finance.yahoo.com
(Reuters) - Warren Buffett may be the world's most famous investor, but even he doesn't get everything right.
Berkshire Hathaway Inc
It is sometimes said that even the best investors might get only six out of every 10 bets right. So while shareholders who have stuck with Buffett, 79, for the very long haul have been amply rewarded, the ride has not always been smooth.
The following are a handful of Berkshire's investments over the years -- the good, the bad and the unknown.
THE GOOD
* In 1976, Berkshire began accumulating an equity stake in auto insurer
* In 1989, Berkshire bought $600 million of preferred stock in Gillette Co, the razor blade maker that had been hurt by the introduction of disposable razors. In 2005, Gillette was acquired by Procter & Gamble Co
* Berkshire owns 200 million Coca-Cola Co
THE BAD
* In 1993, Berkshire bought Dexter Shoe for $433 million in stock. Eight years later, it folded the struggling company into another business. In his 2007 shareholder letter, Buffett called Dexter Shoe "the worst deal that I've made."
* In 2008, Buffett amassed a large stake in oil company
THE UNKNOWN
* Buffett has entered into derivatives contracts, most of which are essentially bets on the long-term direction of stocks and junk bonds. He has said these contracts differ from other derivatives that are "financial weapons of mass destruction" in part because of the billions of dollars of premiums he collects upfront from counterparties, and because Berkshire generally does not need to post collateral.
Berkshire has four major types of contracts:
-- Berkshire has equity index "put" options tied to where the Standard & Poor's 500, Britain's
-- Berkshire has contracts tied to credit losses in higher-risk "junk" bonds, which at year end were on average expected to mature in two years. At year end, Berkshire had a $781 million paper liability on the contracts and said it could in theory owe up to $5.53 billion.
-- Berkshire wrote credit default swaps on various companies, mostly investment-grade. At year's end, Berkshire had no liability on these contracts.
-- Berkshire entered into tax-exempt bond insurance contracts structured as derivatives. At year end, Berkshire had an $853 million liability and $16.04 billion of potential losses. The bonds are largely secured by states' taxing and borrowing power.
* In
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
2 則留言:
所以話, 誰也不要盡信, 自己想清潔才行動.
太多人以為 buy and hold 就可以發達, 但世界是互動的, 變幻莫測 !
張貼留言