By Luciana Lopez and Jonathan Stempel
OMAHA, Neb. (Reuters) –
Berkshire Hathaway Inc shareholders on Saturday celebrated Warren
Buffett’s 50th anniversary running the conglomerate, as the billionaire
expressed optimism the company would thrive over the long haul, even
after he’s gone.
Buffett and his second-in-command Charlie Munger
fielded hours of questions from shareholders, analysts and journalists
at Berkshire’s annual meeting, including some that leaned toward the
business practices of firms that Berkshire owns or works with, such as
Brazil’s 3G Capital.
The meeting had a more festive air this year,
with one of the more than 40,000 people expected to attend shouting out
“Warren and Charlie, we love you” at the start of the main event of
what Buffett calls “Woodstock for Capitalists.”
“It’s not Disneyland, it’s Warrenland,” said David Rolfe, chief investment officer of Wedgewood Partners Inc.
Berkshire
holds more than 80 companies including the Burlington Northern
railroad, Geico car insurance, Benjamin Moore paint, Dairy Queen ice
cream, Fruit of the Loom underwear, and See’s candies, and owns more
than $ 115 billion of stocks.
It’s breadth and depth, which
includes $ 63.7 billion of cash, has given Berkshire a strong balance
sheet that Buffett said will help it thrive should the economy, propped
up by low interest rates that many expect to rise soon, heads south.
“We
will be very willing to act if economic turbulence of any kind occurs,
and will be prepared, and most people won’t be,” he said. He denied that
Berkshire needed special oversight by having become too big to fail.
Buffett
gave no hints about who would succeed him, though he said he would not
want someone whose sole background is in investments to become chief
executive.
Buffett said experience in operations is very
important. “I would not want to put someone in charge of Berkshire with
only investing experience and not any operational experience,” he added.
He
also offered ringing praise for the turnaround at Burlington Northern,
Berkshire’s largest non-insurance unit, which was plagued last year by
service delays.
“The improvement has been huge, and I want to
thank Matt Rose and Carl Ice for their really extraordinary
performance,” he said, referring to the railroad’s executive chairman
and chief executive.
Rose, considered by some a potential
Berkshire CEO candidate, was not mentioned by Buffett in his annual
letter, which led some to believe his standing had been lowered.
Other
potential candidates for the CEO job include insurance executive Ajit
Jain, whose decision to join Berkshire three decades ago was hailed by
Buffett as was one of the “luckiest” events he experienced, and
Berkshire Hathaway Energy chief Gregory Abel, who answered a question
over renewable energy.
Ken Shubin Stein, founder of Spencer
Capital Management LLC in New York, said the idea a CEO should have an
operational background “makes sense since the CEO needs to work with the
investment team and understand their use of capital for investments,
versus using the capital for investing in acquisitions.”
3G DEFENDED
As is usually the case, no major controversy has been hanging over Berkshire.
But
Buffett did get two questions that led him to praise 3G Capital, which
critics say ruthlessly cuts jobs at companies it acquires. In 2013,
Berkshire and 3G bought H.J. Heinz Co, which is now buying Kraft Foods
Group Inc.
“The 3G people have been successful in building
marvelous businesses,” Buffett said. “I don’t know of any company that
has a policy that says we’re going to have a lot more people than they
need.”
Buffett also defended Berkshire’s Clayton Homes
manufactured homes unit, which was criticized in a recent Seattle Times
article for predatory sales practices that can trap low-income borrowers
in homes they cannot afford.
“I make no apologies whatsoever for
Clayton’s lending terms,” he said, adding that Clayton itself faces
losses when borrowers default.
DEVOTEES LINED UP EARLY
Berkshire’s
annual meeting is Omaha’s top annual draw other than baseball’s College
World Series – reflected in hotel rooms that can fetch more than $ 400 a
night and often sell out nearly a year in advance.
Devoted and sleep-deprived shareholders began lining up outside the venue hours before doors opened at 7 a.m. (CDT).
Kyle
Cleeton, a research analyst for an investment firm, may have gotten
there first, saying he showed up at 10 p.m. the night before.
“I wanted to be first in line,” he said. “You’re not sure how many more years you’re going to have.”
Bill
Guenther, a state forester from Brattleboro, Vermont, said, “I’m one
who likes a good seat.” He arrived at 1:04 a.m. despite having last year
suffered a major foot injury when he collided with another shareholder
as he tried to get that good seat.
“My girlfriend said, ‘You’re not going to do this again,’ and I said, ‘I have to, it’s the 50th year.'”
(Reporting by Luciana Lopez and Jonathan Stempel in Omaha, Nebraska; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Bernard Orr)
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