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Minority Stock Positions Stock Portfolio Todd Combs and Ted Weschler

Buffett’s Belief in Todd Combs and Ted Weschler Continues to Grow

(BRK.A), (BRK.B)

Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, the former hedge fund managers that Warren Buffett hired to manage a portion of Berkshire Hathaway’s stock portfolios, have continued to see their portfolios grow.

Combs was hired in 2010, and Weschler was hired in 2011, and each was initially given a billion dollar portfolio to separately manage. Over the past five years Buffett has increased their portfolios as he has grown confident in their abilities, with the portfolios reaching $7 billion each in 2014.

Those portfolios have now reached $9 billion each, according to information in Warren Buffett’s 2015 annual shareholder’s letter.

The total stock holdings for Berkshire total a whopping $132 billion.

As Warren Buffett’s handpicked protégés, Buffett has praised their success, noting that “They have made Berkshire billions already that we wouldn’t have otherwise made,” Buffett said on CNBC in 2014. “They both have a fundamental combination of soundness and brilliance.”

That brilliance has certainly played out big in 2014 and 2015.

It was Todd Combs’s belief in aerospace manufacturer Precision Castparts that directly led to Buffett’s $32 billion acquisition of the company.

“You have to give Todd Combs credit for the deal,” Buffett said, noting that he had never heard of the company before Combs brought it to his attention. ”Todd told me a lot about it, and over the last few years I have become familiar with it,” he added.

Another winner was Combs and Weschler’s positions in DirecTV in 2014. The satellite broadcaster’s acquisition by AT&T brought an over $3 billion windfall for Berkshire, as its 4.5 million shares were purchased at roughly half the tender price of $95 per share offered by AT&T.

Sooner or later, the day will come when the entire Berkshire portfolio will be in Todd Combs and Ted Weschler’s hands, and Berkshire’s shareholders will be able to sleep well at night knowing it is well-managed.

© 2016 David Mazor

Disclosure: David Mazor is a freelance writer focusing on Berkshire Hathaway. The author is long in Berkshire Hathaway, and this article is not a recommendation on whether to buy or sell the stock. The information contained in this article should not be construed as personalized or individualized investment advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

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Minority Stock Positions

BYD Profits Surge as Electric Vehicle Sales Soar

(BRK.A), (BRK.B)

BYD Company Limited, the Chinese battery and vehicle-maker that is 9% owned by Berkshire Hathaway, saw its net profits in 2015 grow a dramatic 550% to 2.82 billion yuan ($431 million).

The growth comes as BYD took over the number one position as the world’s top selling EV manufacturer.

BYD was only ranked seventh in 2014, and its position as the global leader comes while it has yet to retail its EV cars in the United States.

BYD’s success is due in part to the popularity of its Qin sedan and Tang SUV in China, and on the growing sales of its pure-electric buses, not only in China, but around the world.

BYD has pure-electric bus orders from the U.S, Brazil, Columbia, England, Malaysia and Thailand.

In September 2015, BYD scored a massive order in the U. S. from the state of Washington. BYD won a contract from the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) for up to 800 pure electric buses.

On the auto front, the company will introduce two new models in 2016, the SUVs Song and Yuan.

In 2008, Berkshire Hathaway bet on BYD’s potential and purchased 225 million shares, and today owns roughly 9.1% of the company.

For More on BYD, read the Special Report: BYD, Berkshire’s Tesla.

© 2016 David Mazor

Disclosure: David Mazor is a freelance writer focusing on Berkshire Hathaway. The author is long in Berkshire Hathaway, and this article is not a recommendation on whether to buy or sell the stock. The information contained in this article should not be construed as personalized or individualized investment advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

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Clayton Homes Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett Vigorously Defends Clayton Homes in Annual Shareholder Letter

(BRK.A), (BRK.B)

“The Best defense is a good offense,” is the old saying, that is exactly the approach Warren Buffett continues to take in defending Berkshire Hathaway’s mobile-home manufacturer Clayton Homes from those who say it preys on low-income home buyers.

