9:57am EST

    CNBC VIDEO: Becky Quick One-On-One with Warren Buffett -21/01/10

    * Says Kraft buy of Cadbury is “a bad deal”

    * Says feels “poorer” after Kraft deals

    * Says Kraft CEO has done a good job on operations

    * Indicates he will not sell Kraft stake

    * Kraft shares down 2.2 pct (Adds more Buffett comments, byline)

    By Brad Dorfman

    CHICAGO, Jan 20 (Reuters) – Warren Buffett said Kraft Foods Inc’s (KFT.N) proposed $19.6 billion acquisition of Cadbury Plc (CBRY.L) is a “bad deal” and questioned how Chief Executive Irene Rosenfeld chose to pay for it.

    While Buffett indicated he would not sell his stake in Kraft, shares of the company fell more than 2 percent as the U.S. food group came under pressure from its largest shareholder.

    “Irene has done a good job in operations. I like Irene. I mean, I find her — she’s been straightforward with me, we just disagree,” Buffett told cable business channel CNBC on Wednesday.

    “She thinks this is a good deal, I think it’s a bad deal. I think she’s a perfectly decent person. She could be a trustee under my will. I just don’t want her making this particular deal,” he said.

    Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (BRKa.N) holds a 9.4 percent stake in Kraft, the world’s second-largest food group.

    On Tuesday, Kraft sealed a deal with Cadbury’s board to buy the British chocolatier for cash and stock after a four-month long hostile takeover battle. [ID:nL9294700]

    The final deal included more cash and less new kraft shares than Kraft had previously offered. It changed the deal to offer fewer shares after Berkshire said it would vote against an initial plan to issue up to 370 million shares.

    Ironically, in lowering the number of shares issued, Kraft no longer needs its shareholders to approve the deal.

    “If I had a chance to vote on this, I’d vote no,” Buffett said. “I think Kraft is still undervalued. I just don’t think it is as undervalued as it was three weeks ago.”

    Buffett also questioned Kraft selling its fast-growing pizza business to Nestle SA (NESN.VX) in a move that raised cash for the Cadbury deal.

    “I feel poorer,” Buffett said of the deals.

    Kraft shares fell 2.2 percent to $28.75 after Buffett’s comments.

    A Kraft spokeswoman defended the Cadbury deal in response to Buffett’s remarks.

    “We respect his opinion,” spokeswoman Perry Yeatman said. “He’s one of our largest investors. We think this is a good deal for us. It transforms our portfolio for better long-term growth.” (Reporting by Brad Dorfman, editing by Michele Gershberg, Gerald E. McCormick, Dave Zimmerman)

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  • BBC NEWS: Warren Buffett attacks Cadbury takeover

    Wednesday, 20 January 2010

    CNBC VIDEO: Becky Quick One-On-One with Warren Buffett – 21/1/10

    Kraft Food’s largest shareholder, billionaire investor Warren Buffett, has come out against the US group’s takeover of UK chocolate-maker Cadbury.

    “I’ve got a lot of doubts about the deal,” Mr Buffett told US television station CNBC. “If I had the chance to vote on this, I’d vote no.”

    Mr Buffett’s comments come a day after Kraft announced that it had agreed to buy Cadbury for £11.5bn ($19bn).

    Before the deal was agreed he had urged Kraft not to overpay for the UK firm.

    Mr Buffett owns his 9.4% stake in Kraft through his Berkshire Hathaway investment group.

    He also said he questioned Kraft’s decision to sell its North American pizza business for $3.7bn earlier this month to help raise the funds to pay for the Cadbury deal.

    “I feel poorer,” said Mr Buffett.

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  • CNBC VIDEO: Warren Buffett’s Right-Hand Man

    Airtime: Thurs. Jan. 21 2010 | 1:47 AM ET

    Talking with Warren Buffett’s right-hand man, with David Sokol, NetJets chairman, president & CEO.

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