Alleghany said its Chief Executive Officer Joseph Brandon met
with Buffett for dinner in New York City on March 7, where after
some "casual conversation" Buffett offered $850 per share in
cash for the company, less the fee for bankers at Goldman Sachs.
Five days later, Brandon and Alleghany Chairman Jefferson Kirby
met Buffett in Omaha, Nebraska, where Kirby asked Buffett to
make a higher offer, pay Goldman's $27 million fee, or use
Berkshire stock to fund part of the purchase.
"Mr. Buffett reiterated the terms of his original offer,
indicating firmly he did not intend to change his position on
those points," the filing said.
Berkshire, which is based in Omaha, ultimately agreed to pay
$848.02 per share, with the $1.98 difference from $850
accounting for Goldman's fee.
The merger was announced on March 21. Alleghany got 25 days to
potentially find a better offer. Goldman has since asked 31
potential bidders about their interest, the filing said. The
"go-shop" period ends on April 14.
Brandon led Berkshire's General Re unit from 2001 to 2008.
Buffett, 91, has long objected to the costs of doing business on
Wall Street.
He rarely uses investment banks at Berkshire, relying on
98-year-old Vice Chairman Charlie Munger for help in major
capital decisions.
Buffett has praised former Goldman banker Byron Trott, working
with him on purchases of food distributor McLane Co from Walmart
Inc and a large stake in truck stop operator Pilot Flying J from
the family of billionaire Jimmy Haslam.
The Alleghany purchase is expected to close in the fourth
quarter, pending regulatory and Alleghany shareholder approvals.
Berkshire's last major acquisition was the $32.1 billion
purchase of aircraft and industrial parts maker Precision
Castparts in 2016.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Bernard
Orr)
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