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That line jumped out to me as strange as well. I think BHE is more fragmented comprising lots of different business units some of which might have very strong moats but others not so much. I do think BHE being able to deploy more capital from the mother ship into renewables earlier that the competition gives them a huge first mover advantage and allows them to strengthen their moat entrench themselves - for instance, the transmission line project that was recently approved, once it is built they will essentially collect royalties on critical infrastructure for years and there won't be a competing project to displace them.

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BHE has a negative tax rate.  Not many narrow moat businesses can say that!  He has also said before that BHE is a bit of a crown jewel inside of Berkshire.  Regardless BHE is going to be worth a lot more in 5-10 years in the future.  Let's hope they make a distressed acquisition sometime during the next downturn!  

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1 hour ago, yesman182 said:

Curious if you agree with Greg's assessment that "We think Berkshire Hathaway Energy overall is endowed with a narrow economic moat."

 

I don't know much about regulated utilities, but I find it hard to believe someone is going to come into Iowa and compete with Mid America on price, relationship with the community/regulators or by being more environmentally friendly. Seems like the story is similar out west. 

 

I have a hard time following Greg's logic that BNSF is wide moat and the utility is narrow moat. Id be curious to hear how others feel. 

 

 

Not sure if this applies to Greg, but it seems like the Value Line and Morningstar analysts usually have unusually broad coverage, so I pretty much ignore anything they have to say in terms of recommendations. Both are fine for historical data though. 

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8 hours ago, ValueMaven said:

Greg is one of the best Berkshire analysts out there ... so not a relevant comment @KPO

Energy around loving a sell-side analyst on a value forum is unexpected. Of the 7 analysts that cover Berkshire I haven’t seen much in the way of unique insights, but good to hear that you like him. 

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BRK reports earnings this Saturday, the 6th.

 

What is everyone expecting to hear?  They've obviously been putting some cash to work this quarter AND you had BRK stock price drop into the 260's to 270's for awhile so buybacks could have happened at a good clip.

 

Will be interesting.

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From the 10Q.

 

In June 2022, BHE acquired the BHE common stock held by Greg Abel, Berkshire’s Vice Chairman - non-insurance operations, for $870 million. The purchase was pursuant to the terms of a shareholders agreement between Berkshire, BHE and BHE’s non-controlling shareholders. Berkshire recorded a charge of $362 million to capital in excess of par value for the excess of the consideration paid over the carrying value of the acquired noncontrolling interest.

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11 minutes ago, yesman182 said:

From the 10Q.

 

In June 2022, BHE acquired the BHE common stock held by Greg Abel, Berkshire’s Vice Chairman - non-insurance operations, for $870 million. The purchase was pursuant to the terms of a shareholders agreement between Berkshire, BHE and BHE’s non-controlling shareholders. Berkshire recorded a charge of $362 million to capital in excess of par value for the excess of the consideration paid over the carrying value of the acquired noncontrolling interest.

 

I noticed that too.  Sort of surprised they did a taxable cash deal when he had the option to do a tax free swap into Berkshire shares but way to go Greg!  New hockey rinks for everyone!

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14 minutes ago, gfp said:

I noticed that too.  Sort of surprised they did a taxable cash deal when he had the option to do a tax free swap into Berkshire shares but way to go Greg!  New hockey rinks for everyone!

It seems unreasonable to not swap into Berkshire shares. Why pay hundreds of millions in taxes? Wouldn't we rather have Greg invested in Berkshire than sitting on a mountain of cash. On one hand I am glad Greg isn't heavily invested in one part of the conglomerate, but why not swap into Berkshire's shares to his net worth grows as the company grows. 

 

I understand Berkshire doesn't like to issue shares, but this seems like the perfect time to do it. I wonder if Greg did this in hopes that the last few remaining owners of Mid America will follow suit? 

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Yesmans great observation is in the 10-Q on p. 20, last paragraph.

 

Like gfp I would be surprised if this transaction was done on a taxable basis, if the shareholder agreement has had the option to do it as a tax free swap of BHE shares for BRK shares [A or B].

 

I think that the transaction was perhaps done as a tax free share swap, ref. the horisontal line named "transaction with noncontrolling interests" totalling USD M (1,032) in "Consolidated statements of changes in shareholders' equity" on p. 5.

 

 

Edited by John Hjorth
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I do think it was a taxable cash deal with Greg Abel.  A long term capital gain.  I'm sure a chunk is going towards philanthropy as well.  There is a certain badge of honor for Berkshire executives to purchase their Berkshire shares with their own hard-earned after tax money.  Just like Ajit did and just like Warren did.

 

It will be nice to see Greg buy some shares in the open market when he is allowed to.

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Valuation of BHE as per last repurchases done by the company in 2020 was around $53.3 billion. It seem to have increased a lot to about $87 billion if 1% stake is valued at $0.87 billion . Seems like very high jump and out of step with earlier increases in the BHE valuation. I wonder if it was done at higher valuation to account for taxes. 

 

BHE Annual report mentions:

 

Quote

Net cash flows from financing activities for the year ended December 31, 2021 were $(3.1) billion. Sources of cash totaled $2.4 billion and consisted of proceeds from subsidiary debt issuances. Uses of cash totaled $5.5 billion and consisted mainly of preferred stock redemptions totaling $2.1 billion, repayments of subsidiary debt totaling $2.0 billion, distributions to noncontrolling interests of $488 million, repayments of BHE senior debt totaling $450 million and net repayments of short-term debt totaling $276 million.


What is this 'distributions to noncontrolling interests of $488 million'?

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59 minutes ago, adesigar said:

Maybe my numbers are wrong but was it a 10 billion buyback in the last 3 months. Actually mostly in the last month or so

 

I think your numbers are wrong.  A little over a billion dollars worth during June and then another half billion or slightly less spent after quarter end through July 26th.

Edited by gfp
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15 minutes ago, rolling said:

My numbers say 8B in June, and zero in april and may. Did not find july data, though. July numbers attending to stock price most likely took it to the 10B someone mentioned

 

June: 

 

2397 at 425,870.54 = $1.02 billion

plus

25,462 at 276.75 = $7 MILLION dollars worth

 

(there is also a press release that spells it out "approx. $1.0 billion was used to repurchase BRK shares during the quarter")

Edited by gfp
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1 hour ago, valueinvesting101 said:

Valuation of BHE as per last repurchases done by the company in 2020 was around $53.3 billion. It seem to have increased a lot to about $87 billion if 1% stake is valued at $0.87 billion . Seems like very high jump and out of step with earlier increases in the BHE valuation. I wonder if it was done at higher valuation to account for taxes. 

 

BHE Annual report mentions:

 


What is this 'distributions to noncontrolling interests of $488 million'?

 

Valueinvesting101,

 

Please take a look at BHE Annual report 2021, p. 95.

 

Several of the subsidiaries are participating in joint ventures related to : Natural gas, coal, solar & nuclear [, but not wind, hydroelectric & geothermal].

Edited by John Hjorth
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From the 1Q report

 

Number of shares of common stock outstanding as of April 20, 2022:

Class A — 613,707

Class B — 1,285,751,332

 

 

From the 2Q report

Number of shares of common stock outstanding as of July 26, 2022:
Class A — 599,924

Class B — 1,301,126,370

edit
nvm I figured out my mistake. 

Edited by adesigar
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long term bulls on the name should be very happy with these very strong results.  Operating Income was very strong in a very challenging market.  Buyback was not as aggressive as I thought ... so what??  I dont own the stock for Berkshire to gun it higher through buybacks ... BNSF is a monster asset - and I am looking forward to having the Alleghany deal closed soon!!

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