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gfp

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Everything posted by gfp

  1. With no stock to buy back, Buffett is busy steadily dividending out the last of his cost basis. Who says Warren doesn't do private equity
  2. Hopefully dealraker will chime in but I just wanted to say the thread title would probably make an excellent ETF.
  3. I wouldn't read too much into a brief spike caused by less than $1,500 in buy orders, followed by what looks to be on its way to a complete reversal of the price move. Anyone could move this thing a thousand percent with their bar mitzvah money.
  4. What's the idea here? I'm assuming you bought 130,000 warrants and not $130,000 worth of warrants (which doesn't look possible). So you spend like a hundred dollars and it becomes worthless when the SPAC liquidates? Am I missing the point? This looks like a zero.
  5. Berkshire reported higher stakes in the 5 Japanese equities and is issuing Yen bonds again https://www.reuters.com/markets/deals/buffetts-berkshire-boosts-stakes-japans-five-biggest-trading-houses-2022-11-21/ https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1067983/000119312522289445/d372820d424b5.htm who says carry trade is dead
  6. Thanks for posting Libs - great stuff
  7. I guess it would be entertaining if the single family home address they list is actually where these geniuses are living. Also, you have to appreciate the honesty in this FAQ entry. Never is a strong word but they weren't afraid to use it:
  8. https://berkshirehathawaytx.com killer name for your crypto biz bro https://berkshirehathaway.com/news/nov1822.pdf
  9. Good luck. Make sure the deals would still close if basically everyone redeems their shares at trust value (which I would expect to happen). I assume the rights are worthless if no deal is consumated but I am not familiar with any of the tickers you listed. Also there does not appear to be liquidity / trading volume for some of those securities. If they don't trade, or have very wide bid/ask spreads, you might find it difficult to execute a hypothetical trade in the real world. If the deals end up closing, consider the possibility that the current price of the Rights may be telegraphing an expected future share price for the post deal shares.
  10. So, whatstheofficerproblem, are you planning to actually short the common on each of these or are you only interested in going long the warrants?
  11. This link opens a PDF of a new E&S Insurance industry publication with several articles quoting executives on the state of the industry. These magazines are usually not free but this one is a new launch from 'The Insurer.' Berkshire is big and growing in Excess and Surplus lines (BHSI) so I am linking it here but it may be interesting to other insurance investors (FFH, MKL, etc) as well. https://pdf.static.prod.wbm.infomaker.io/JcntEWo9rNCEbfRJb1rjM3trOeg.pdf
  12. So Berkshire hired Michael Fowler to run this operation, who is the number one executive in the space. He built a huge operation inside AIG that was called SunAmerica Affordable Housing Partners. AIG sold it to Blackstone I think. This is an in-house operation at Berkshire, not just a case of Berkshire buying tax credits from a bank because Berkshire has a big tax credit appetite. Here is one article that mentions Berkshire's operation and Fowler - https://www.chicagobusiness.com/article/20120412/NEWS03/120419922/oracle-of-omaha-invests-in-chicago-area-affordable-housing
  13. These are from quarterly NAIC filings: NAIC = National Association of Insurance Commissioners. Columbia Insurance is a large insurance subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway that goes all the way back to the Diversified Retailing days (it was a subsidiary of Diversified Retailing, the department store company). National Indemnity even larger, as you would expect. Other individual filers are General Re and Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance. Some insurance subsidiaries don't file on their own because they are subsidiaries of other insurance companies. These are screenshots because to find this information in the filing would take most people a lot of time. Here are a few of the Q3 filings (attached) - edit: they are too big and taking too long to upload so here is one. You can buy the individual filings at the naic website here https://insdata.naic.org Another interesting thing you can see from these filings is the internal structure of Berkshire Hathaway through the multiple Org charts they include on what all the corporate entities are, which subsidiaries own what, etc. Also it becomes very obvious that Berkshire went huge on affordable housing tax credits when it hired over the guy that build AIG's affordable housing business. National Indemnity Q3 NAIC.pdf
  14. After your post I went and looked at Maverick Capital's portfolio. Jesus what a mess. I couldn't even count the number of positions and inconsequential trades made every quarter. To answer your question, they were probably buying the units at IPO knowing that they had some optionality and couldn't lose money on a cash substitute with the possibility of a pop. There are companies that were specializing in these pre-deal SPACs and it was popular when interest rates were lower and SPACs sometimes went up. Now not so much. Guys that routinely did this would get the calls to be offered the new SPAC offerings and the warrants were sort of "free" and had value when they separated. You can still make money buying a SPAC below trust value and voting to redeem when the time comes but there are better opportunities out there. Also a one year t-bill yields 4.63% today so that raises the hurdle on what is worth doing.
  15. If you can't ask him you have to guess. We'll see how big the position gets. Personally I think this is Warren and Charlie and not Ted and Todd. If it blows out to 8 or 9 billion by year end I think we can put high odds on it being Warren.
  16. This screenshot is from National Indemnity Q3 NAIC filing - showing purchases of stock inside National Indemnity only. I thought it was interesting that Buffett was buying TSM as early as August 25th at around $88/share. Makes it more likely he continued to buy the stock after quarter end but that is a guess. (I should add that several of these entries are intercompany transfers and the rightmost column is price paid, second from the right is number of shares) He bought another billion dollars worth of TSM at around $76.84 / sh. inside Columbia Insurance Company.
  17. Yeah I doubt PARA is a Warren Buffett pick. USB was, and he went right up to 10% and kept it just below for years. When Warren starts to sell he usually sells it all, so it could disappear next quarter.
  18. gfp

    China

    That's great - Becky mentions at the end that Charlie had to go because he had another meeting right afterwards.
  19. Looks like USB was one of the big financial stock sales https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/36104/000119312522282565/d302279dsc13ga.htm they also filed in HK with another 14.285 million share sale of BYD https://di.hkex.com.hk/di/NSAllFormList.aspx?sa2=an&sid=2508&corpn=BYD+Co.+Ltd.++-+H+Shares&sd=11/11/2021&ed=11/11/2022&cid=2&sa1=cl&scsd=11%2f11%2f2021&sced=11%2f11%2f2022&sc=1211&src=MAIN&lang=EN&g_lang=en&
  20. yeah he is usually wrong about a lot of little details. I think it is because he can't edit tweets and fires them off in a hurry. As most know, Berkshire is over 10% on BAC and would have been required to disclose any sales within a few days. No sales of American Express either. Berkshire did sell stuff in the category though, but it could be quite a few different securities.
  21. Yes it looks like $8.977 Billion in equity purchases and $5.299 Billion in equity sales in the quarter ($3.678 Billion in net purchases). Somewhere around $880m in CVX shares were added and we could figure out from the public filings what the total OXY purchases were for the Q. They sold stuff out of Banks, Insurance & Finance category - so that could be any of Citi, BK, USB, MA, V, AON, ALLY, MKL, MURGY, Allianz, etc..
  22. Also, interestingly, Warren only repurchased A shares in the quarter. No B-shares were repurchased
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