Part I: Nelson’s Notes on Berkshire Hathaway’s 2014 Newsletter

Hi all, It has taken me a few weeks to get a chance to read the annual newsletter of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A, BRK.B), and this year’s installment was not a disappointment. For me personally, there’s not a lot of incremental insights that are gleaned, but I like reviewing the newsletter because the annual installment is invaluable for new investors, especially those looking to learn about the markets and how to think about them. What I’ll do below and in future parts is pull out a sentence or paragraph from the annual report and add to it or comment on it in order to provide further perspective. It should make for some great conversation. I’m not sure how many … Read more

Berkshire Scoops Up Duracell; Hasbro Ponders Dreamworks

Edited November 14, 2014. We should have known that Warren Buffett (BRK.A, BRK.B) was interested in acquiring Procter & Gamble’s (PG) battery business, Duracell. Today, we found out that he was. In exchange for a recapitalized Duracell Company, including $1.7 billion in cash at closing, Berkshire Hathaway will fork over $4.7 billion worth of Procter & Gamble shares to the former parent to bring Duracell’s operations into Berkshire Hathaway. The transaction is expected to close in the second half of 2015. We think it’s mostly a win for Procter & Gamble. The company had announced its decision to shed Duracell in its most recent quarterly report, a move we had been heavily in favor of. Based on trading action following … Read more

Alibaba Still Has Upside to $125+ Per Share

Warren Buffett (BRK.A, BRK.B) hasn’t bought an initial public offering (IPO) in fifty years. The Oracle of Omaha has often said that IPOs are almost always bad investments, which may often be the case. Such a view is great guidance for new and inexperienced investors, but the key word of emphasis in his view is ‘almost.’ Some IPOs are, in fact, worth looking into. Remember: an asset in any form can be mispriced, whether it is a house, rental car, piece of equipment, secondary stock sale, and yes, even an IPO. An asset’s value in any and all cases will be the present value of risk-adjusted future free cash flows after accounting for the current balance sheet net cash/debt position … Read more

Big Blue Blows Up

We knew something was terribly wrong. IBM’s (IBM) earnings quality had been waning, and we thought a big miss might be on the horizon. We wrote here in January 2014: Never did we ever think we’d be using Big Blue as an example of poor earnings quality, but its fourth-quarter 2013 results, released January 21, fit the mold. The first is revenue growth. IBM’s fourth-quarter 2013 revenue dropped 5.5%, a pace that exceeded that of the 4.6% drop for the year, indicating an acceleration of the revenue decline. We’re viewing this as a sign that the worst may still be ahead of Big Blue as it tries to steer the company back to growth. Without a solid backdrop of revenue growth, earnings-per-share expansion will … Read more

The Correction: No Panic Selling on Columbus Day

The past three years have been an anomaly, in our view, with the broader equity markets practically going straight up. For those new to the markets and stock investing, in general, this simply is not how the equity markets behave. Many stock pickers have even become frustrated as a result of the market’s steady-eddy advance with negligible meaningful swings during most of the past 36 months. The market, as measured by the SPDR S&P 500 (SPY), hasn’t had a 10% drop in nearly 1,100 days. As of last Friday’s close, we’re a mere 5.6% from the intra-day high on September 19. During the past three years, the market has made everyone look like a genius, and frankly it has been … Read more