Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Cuts Stake in IBM by Third -- 2nd Update
May 05 2017 - 8:47AM
Dow Jones News
By Nicole Friedman
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. sold about a third of its shares in
International Business Machines Corp. this year, Berkshire Chairman
Warren Buffett told CNBC.
Berkshire held about 81 million IBM shares at the end of last
year and sold 24 or 25 million shares, CNBC said. Mr. Buffett told
CNBC he has "revalued it somewhat downward" because of strong
competition.
The report came ahead of Berkshire's widely attended annual
meeting on Saturday in Omaha, Neb.
Berkshire sold the shares above $180 each, Mr. Buffett said.
Berkshire's average purchase price for its IBM stake was roughly
$170, according to the company's annual report. IBM shares, which
ended trade Thursday at $159.05, hovered above $180 from late
February to early March.
In premarket trading Friday, IBM shares slid 3.8% to $153.05. An
IBM representative didn't provide an immediate comment on the
news.
Mr. Buffett told CNBC that IBM Chief Executive Ginni Rometty met
with him "a few weeks ago" and asked if him about reports that he
was selling IBM stock. Mr. Buffett said he confirmed the selling
but didn't provide the rationale or the details.
Berkshire first bought IBM in 2011. Mr. Buffett had avoided
technology stocks for years, saying he didn't understand them.
After Berkshire's IBM stake was first revealed, Mr. Buffett told
The Wall Street Journal that IBM "fits all my principles...it's
something we expect to own indefinitely."
Armonk, N.Y.-based IBM said last month that its revenue fell for
the 20th consecutive quarter in the first three months of the year.
IBM's legacy businesses have been shrinking, but it has built new
revenue streams in areas such as cloud computing and artificial
intelligence.
Mr. Buffett's willingness to change his mind about investments
and admit his mistakes is "one of his greatest strengths," said
Paul Lountzis, president of Lountzis Asset Management LLC, which
owns Berkshire shares.
"If he really doesn't believe in it...I would have loved to see
him sell it all," Mr. Lountzis told The Wall Street Journal after
the CNBC article appeared.
Mr. Buffett likes to say that his biggest mistakes are those of
omission. But he has had several notable investment reversals over
the years. In his 2008 letter to shareholders, he said his purchase
of ConocoPhillips shares when oil and gas prices were near a peak
and his choice to buy two Irish banks were "unforced errors." Mr.
Buffett also has called his 1965 purchase of Berkshire, originally
a New England textiles company, a major mistake. Berkshire later
closed its textiles business.
In his annual letter to shareholders released in February, Mr.
Buffett said: "We have made no commitment that Berkshire will hold
any of its marketable securities forever....We regard any
marketable security as available for sale, however unlikely such a
sale now seems."
As Berkshire has grown over the decades to a $410 billion
company, it has shifted its focus from stock picking to buying
entire businesses. The conglomerate owns insurers, utilities,
retailers and a railroad, among other companies.
The IBM sale adds to Berkshire's growing cash pile. Berkshire
held $86 billion in cash by year-end, and Mr. Buffett told CNBC
that it now holds about $90 billion.
Write to Nicole Friedman at nicole.friedman@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 05, 2017 09:32 ET (13:32 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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