Jump to content

gfp

Member
  • Posts

    4,835
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    8

Posts posted by gfp

  1. So I just got a letter in the mail from my commercial bank - not a national bank - that the next 3 loan payments are being deferred for everybody.  This is without discussing it with us first to see if we wanted to not pay for 3 months.  Seems strange to force it on all clients so I assume it was at the very least strongly suggested by the Feds.  Will have to ask around and do some research on why they did it this way.  The interest will be added to principal and they get to pretend all of their loans are performing in New Orleans right now - which sounds preferable to their reality.  Certainly leads to a bing swing in cash flow for the next 3 months.

     

    Are other multifamily investors being told similar / same?

     

     

     

    I think the current situation can create short term disturbances. But my feel was that things had already begun softening and one of the most under appreciated aspects of that was the SALT deduction ban.

     

    Yes, the SALT deduction changes definitely impacts RE values in high tax states - NY, NJ, CT and MA. NY probably the worst.

     

    LOL. That's likely a reason a friend lost a bid on a house against 5 cash offers two weeks ago.

     

    Not.

     

    My cousin is not backing away from 900k house in SF Bay Area suburbs. It will be her primary residence. She is not worry about a downturn and said she will buy more as investments if she see "deals."

     

    RE investors better have DEEP pocket and good relationships with their banks.  I've been hearing from people about investors and flippers about to get caught with their shorts down in a big way soon.

  2. Interesting information guys - thanks.  There is certainly some stress at the banks.  In about a week's time I saw a friend get a 30 year Jumbo(!) loan at 2.5% and then watch local 30 year conforming rates hit 5% briefly in a liquidity / capacity crunch.

     

    In reading articles about the airbnb hosts, I had no idea so many people had built up huge "arbitrage" airbnb businesses where they rent a bunch of units - sometimes hundreds - and host them on airbnb.  I knew about the big corporate players doing it like Sonder - but I didn't realize there were so many people trying to build their little arbitrage business with no capital.  Makes sense in this YouTube 'learn how to be an airbnb millionaire with no capital ' world..  Those guys are scrambling and their landlords will get hit I'm sure.

     

    We have one airbnb and several long term rentals.  The airbnb went to zero on march 20th and we have a lot of nurses and teachers as tenants so we will probably fare ok.  But I noticed commercial banks dragging their feet on loans / terms / lines of credit this past week.  We'll see what this week brings.  I'm still expecting to borrow 5/20 at no more than prime plus one, which is 4.25% right now, so perhaps the bankers will not see it that way.  (these are 75% ltv multifamily commercial 5 year term, 20 year am rates - the standard for my market)

     

    Certainly happy to have the single family house we recently renovated to sell closed in February.  Wouldn't want to be trying o sell something right now.

     

    We tried to buy a 7 unit last week that fell out of contract over COVID fears but couldn't make the numbers work at anything close to asking price (mostly because of condition of the apartments, location was phenomenal) - but those 7 tenants had "I'm not paying a dime in rent for several months" written all over them!  And their landlord was paying utilities for 5 of the units...  Yikes

     

     

  3. I agree Precision hasn't been a great acquisition so far - but how are you not impressed with BNSF results compared to purchase price?  He's been upstreaming huge amounts of cash out of it every year - tax free - vs a purchase price of a bit over $34 Billion if I am remembering correctly.  Plus I think he borrowed like $8 billion of the cash for purchase.  He's basically taken the entire purchase price out in tax free cash dividends and has a sub worth $80 billion or something like that.  And still takes the cash out every year.

     

    The only part I could criticize is the equity issuance but that was the price to do the deal.  Better to issue the equity and make the deal vs miss out on such an important acquisition.

     

    Hopefully he can close on a big acquisition like BNSF (although I'm not super impressed with the results from BNSF). Warren being disciplined on price (and buying in 2009 plus buying almost 20% of the stock at very low prices) helped enormously. Apparently, Precision wasn't a great acquisition either. It might not be possible to find another Geico due to all the capital in the world, but I'm confident he can find something by the end of the year.

    Almost 90 and Charlie is 96 and still going strong!

  4. Robin Raina over at Ebix has been buying shares and issuing press releases noting they are not aware of anything specific going wrong with their company (other than market related COVID fears).  I traded it a bit today, apparently selling out way too early - as it is currently up 66% on the day.  Just remarkable volatility lately.  I bought at 9.15 and 9.19 this morning.  Sold out before this, but currently sitting at 14.50.  Bonkers

  5. I believe it to be true.  It was a Berkshire Hathaway Energy deal. 

     

    "The investment giant was going to provide C$4 billion ($3 billion) for GNL Quebec’s proposed liquefied natural gas plant 290 miles northeast of Montreal, according to Michel Potvin, a city councilor who heads the promotion agency in Saguenay, where the project is based."

     

    Bloomberg journalists are usually pretty good at confirming a story with at least one source with direct knowledge of their subject -

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-03-05/buffett-drops-3-billion-lng-investment-in-quebec-reports-say

     

    The "why" is probably guessing.  And of course BHE could come back to the table at any point. 

  6. Warren is probably aware of how many Annual Reports the company prints each year.  There would be much higher numbers of "look through" shareholders through funds but I would imagine Berkshire and the transfer agent have a good handle on the number of direct individual holders, including the large number held in street name.  The BNSF deal and associated 50-1 share split probably added a huge number of individual holders.

  7. An unusual denial by Berkshire - they must really not want people thinking they are blessing this investment -

    https://www.berkshirehathaway.com/news/mar0420.pdf

     

    In other news, the annual meeting will go ahead as scheduled - possibly with curtailed events.  Lets keep the old folks away from the germs though please...

     

    And - Berkshire is about to sell bonds in Dollars and Euros again.  Preliminary prospectus-es (prospecti?) filed.  Could just be refinance of maturing debt but will be interesting to watch size.

  8. I also prefer Rum and have been a loyal Fleur De Cana (nica) drinker for many years.  I usually drink the 7, 12 or 18 year bottles.  As you probably know, 23 year old rum is not actually 23 years old, but blended from rums of different ages.  Its like the adjusted EBIDTA of the spirits industry.  Zacapa Centenario is 6-23 years old, but even that is probably a fishy statistic.

     

    Zacapa Centenario 23years (prefer rum over scotch ;D)

     

    Duvel

    Sint-Bernardus Abt 12

  9. Terrific interview on CNBC! Biggest news items, Buffett gave up on his flip phone and the crypto coin he received at the charity luncheon 😉

     

    I thought it was interesting when he was talking about apple - a $75-80 Billion position for Berkshire - that he characterized it as their 3rd biggest commitment after Insurance and the Railroad.  Which indicates roughly how he values those two businesses within Berkshire. 

  10. When shares vest as part of a compensation plan it is common for the company to keep some of the shares to help satisfy the employee's tax liability because it looks a lot better than that insider employee being forced to sell stock in the open market to satisfy the income tax on their share based compensation.  Did that make sense?

  11. returning to the topic of sub-trillion-dollar acquisition speculation - Berkshire and/or Berkshire with 3G would be realistic buyers of Thyssenkrupp's Elevator business [ 8 Billion Euros in revenue, 50,000 employees, speculated $20B USD market cap ].  But, of course, the usual consortiums of private equity folks will likely be willing to bid higher. 

     

    https://www.ft.com/content/490b7c12-1846-11ea-9ee4-11f260415385

×
×
  • Create New...