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WRAPUP 3-Buffett says Berkshire 'fine' with Trump or Clinton

Published 2016-04-30, 05:25 p/m
© Reuters.  WRAPUP 3-Buffett says Berkshire 'fine' with Trump or Clinton
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By Jonathan Stempel and Trevor Hunnicutt
OMAHA, Neb., April 30 (Reuters) - Warren Buffett said on
Saturday that Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa) Inc BRKa.N BRKb.N is poised
to do well no matter who wins the White House in November, and
the billionaire investor defended the performance and tactics of
the conglomerate's several large investments.
Buffett presided over his 51st Berkshire annual meeting in
Omaha, Nebraska, where he and Vice Chairman Charlie Munger
fielded five hours of questions on such matters as Coca-Cola's
sugary drinks, lower shipping volumes on the BNSF railroad,
risks from derivatives, and who might succeed Buffett as chief
executive.
Buffett, a staunch supporter of Democrat Hillary Clinton for
president, was asked about the regulatory impact on Berkshire if
Republican front-runner Donald Trump wins the 2016 U.S.
presidential election.
"That won't be the main problem," he said to audience
laughter.
"If either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton becomes
president, and one of them is very likely to be, I think
Berkshire will continue to do fine."
Because the meeting fell early this year, Berkshire also
released only preliminary first-quarter results rather than full
results, which will come out on May 6.
Berkshire said net income probably rose 8 percent, helped by
a gain from the swap of Procter & Gamble Co PG.N stock for the
Duracell battery business.
Operating profit probably fell 12 percent, however. Buffett
said BNSF was hurt by declining oil prices and coal shipments,
while hailstorms caused losses in Berkshire insurance units.
"Railroad carloading throughout the industry - all of the
major railroads - were down significantly in the first quarter,
and probably almost certainly will continue to be down for the
balance of the year," Buffett said.
Berkshire owns close to 90 businesses in energy, insurance,
manufacturing, railroad, retail and other sectors, and invests
well over $100 billion in stocks.

COKE IS STILL IT
The meeting filled a downtown arena and overflow rooms, and
shareholders could buy products made by Berkshire units at deep
discounts in an exhibit hall.
Buffett suggested that 40,000 people may have shown up for
his "Woodstock for Capitalists," close to last year's record,
though the meeting was streamed online for the first time.
At the meeting, Buffett and Munger fielded dozens of
questions from shareholders, analysts and journalists. A
shareholder proposal for more disclosures on the risks to
Berkshire on climate change was overwhelmingly rejected.
Buffett parried concerns raised by a shareholder, and
previously by hedge fund manager William Ackman, that Berkshire
promotes bad health through its roughly 9-percent stake in
Coca-Cola Co KO.N .
Buffett, who consumes 700 calories of Coke a day, said it
seemed wrong to blame calories alone for rising obesity levels.
"I elect to get my 2,600 or 2,700 calories a day from things
that me feel good when I eat them," he said, including the
Cherry Coke and See's peanut brittle he consumed during the
meeting. "That's my sole test."
Buffett also renewed his defense of Brazilian private equity
firm 3G Capital, which with Berkshire has a controlling stake in
food company Kraft Heinz Co KHC.O , where it has built on its
reputation as a ruthless cost-cutter.
Berkshire is seen as a friendlier owner, but Buffett said
3G's cuts have been "extremely intelligent," and did not appear
a threat to Kraft Heinz's ability to produce packaged goods.
Buffett also defended efforts of Berkshire's NV Energy unit
to persuade Nevada regulators to reduce subsidies for homeowners
there who use solar power, prompting Elon Musk's SolarCity Corp
SCTY.O to say it would cease activity there.
"Ninety-nine percent of our consumers were being asked to
subsidize the one percent that had solar units," Buffett said.
"I personally think that if society is the one that's benefiting
from the reduction of greenhouse gasses, that society should
pick up the tab."
Buffett also emphasized his worry that derivatives could
cause major risks for most of the world's largest banks if
markets were disrupted.
"It is still a potential time bomb," he said, but added that
he was "not in the least troubled" by Berkshire's big stakes in
Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) & Co WFC.N and Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC) BAC.N .
Buffett also said Geico has been hurt because falling oil
prices led to more driving, more accidents and more loss claims,
but said he did not "necessarily see the same trends this year."
He also said there are no "tea leaves" in the recent
announcement that the next chief of the General Re reinsurance
unit will report to Buffett's insurance lieutenant Ajit Jain,
not to Buffett. Some investors believe Jain is a top candidate
to succeed Buffett as Berkshire's chief executive. WAKE-UP
Buffett also said Mark Donegan, chief executive of Precision
Castparts, which Berkshire bought in January for $32 billion,
may now fare even better now that his company has the support
from Berkshire's deep well of capital.
"I would almost rank Mark as one of a kind," Buffett said,
before joking: "If he needs capital, he's got my 800 number."
Shareholders at the meeting included hundreds who waited
hours in a rainstorm before doors opened at 6:20 a.m., 40
minutes early.
"I wanted to make sure I got a good seat," said Kim Baumler,
an office manager for a wealth management company from Fargo,
North Dakota, who said she was at the head of the line at 10:30
p.m. Friday night. "My boss is a huge Warren Buffett follower,
and I got hooked. I wanted to see what it was all about."
Mark Hughes, a money manager from Ashton, Maryland attending
his 25th meeting, said he sees no sign Buffett and Munger are
winding down.
"They're 85 and 92, and look as good as they ever did," he
said.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
INTERVIEW-Berkshire's Clayton sees upturn in business despite
critics
FACTBOX-Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett at a glance

Berkshire preliminary Q1 operating profit falls
PREVIEW-Warren Buffett's shareholder gala enters home stretch

REUTERS TV-Media swarm Buffett http://www.reuters.tv/8vP/2016/04/30/insight-media-swarm-warren-buffett
REUTERS TV-Buffett cuts back his involvement https://www.reuters.tv/8vV/2016/04/30/omaha-comes-alive-for-buffett-s-berkshire-blowout
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(Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Nick Zieminski)

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