Buffett binging on shares of wirehouse

Buffett binging on shares of wirehouse
With the market selling off, Warren Buffett has been moving in. In fact, SEC filings show the Oracle has been loading up on stock, particularly shares of Wells Fargo. This may be of some interest to advisers, considering the bank's P/e ratio is now less than 9 to 1.
AUG 11, 2011
By  John Goff
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. increased its stake in Wells Fargo & Co. Ticker:(WFC), building equity holdings amid a markets decline that the billionaire investor said provided an opportunity for buying stocks “on sale.” Buffett's firm added 9.7 million shares of the biggest U.S. home lender in the three months ended June 30, boosting the holding by 2.8 percent, Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire said yesterday in a filing that listed its U.S. stockholdings. Berkshire accelerated purchases on Aug. 8 as the Standard & Poor's 500 Index plunged 6.7 percent, its steepest decline since December 2008. “I like buying on sale,” Buffett, Berkshire's chief executive officer and head of investments, said in a television interview with Charlie Rose to be broadcast on PBS. “Last Monday, we spent more money in the stock market buying than any day this year.” Buffett, 80, is spending on stocks and takeovers as near- record low interest rates limit returns in fixed income. Banks, facing tighter regulation, can “still be plenty profitable,” Buffett said last month. San Francisco-based Wells Fargo, which counts Berkshire as its biggest shareholder, fell 12 percent in the three months ended June 30 and has slipped 11 percent in the current quarter. The increase in the Wells Fargo stake cost Berkshire about $277 million, assuming purchases came at the bank's average trading price for the second quarter of $28.53 a share. Stay Tuned “It looks to me that he couldn't resist topping up,” said Thomas Russo, a partner at Berkshire investor Gardner Russo & Gardner. “Stay tuned. If he liked it at the quarter's end, and he has as much cash as he had, there's no reason to think he might not have liked it more in the early half of August.” Wells Fargo rose 89 cents, or 3.7 percent, to $25.02 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, valuing Berkshire's stake at $8.8 billion. Wells Fargo, led by Chief Executive Officer John Stumpf, has slid 19 percent since Dec. 31, better than the 25 percent decline in the KBW Bank Index. Berkshire Class A shares have fallen 9.8 percent this year. Berkshire added a stake in retailer Dollar General Corp. Ticker:(DG) in the second quarter and increased holdings in MasterCard Inc. Ticker:(MA) by 88 percent. Buffett's firm cut its stake in Kraft Foods Inc. by about 5.5 percent to 99.5 million shares. Buffett, Berkshire's chairman and CEO, is reshaping the equity portfolio with Todd Combs, who was hired as an investment manager last year. Combs was assigned to oversee as much as $3 billion with a focus on equities and can make trades without consulting Buffett. It was Combs, 40, who in the first quarter added a stake in MasterCard, a firm that he had bet on while managing hedge fund Castle Point Capital Management LLC. Dollar General The Dollar General stake, valued at about $48 million as of yesterday, may also have been taken by Combs, said Russo, citing the size relative to larger Buffett bets. The addition of Goodlettsville, Tennessee-based Dollar General expands Berkshire's holdings of discount retailers. Buffett's firm owns stock in Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Costco Wholesale Corp. Berkshire's Dollar General investment “is almost like a bet on a declining economy,” said Mark Montagna, senior analyst following retailers at Avondale Partners LLC. Berkshire's biggest holdings, including Wells Fargo and Coca-Cola Co. Ticker:(KO), have slipped in the last three weeks as global equity markets retreated. Buffett has reiterated his view that the U.S. would avoid a second recession in three years. “Financial markets create their own dynamics, but I don't think we're facing a double dip,” Buffett told Bloomberg Television's Betty Liu in an interview on Aug. 6. Confidential Trades Berkshire omitted information about its portfolio for the second straight quarter. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sometimes allows companies to withhold data from the public to limit copycat investing while a firm is building or cutting a position. Berkshire's equity portfolio was valued at $67.6 billion as of June 30, with 40 percent in consumer-products firms and 37 percent in financial companies such as banks and insurers. The rest was in a group Berkshire labels “commercial, industrial and other.” Buffett agreed in March to spend $9 billion on engine additives maker Lubrizol Corp., and this month offered to buy reinsurer Transatlantic Holdings Inc. for about $3.25 billion. Berkshire held $47.9 billion of cash as of June 30. Yesterday's filing by Berkshire includes U.S. holdings. Equity investments abroad are reported to local regulators. --Bloomberg News--

Latest News

Advisor moves: LPL welcomes $750M Osaic team, Raymond James recruits Wells Fargo duo in New York
Advisor moves: LPL welcomes $750M Osaic team, Raymond James recruits Wells Fargo duo in New York

Elsewhere in Utah, Raymond James also welcomed another experienced advisor from D.A. Davidson.

UBS loses arbitration battle in fiduciary fight over foundation funds
UBS loses arbitration battle in fiduciary fight over foundation funds

A federal appeals court says UBS can’t force arbitration in a trustee lawsuit over alleged fiduciary breaches involving millions in charitable assets.

RIA moves: NorthRock adds $800M Parkside Advisors, NFP acquires Levine Group in Tennessee
RIA moves: NorthRock adds $800M Parkside Advisors, NFP acquires Levine Group in Tennessee

NorthRock Partners' second deal of 2025 expands its Bay Area presence with a planning practice for tech professionals, entrepreneurs, and business owners.

Three easy ways to boost your firm’s impact this summer
Three easy ways to boost your firm’s impact this summer

Rather than big projects and ambitious revamps, a few small but consequential tweaks could make all the difference while still leaving time for well-deserved days off.

Hightower taps Osaic alum Scott Hadley as first chief advisory officer, expands C-suite
Hightower taps Osaic alum Scott Hadley as first chief advisory officer, expands C-suite

Hadley, whose time at Goldman included working with newly appointed CEO Larry Restieri, will lead the firm's efforts at advisor engagement, growth initiatives, and practice management support.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.