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Berkshire Buys Burlington Northern – Analyst Blog

Zacks Market Commentaries (November 3rd, 2009) Writes:
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) said on Tuesday that it is acquiring Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp (BNI) for $44 billion. This is the biggest acquisition ever for Berkshire Hathaway. With this acquisition, Berkshire Hathaway is adding the railroad transportation business to its already diverse range of businesses including retail sales, insurance and financials, newspaper publishing, manufacturing, business services and several regional electric and gas utilities. Berkshire Hathaway, which already owns 22.0% stake in Burlington Northern, has offered $100 per share in cash and stock for the remaining portion of the holding. The transaction which is contingent on approval by two-thirds of Burlington’s outstanding shareholders is expected to close by first quarter of 2010. Burlington Northern will continue operating from its Fort Worth, TX headquarters. Berkshire Hathaway also announced that its Class B common share (BRK.B) will be split off into 50 ...

Berkshire “B” Shares to Split 50 to 1 – Analyst Blog

Tracey Ryniec (November 3rd, 2009) Writes:
Lost in today's news that Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) (BRK.B) was acquiring Burlington Northern (BNI) was the announcement that Berkshire's "B" shares, or, commonly known by investors as the "cheaper" shares, would be split 50 to 1.

It is rare to see a stock split for either the Berkshire "A" shares or the "B" shares. Over the years, Warren Buffett has resisted calls to split the stock.

The "A" shares have long been out of reach for nearly everyone except professional investors. In the past 52 weeks, those shares traded in the range of $70,000 to $119,000 per share.

The "A" shares are obviously not very attainable for most investors.

Many investors turned to the "B" shares but even those "cheaper" shares traded in the range of $2241 to $3969 in the last 52 weeks. Again, for many investors, owning a share of Berkshire was likely out of

...

Video-o-rama: Stress tests ad nauseum

Prieur du Plessis (May 8th, 2009) Writes:

As to be expected, discussions about the stress tests on the health of the 19 biggest US banks dominated the video airwaves during the past few days, with arguments ranging from whether the tests were necessary to whether they were stressful enough.

For the rest, Warren Buffett held his annual Berkshire shareholders’ jamboree - this year sharing both concern and optimism about the future. And as the nascent stock market rally is looking more tired by the day, the debate intensified on whether this was a “real rally”.

In addition to Buffett and the usual suspects of Tim Geithner and Ben Bernanke, commentators featured on camera in this post include Richard Bernstein, Bill Fleckenstein, Nouriel Roubini, Neel Kashkari, Alan Blinder, Russell Napier, Robin Griffiths and Meb Faber.

The selection kicks off with an item in lighter vein - a song entitled

...

Stock Market News for May 4, 2009 – Market News

Zacks Market Commentaries (May 4th, 2009) Writes:

Asian markets rose to a seven-month high on Wednesday, with some Asian benchmarks up more than 5%, as upbeat economic news from China and the U.S. pulled investors from the sidelines.  Data showed China's manufacturing rose for the first time in nine months.  China's Shanghai Composite Index rose 3.3% to 2,559.91 points, while South Korea's Kospi added 2.1% to 1,397.92, its highest close in 2009.  India's Sensex index jumped 6.4% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng climbed 5.5%.

U.S. stock futures suggested a higher opening at the Wall Street. Dow futures were up 49 points, or 0.6%, to 8,230, while the broader Standard & Poor's 500 futures rose 5.50 points, or 0.6%, to 881.60.

Rising consumer confidence and manufacturing data convinced investors that the worst may have passed, pushing major indices higher last week despite a pullback in financial sector shares.  Tech-heavy Nasdaq gained for the eighth straight week;

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Would You Be Interested in Earning a Steady 15% a Year?

Contrarian Profits (April 9th, 2009) Writes:
Notes from the Investment Underground April 9, 2009 Palermo Viejo, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Why you should invest in pipeline companies… Wither Geither’s stress test results? Congress vs the Treasury… Check out of USA Inc with these four BRIC EFTs… How to survive the “Great Money Famine of 2009”… Three questions for Barney Frank… Congressional panel: Liquidate banks, fire top execs… PPIP FLOP… Geithner’s latest Orwellian manoeuvre… And more!

*** We’ve added a new section to Notes. It’s called “Must Reads” and it’s basically a list of the day’s must read articles on money-making and the markets. It’s at the very bottom of the issue. Tell us what you think: info@contrarianprofits.com. Don’t be shy. We’ve got thick skins.

*** We love DailyWealth. It’s quite possibly the single best free source of contrarian money-making ideas out there (apart from Notes, of course).

...
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Stocks Rally While Big Companies Fail

Bill Bonner (March 16th, 2009) Writes:

Hate thy neighbor? Giveth his children money; that will fix them all. Few things are as costly as free money.

When the Spanish Galleons came back from the New World with cargoes of gold and silver coins, the Spaniards thought they’d hit the jackpot. All of a sudden, Iberia had plenty of money. Historians report that the Spanish neglected their fields and their manufactures; now they had easy money to spend. Prices rose quickly. Then, when the treasure ships stopped coming, the Spanish were broke. Spain – and Portugal too – went into a decline that lasted four centuries.

In the late 1990s, America got in the habit of getting shiploads of stuff from Asia – and paying for it only with pieces of green paper. Pretty soon, Americans too neglected their own factories – though not their fields. Let the Asians sweat, they said. We’ll think!

Not much serious thinking has taken

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Global Investing Roundups Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

Contrarian Profits (December 17th, 2008) Writes:

Best Buy Profit Falls 77%; Goldman Sachs Posts $2.12 Billion Loss; New Permits and Starts at Record Low; Brazil Retail Rises 10.1%; Berkshire Buys NC Real Estate Brokerage; Crude Slides in Spite of OPEC

Profit at electronics retailer Best Buy Co. (BBY) fell 77% during the company’s fiscal third quarter ended Nov. 29. The company said it would offer buyout packages to nearly all corporate employees to save on costs as it trudges through a dismal holiday shopping season, the Associated Press reported. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) reported a $2.12 billion, or $4.97 a share, loss for its fiscal fourth quarter, Bloomberg reported. “Our results for the fourth quarter reflect extraordinarily difficult operating conditions, including a sharp decline in ...

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