View Full Version : Berkshire Hathaway
Powderworker
Mar 31st, 2005, 06:33 PM
Does anybody here own any shares in BRK? Just wondering how easy it is to buy/sell just one share, since it's a very odd lot (but then, the value of one B class share is $3K anyhoo). Is it worthwhile to own just one share, or do Canadian/US government regulations/taxes make it not worth it?
rain111
Mar 31st, 2005, 08:08 PM
I do not currrently own the stock but from what I read in books about Warren, I don't think Berkshire Hathaway will distribute dividend and thus if you are holding it long term you will not be taxed until you sell your share. Yes you can buy one share of Berkshire Hathaway. Only instituational investors could afford buying 100 shares of BRK.b in one transaction.
UncleSteve
Mar 31st, 2005, 10:14 PM
The class-A closed today at $87,000 !!!!
Interesting reading their annual reports on the website. Warren Buffett is one smart cookie.
sumfunny
Mar 31st, 2005, 10:26 PM
He really doesn't like large volumes and fluctuations in his company so that why there are so few shares outstanding and why they are so expensive
ctam
Mar 31st, 2005, 11:37 PM
Did you see the historic performance of the shares?? :) Warren Buffet is indeed one of the best investors around.
Does anybody here own any shares in BRK? Just wondering how easy it is to buy/sell just one share, since it's a very odd lot (but then, the value of one B class share is $3K anyhoo). Is it worthwhile to own just one share, or do Canadian/US government regulations/taxes make it not worth it?
dlander
Apr 1st, 2005, 12:08 AM
The odd lot stuff does not apply because Berkshire does not split its stock the way most companies do.
ogs20
Apr 1st, 2005, 01:31 AM
Powderworker:
AFAIK, all Canadian brokers handle BRK.A/B orders as manual orders, so it doesn't matter if you buy 1 share or 100 shares. Just don't expect to buy them on the cheap (i.e. pay the offer).
Given BRK will likely never pay any dividend, consider it like buying a closed end fund with all distributions reinvested, then taxed as cap gains when you sell. Better tax treatment than anything else.
dlander
Apr 1st, 2005, 08:44 AM
AFAIK, all Canadian brokers handle BRK.A/B orders as manual orders, so it doesn't matter if you buy 1 share or 100 shares. Just don't expect to buy them on the cheap (i.e. pay the offer).
Given BRK will likely never pay any dividend, consider it like buying a closed end fund with all distributions reinvested, then taxed as cap gains when you sell. Better tax treatment than anything else.
Not true. My discount broker handles it as a stock purchase. I trade online with TD Waterhouse, and the other online discounters are the same. You can see what the bid/ask prices are and can put in you order at the bid same as anything else. No more of a reason to pay the ask than with any other stock.
And while brk has never paid any dividend, Buffet personally said that given the huge Bush tax cut for US citizens receiving dividends, he MAY pay one. Probably a 1 time payment. If Buffet gets opportunities to purchase attractive assets at cheap prices, there will be no dividend, but otherwise it is possible.
And BTW brk shares have gotten a bit cheaper lately due to insurance scandals in the US. Buffet is clean as can be but there is bad publicity anyway. I am hoping the price comes down some more, I love to buy cheap.
ogs20
Apr 1st, 2005, 09:55 AM
Not true. My discount broker handles it as a stock purchase. I trade online with TD Waterhouse, and the other online discounters are the same.
Dlander, maybe you can try entering an order on webbroker for Brk (either A or B) shares
That's right, you can't. If you were to call up an investment representative, s/he will say it's a best-efforts order, and the order will not show until it's filled.
I WORKED at TD Waterhouse in a different life -- I know a thing or two about order routing.
You can see what the bid/ask prices are and can put in you order at the bid same as anything else. No more of a reason to pay the ask than with any other stock
No there isn't; but the difference between the bid-ask is minimal, and if you are seeking liquidity, you might as well pay the extra few bucks. The cost of not getting filled could easily exceed that.
And while brk has never paid any dividend, Buffet personally said that given the huge Bush tax cut for US citizens receiving dividends, he MAY pay one.
