According to a Berkshire proxy filing on Friday, David Witt, a
Cincinnati resident who owns nearly $8,600 of Berkshire stock, will
propose the payout at the company's May 3 annual meeting.
Berkshire has not paid a cash dividend since 1967.
"Whereas the corporation has more money than it needs and since the
owners unlike Warren are not multi-billionaires, the board shall
consider paying a meaningful annual dividend on the shares," Witt's
proposal said, referring as Buffett does to shareholders as owners.
Buffett was not immediately available for comment.
His $58.2 billion net worth makes him the world's fourth-richest
person, Forbes magazine said this month.
In opposing Witt's proposal, Berkshire's board said it already
considers annually whether the Omaha, Nebraska-based company should
retain all earnings.
Buffett, 83, has long maintained that he can generate better returns
through acquisitions such as the BNSF railroad and investments such
as Wells Fargo & Co.
He told shareholders in 2011 that Berkshire's share price ought to
fall if the company decided to pay a dividend. Buffett also wants to
keep a $20 billion cash cushion.
PAY RISE
"Our shareholders are far wealthier today than they would be if the
funds we used for acquisitions had instead been devoted to share
repurchases or dividends," he said in his March 2013 annual letter.
[to top of second column] |
"Though large transactions of the BNSF kind will be rare, there are
still some whales in the ocean."
Berkshire also urged shareholders to vote against a proposal that it
set goals for its energy businesses to reduce greenhouse gas and
other emissions. Similar proposals failed in 2011 and 2013.
Buffett controls one-third of Berkshire's voting power. Shareholder
proposals that Berkshire opposes typically fail by overwhelming
margins.
Berkshire also disclosed that Buffett's compensation rose 15 percent
last year to $485,606. That includes his usual $100,000 salary, plus
$385,606 for personal and home security.
The company also said it paid most directors an extra $300 last
year. That meant Bill Gates, the Microsoft Corp co-founder and
world's richest person, was awarded $2,100 last year for his work as
a Berkshire director.
Gates is worth $76 billion, Forbes said.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New
York,; additional reporting by Luciana Lopez; editing by Sophie
Hares)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|