It was less than a year ago that the company first came under attack, when with the force of a volcano, a Seattle Times and the Center for Public Integrity investigative report titled “The Mobile Home Trap” accused Clayton Homes of relying on “predatory sales practices, exorbitant fees, and interest rates…trapping many buyers in loans they can’t afford and in homes that are almost impossible to sell or refinance…”

Buffett’s immediately addressed the accusations head on at the 2015 Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting, when he said, “I make no apologies whatsoever about Clayton’s lending terms.”

Now, in his 2015 annual letter to shareholders, Buffett has a devoted one and a half pages to defending Clayton Homes from its detractors.

In a vigorous defense, Buffett wrote:

“Our retail outlets, employing simple language and large type, consistently inform home buyers of alternative sources for financing – most of it coming from local banks – and always secure acknowledgments from customers that this information has been received and read.”

In an unusual move, Buffett went so far as to include the actual form on page 119 of the 2015 annual report.

In the Same Boat as the Home Buyer

In defending Berkshire’s practices as a home seller and mortgage lender, Buffett points to Berkshire’s holding on to the mortgages it originates rather than selling them off in the broader market. Buffett notes that this adds risk to Berkshire, and that by holding on to the mortgages it is in the same boat as the home buyer. If a home buyer defaults on their mortgage it leaves Berkshire not only with a bad loan, but it also has to eat the costs associated with repossessing a used mobile home.

“At Clayton, our risk retention was, and is, 100%. When we originate a mortgage we keep it (leaving aside the few that qualify for a government guarantee). When we make mistakes in granting credit, we therefore pay a price – a hefty price that dwarfs any profit we realized upon the original sale of the home. Last year we had to foreclose on 8,444 manufactured-housing mortgages at a cost to us of $157 million. The average loan we made in 2015 was only $59,942, small potatoes for traditional mortgage lenders, but a daunting commitment for our many lower-income borrowers. Our buyer acquires a decent home – take a look at the home we will have on display at our annual meeting – requiring monthly principal-and-interest payments that average $522.

Some borrowers, of course, will lose their jobs, and there will be divorces and deaths. Others will get overextended on credit cards and mishandle their finances. We will lose money then, and our borrower will lose his down payment (though his mortgage payments during his time of occupancy may have been well under rental rates for comparable quarters). Nevertheless, despite the low FICO scores and income of our borrowers, their payment behavior during the Great Recession was far better than that prevailing in many mortgage pools populated by people earning multiples of our typical borrower’s income.”

Congress Weighs In

The Seattle Times report did not fall on deaf ears in the halls of Congress. In January, Representatives Maxine Waters, Michael Capuano, Emanuel Cleaver and Keith Ellison wrote a letter to the Justice Department and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau calling for a probe of the company’s lending practices.

So far, there has been no action by the Justice Department or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and in his annual letter Buffett forcefully touts what he feels is Berkshire’s outstanding record in regards to adhering to the regulations that govern mortgage lending.

“Let me talk about one subject of which I am particularly proud, that having to do with regulation. The Great Recession caused mortgage originators, servicers and packagers to come under intense scrutiny and to be assessed many billions of dollars in fines and penalties.

The scrutiny has certainly extended to Clayton, whose mortgage practices have been continuously reviewed and examined in respect to such items as originations, servicing, collections, advertising, compliance, and internal controls. At the federal level, we answer to the Federal Trade Commission, the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Dozens of states regulate us as well. During the past two years, indeed, various federal and state authorities (from 25 states) examined and reviewed Clayton and its mortgages on 65 occasions. The result? Our total fines during this period were $38,200 and our refunds to customers $704,678. Furthermore, though we had to foreclose on 2.64% of our manufactured-home mortgages last year, 95.4% of our borrowers were current on their payments at yearend, as they moved toward owning a debt-free home.”

While all has been quiet recently in regards to Clayton Homes, the fact that Buffett has devoted so much space in his annual letter to defending the company may mean that more tremors are coming, and issues related to Clayton Homes could erupt again in the future.

© 2016 David Mazor

Disclosure: David Mazor is a freelance writer focusing on Berkshire Hathaway. The author is long in Berkshire Hathaway, and this article is not a recommendation on whether to buy or sell the stock. The information contained in this article should not be construed as personalized or individualized investment advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.