True, but Berkshire also targets 15-20% ROE (or some IMO absurd number). That will be very hard if they pay large amounts of dividends. He may be saying that just to set the stage for future "disappointments".
I'll believe it when I see it.
advantage21
Apr 1st, 2005, 04:34 PM
True, but Berkshire also targets 15-20% ROE (or some IMO absurd number). That will be very hard if they pay large amounts of dividends. He may be saying that just to set the stage for future "disappointments".
I'll believe it when I see it.
I'm too lazy to look up the exactly number, but I believe BRK's ROE for the last 30 years is around 20 something % compounded. Although, WEB said he expect BRK's return to be in the single digits going forward since BRK has grown so hugh and he is having trouble finding good businesses that are large enough for him to invest in.
Powderworker
Apr 1st, 2005, 08:26 PM
On TD Waterhouse, I tried to enter an order, and got this message:
"The order details that you have entered require the attention of a Registered Representative. Please contact your local TD Waterhouse office for assistance"
So the order has to be placed over the phone, where I'll have to pay higher commission fees?
dlander
Apr 2nd, 2005, 12:33 AM
Maybe you can try entering an order on webbroker for Brk (either A or B) shares
That's right, you can't. If you were to call up an investment representative, s/he will say it's a best-efforts order, and the order will not show until it's filled.
U are right. You need to call up to have the order placed by a rep.
True, but Berkshire also targets 15-20% ROE (or some IMO absurd number). That will be very hard if they pay large amounts of dividends. He may be saying that just to set the stage for future "disappointments".
I'll believe it when I see it.
U are wrong. Not saying that a dividend is coming as Buffet is still hoping to deploy the capital in a sizable aquisition. But the ROE comment is incorrect. Giving a big dividend would raise BRK's ROE not lower it. They are sitting on over $40 billion cash which is earning peanuts. Pay out a sizable dividend from the undeployed cash and shareholders equity drops. Meanwhile net income barely moves as the cash is earning very little.
Given brk's current balance sheet, the net effect of a dividend is that ROE goes on up on the back of the lower equity.
scottyb
Apr 2nd, 2005, 11:04 AM
It would really suck to buy the stock and then receive a large dividend, because you would have to pay tax on that dividend even though you never participated in the growth leading up to it!
elty
Apr 2nd, 2005, 11:14 PM
wow.... drop $2000 a share on friday!
NoahVail
Apr 3rd, 2005, 03:22 PM
I saw mention of a way you could use Canadian Shareowners Investments Inc. to buy BRK.B-N
See:
http://www.investments.shareowner.com/comm_details1.html
and
http://dripinvesting.org/Boards/Read.asp?MID=32930
NV
dlander
Apr 4th, 2005, 05:37 PM
I'm hoping that brk drops due bad publicity from New York Attorney General Elliot Spitzer's investigation into unethical behaviour in the insurance industry.
Today's price is decent, but what I really would love to get brk for a redflagdeals bargain price.
Barton03
Apr 4th, 2005, 07:22 PM
Who is Mr. Hathaway and why do a lot of wall street people talk about him like the guy who found the cure to cancer? And why doesnt his stock split? doesnt he want more volume???
hagbard
Apr 4th, 2005, 07:37 PM
So, what happens when Buffet dies?
rain111
Apr 5th, 2005, 11:53 PM
Who is Mr. Hathaway and why do a lot of wall street people talk about him like the guy who found the cure to cancer? And why doesnt his stock split? doesnt he want more volume???
Berkshire Hathaway is actually owned by Warrent Buffett. Berkshire Hathaway used to be a textile company. Warren bought the company and moved the company into insurance business.
Warren is the second richest man on earth. Over the past 4 years, Warren is closing in on Bill. He's also known as "Oracle of Omaha".
rfdrfd
Feb 28th, 2007, 11:08 AM
I have put in an order for 1 share of BRK.B. CIBC investor edge online, order went in, as OPEN ORDERS - "OPEN" status.
But its been like 10 minutes now? Still OPEN. So I guess it went thru online, but just hasn't been able to buy any?
