Sunday, May 4, 2008

Worst crisis is over for Wall Street, says Buffett



Omaha/New York: Warren Buffett, chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc, said the global credit crunch has eased for bankers and the Federal Reserve probably averted more failures by helping to rescue Bear Stearns Cos.“The worst of the crisis in Wall Street is over,” Buffett said yesterday on Bloomberg Television. “In terms of people with individual mortgages, there’s a lot of pain left to come.” Buffett, the world’s richest man according to Forbes magazine, said the Fed acted properly when it arranged a $2.4bn bailout in March of New York-based Bear Stearns by JPMorgan Chase & Co. The billionaire said he turned down the opportunity because he lacked enough capital and time to grasp the situation. More failures and wider panic may have resulted if the regulators didn’t halt the run on Bear Stearns, he said.“The worry was that there would be contagion; it was a very real worry,” Buffett said. “If Bear Stearns had gone, the next day, somebody else would have gone. It could’ve been a very, very, very chaotic situation.”Buffett, 77, said he was contacted in March before JPMorgan, the third-biggest US bank by assets, agreed to buy Bear Stearns. The person calling him, whom he wouldn’t identify, was “someone responsible” and wasn’t from the Federal Reserve or the Treasury. The call lasted about half an hour, Buffett said.“As I understand it, Bear Stearns had $65bn due on Monday and I didn’t have $65bn,” Buffett said. “I couldn’t get my mind around that situation in the required time.” New York-based JPMorgan was the right buyer for Bear Stearns, he added.Berkshire had about $35bn in cash as of March 31, according to a regulatory filing yesterday.JPMorgan agreed in mid-March to acquire Bear Stearns, once the fifth-biggest US securities firm, after customers grew concerned about the company’s health and pulled out their money, leaving Bear Stearns short on cash. JPMorgan, which got financial support from the Federal Reserve, raised the purchase price a week later to $10 a share from $2 to mollify Bear Stearns shareholders who said they weren’t getting enough.The world’s biggest banks and investment firms have recorded more than $300bn of losses and writedowns tied to mortgages, bonds and loans.Berkshire’s own investment in derivative contracts recovered between $500mn and $600mn of lost value since the end of March, Buffett said. Berkshire said on Friday the value of the investments had declined by $1.7bn in the first quarter. The entire company’s quarterly profit plunged 64% to $940mn.Buffett is scheduled to embark on a four-city European trip this month to scout potential acquisitions, including family-owned companies. He has been investing in China, Israel and the UK to spur profit growth after saying that US investments meeting his criteria have become scarce.“Over time we’d like to develop more international earnings,” Buffett said. “If it’s a $2bn deal, fine; if it’s a $20bn dollar deal, fine.”Buffett, who made his first non-US acquisition in 2006, paying $4bn for 80% of Israel-based Iscar Metalworking Co, said he can’t predict the location of the next company Berkshire will acquire.“They can come from Europe, they can come from the US, you just never know,” he said. “Somebody, someplace is going to have a situation where we fit. They’re going to call me; I want to make sure I’m on their radar screen.”Buffett is looking to acquire businesses as competition forces down insurance rates in the US Berkshire, which owns National Indemnity, General Re Corp and Geico Corp, typically gets about half its profit from insurance. – Bloomberg

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