Insurance dampens
Berkshire results before annual meeting
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[May 06, 2017]
By Jonathan Stempel
OMAHA, Neb. (Reuters) - Berkshire Hathaway
Inc <BRKa.N>, the conglomerate run by billionaire investor Warren
Buffett, reported a 27 percent decline in first-quarter profit on
Friday, and said a loss from insurance underwriting contributed to
operating results that fell short of forecasts.
The results were released one day before Berkshire's annual meeting in
Omaha, Nebraska, where Buffett, 86, and Berkshire Vice Chairman Charlie
Munger, 93, will answer five hours of questions from shareholders,
journalists and analysts.
That meeting is the centerpiece of a festive weekend of events
throughout Omaha expected to draw more than 37,000 shareholders.
Net income fell to $4.06 billion, or $2,469 per Class A share, from
$5.59 billion, or $3,401, a year earlier, when Berkshire had a $1.9
billion gain from its swap of its Procter & Gamble Co <PG.N> stock for
the Duracell battery business.
Quarterly operating profit, which excludes investment and derivative
gains and losses, fell 5 percent to a three-year low of $3.56 billion,
or $2,163 per Class A share, from $3.74 billion, or $2,274.
Analysts on average expected operating profit of about $2,666 per Class
A share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Buffett believes Berkshire's investment and derivative gains in any
given quarter are often meaningless, but accounting rules require
Berkshire to report them in its earnings statements.
Despite the earnings shortfall, Buffett's preferred measure of growth
for Berkshire, book value per Class A share, or assets minus
liabilities, rose 3.5 percent in the quarter to $178,073.
The conglomerate also ended the quarter with roughly $96.5 billion of
cash, equivalents and Treasury bills, a record sum and enough for one or
more major acquisitions.
Berkshire has more than 90 operating units in insurance, chemical,
energy, food and clothing, railroad and other sectors, and also has
large investments in stocks of companies such as Apple Inc <AAPL.O> and
Wells Fargo & Co <WFC.N>.
Many Berkshire units are selling their wares at discounted prices at the
annual meeting, while others offer memorabilia such as "Berky" boxers
and bras, talking Warren Buffett dolls, and rubber ducks that look like
Buffett and Munger for $5 a pair.
Buffett has led Berkshire since 1965.
AIG DEAL WEIGHS, BNSF GAINS
Berkshire said its insurance businesses swung to a $267 million
underwriting loss from a year-earlier profit of $213 million.
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Warren Buffett, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, speaks at
the Fortune's Most Powerful Women's Summit in Washington October 13,
2015. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
This reflected higher losses from catastrophes in 2017, including an Australian
cyclone in March; unexpectedly high losses related to hurricanes and earthquakes
in 2016, and weaker results at the auto insurer Geico and the reinsurer General
Re.
It also reflected the amortization of deferred charges from Berkshire's January
agreement to take on many long-term risks in American International Group Inc's
<AIG.N> property and casualty portfolio, in exchange for $10.2 billion upfront.
That payment helped boost float, or the amount of insurance premiums collected
before claims are paid and which helps fund Berkshire's growth, to about $105
billion from $91 billion at the end of 2016. It also helped boost quarterly
revenue 25 percent to $65.19 billion.
Quarter-to-quarter swings "are about the mix of business and what is coming due,
and what is being renewed," said Cole Smead, portfolio manager at Smead Capital
Management in Seattle. "This is not a disaster."
It is unclear whether Berkshire booked losses as Buffett began selling some of
its stock in IBM Corp <IBM.N>, which it has owned for about six years.
Buffett told CNBC on Thursday he sold about one-third of Berkshire's 81 million
share stake in IBM this year, and no longer values the computer services company
as highly as before.
In other businesses, the BNSF railroad saw profit rise 7 percent to $838
million, helped by higher revenue from fuel surcharges and increased shipments
of consumer products.
Berkshire Hathaway Energy, a utility unit mostly owned by Berkshire, saw profit
rise 14 percent to $501 million, helped by lower pension and maintenance costs
at the PacifiCorp electric utility and a better rate structure for natural gas
pipeline operator Kern River.
In Friday trading, Berkshire Class A shares rose 0.2 percent to $250,000 and its
Class B shares rose 0.1 percent to $166.55. The shares are roughly 6 percent
below record highs set on March 2.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in Omaha, Nebraska; Additional reporting by
Jennifer Ablan; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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