My price was MARKET price too
rfdrfd
Mar 2nd, 2007, 03:08 PM
Well, order went thru and I am now part of the Class B BRK.B !!!
See you in 30-40 yrs !!! Hopefully a millionaire !!
climacus
Mar 2nd, 2007, 03:43 PM
After I put in an order, it disappeared from my CIBC InvestorEdge account. Then they called me right away to tell me they submitted a manual order for it but I won't see it on the system until it goes through.
rfdrfd
Mar 2nd, 2007, 03:45 PM
After I put in an order, it disappeared from my CIBC InvestorEdge account. Then they called me right away to tell me they submitted a manual order for it but I won't see it on the system until it goes through.
Wish u good luck too!
climacus
Mar 2nd, 2007, 03:50 PM
Wish u good luck too!
Yeah, that was one heck of an expensive impulse buy, but it beats having the cash sitting in the trading account earning 1.3% interest. :lol:
polaris
Mar 3rd, 2007, 03:25 AM
Buffet is one the few men I'd die to have a chance to meet. Him and Li Ka Shing. Forget Comb-Over-Boy Donald, these guys are the real deal.
iamfat
Mar 3rd, 2007, 03:44 PM
So, what happens when Buffet dies?
the stock price will die too. He's the one running the company, without him, there is no BRK
bionicbadger
Mar 3rd, 2007, 08:40 PM
WTF why isnt this thread locked? No discussion about individual stocks i thought....
MrDisco
Mar 3rd, 2007, 09:00 PM
Buffet is one the few men I'd die to have a chance to meet. Him and Li Ka Shing. Forget Comb-Over-Boy Donald, these guys are the real deal.
he's holding an auction where you can bid to have lunch with him (along with other celebs who's names i don't recall at the moment). naturally its for charity. previous auctions for him have gone over $60k us.
BadDrafter
Mar 3rd, 2007, 09:25 PM
WTF why isnt this thread locked? No discussion about individual stocks i thought....
The price of an individual stock is the same as the price of a luxury sedan. I doubt any of the posters here are lining up to buy them.
hagbard
Mar 3rd, 2007, 09:29 PM
Wow, this is an old thread. I started reading through it thinking "what happens if Buffet dies", and hey, there's a post from me two years ago asking that question. Awfully risky investment, imho.
furball
Mar 3rd, 2007, 11:31 PM
(Since this thread is bumped anyways...)
The Pseudo Death of Warren Buffet (dated June '06): http://www.gurufocus.com/news.php?id=1910
Sylvestre
Mar 4th, 2007, 08:57 AM
k, who's the Star writer doing research here?
http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/187972
dlander
Mar 4th, 2007, 11:49 PM
I bought airline tickets to Omaha for the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholders meeting. My wife is not interrested so I will be flying down with a buddy from my investment club.
If anyone else here is going PM me.
If anyone wants to read Buffett's 2006 letters to shareholders, it just came out last Thursday. Herz da link:
http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/2006.html
duck_oil
Mar 23rd, 2007, 09:22 PM
Wow, this is an old thread. I started reading through it thinking "what happens if Buffet dies", and hey, there's a post from me two years ago asking that question. Awfully risky investment, imho.
I couldn't feel more confident buying shares in a company run by the world's greatest investor. Remember Buffet has hand picked his replacement in case of an emergency.
hagbard
Mar 23rd, 2007, 10:15 PM
I couldn't feel more confident buying shares in a company run by the world's greatest investor. Remember Buffet has hand picked his replacement in case of an emergency.
Only works if he's a clone.
Steeve Urkel
Mar 25th, 2007, 03:33 AM
Buffet is one the few men I'd die to have a chance to meet. Him and Li Ka Shing. Forget Comb-Over-Boy Donald, these guys are the real deal.
one of my relatives might have met or has dealings with "comb over donald":lol:
apparently from what I hear he does not own all the buildings with his name, ex- all the Trump condos going up in different states.
He licenced out his name to some builders, who are then leasing the land the condos are being built on.
I only know this because I know one of the persons that owns the land where one of his named condos is being built.
Knowing this I would rather meet Warren Buffet or Richard Branson also sounds like an interesting person- the Virgin mobile guy...;)