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How Buffett will win in bailout

Posted Oct 02 2008, 01:52 PM by admin
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At a time when the country is obsessing over the need for a $700 billion fix for the economy, billionaire investor Warren Buffett is positioning himself to be one of its biggest beneficiaries.

Not that Buffett needs bailing out. Instead, he's doing what he does best: Buying assets on the cheap when he perceives he has an advantage.  As BusinessWeek points out, Buffett is doing what investors like John D. Rockefeller and J.P. Morgan have done in crises past, propping up faltering institutions.

But as he does so, Buffett, via his conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway, is playing salesman to average investors, even as he gets deals they could only dream of. Look at the GE deal: Buffett's buying $3 billion in perpetual preferred stock from General Electric. Buffett's investment has a 10% dividend -- $300 million a year --  and GE can’t undo the deal for three years. Buffett also gets the right to buy $3 billion in GE common shares at a price of $22.25. So he can sit back and watch the GE stock chart, and if it hits $45, for instance, he can double that $3 billion without having risked an extra dime.

GE will sell up to $12 billion in common stock to the public, which won't get anything like Buffett's sweetheart deal. Those investors will likely buy in because the Sage of Omaha did.  But all they get plain old shares with much smaller dividends that can disappear well before Buffett’s, in the event that GE runs into yet more trouble. And if they think GE’s stock price is going to $45, they have to take the risk now, not simply cash in down the road.

It's almost identical to the terms Buffett received when making an investment in Goldman Sachs. As Charley Blaine pointed out in this blog last week, Buffett invested $5 billion in Goldman and received preferred stock that pays a 10% annual dividend. In addition, Berkshire received warrants to buy $5 billion in Goldman Sachs common shares at a strike price of $115 that can exercised at any time over the next five years. Like GE, Goldman used Buffett as the pitchman to sell sold $5 billion in common stock.

Even with his advantageous position in both companies, Buffett's investments aren't without risk.  Other investors have bet that institutions like Washington Mutual would recover, and lost their shirts. No one's saying that the share prices of the companies won't go down; Goldman shares sank more than 5% this morning, for instance, while GE was down 9%, to slightly below Buffett's strike price.  That GE and Goldman would do these deals at all with Buffett shows just how desperate they are.

Yet Buffett has another advantage over the average investor. From his perch as the country's most successful, and famous, investor, he gets to scare the wits out of lawmakers just as they consider a bill that in all likelihood will prop up the both of his new investments.

"This really is an economic Pearl Harbor," Buffett said on "The Charlie Rose Show" Wednesday. "That sounds melodramatic, but I've never used that phrase before. And this really is one."

The timing of that interview is no mistake. Buffett wants the House Republicans who rejected the bill on Monday to know where he stands on the crisis, and the bailout, saying he expected lawmakers to do the right thing. The bailout could be a boon for Goldman and GE, both of which have seen their shares plummet more than 40% over the past year.

"In my adult lifetime, I don't think I've ever seen people as fearful economically as they are now," Buffett told Rose.

Fear for some. Opportunity for Buffett. ``You want to be greedy when others are fearful and you want to be fearful when others are greedy.''

-- Christopher Oster

Comments

 

The Voice of Reason is full of nonsense. What anyone is asking for in their comments is for the same opportunites as Warren gets.  If not, please tell us why not.  Is Warren somehow entitled to special deals that the rest of us cannot obtain?  Please, tell my why Warren is sooooo privileged?

 I agree with Tammy. Buffet (and Gates) have donated unprecidented amounts of money to charity. This is America folks. These men in particular reached their success through intellect and innovative thinking...not through weaselling people out of their hard earned dollars.

Thank goodness for Warren Buffett. Without him we would have no comeback at all. And what one fails to remember is that all of our IRA and retirement accounts will benefit from Buffett. And after all, he is buying for his stockholders.

The man has donated more then all of our net worths combined - I suspect.

A brilliant investor who is doing a whole lot of good for the human race in the long run.

Good for him that he was able to cut the deals he has with Goldman and GE.

Right place at the right time in history with the resources and smarts.

Tell me any one of us would do any different.

Regarding swaying the politicians,  that is left up to each politician to explain why they voted the way they did on 10/3 - not Buffett.

Hey Mike, I think Buffet has a bit more integrity than the greedy bastards of wall street who worked up these cancerous mortgage backed securites to feed the world investors at this 10% return vs the measly 2% return for US Treasuries.

Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't that 5 times the risk.

No, I'm not for "bailing out" the bastards but the story line has more to it than just this - try liquidity for starters.

If you want to talk about power try looking into the Worlds Central Banks and the power they have.  

Could it be that all of this stems from the Central Banks?

And is The Fed really a US Government entity.

Look at the interest owed on debt to the Fed.

All smells like a rotten fish in the garbage and we the tax payers in the US on "the hook" for generations if this supposed "Paulson Plan" tanks.

We're on the hook anyway.

JD, correct me if I'm wrong but $ buys privledge.

Always has - that's the bottom line.

Bush has been in The White House because he was born with a silver foot in his mouth but that's a differrent topic for another day.

Buffet began with roughly 100k of OPM.

Worked it with smarts, in a legit manner and is where he is - good for him.

I have no problem with Buffet.

Have a problem with the greedy, side moving bastards of Wall St.

It amazes me that people are very quick to judge and with Buffet investing billions in times like this, obviously shows you that he knows what he is doing. For those who are right down mean and with little or no perception of what is going on in the world, rather say nothing. If you had the financial intelligence like Buffet do, you would too do exactly the same as he did. I wish their was more people like him who still sees opportunity in times like this, stay positive and leave the pessimism for those who's bark is bigger then their bite. Hopefully this will help the individual to understand that it is better to be in control of your own money as to give it to someone who pays you back a small percentage and put the rest in their pocket.

Jealousy is an ugly thing to see.

Every one has the same 24 hours in a day

It just comes down to your priorities

Buffet started around 11 years old, when did you start investing/saving

Josh mentions "leave it to the professionals and shut your mouth"  And Josh, just where has that gotten us and where will it get us ?  The time for having a simple mind and wearing blinders is long ago past.

It is time for every one of us to pay attention, listen, learn, speak, act.  For nothing changes for the herd of sheep except the big bad wolf with very sharp teeth.  

Each person must have the basic mental capacity to take all the information they soak in and make a personal course of action based upon what they have learned. Then you take your path based upon your choices.

Each person has their own story of how this crisis will effect their future.  One has to gain wisdom for ones self to know when to call BS of said professionals.

The mans record speaks for itself

Why should the people buy to help to probe up those stocks' prices when they are getting the raw end of the deal (compared to Buffett)?  Why don't GS and GE open the preferred stocks deal to everybody?  Companies which routinely snarely the average investors should be dumped!  

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