Investing
Strong Buffett 2013 Annual Report, Yet Book Value Not Keeping Up With Stock
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Warren Buffett has released the highly anticipated Annual Report for Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE: BRK-A), which also contains the highly visible Annual Letter to Shareholders. Buffett is often considered the greatest investor of modern times. What stands out, despite the stock’s strong performance, is another year where the book value growth is simply not keeping up with the stock price.
For starters, Berkshire Hathaway’s gain in net worth was $34.2 billion in 2013, and the book value per share rose by 18.2% to $134,973 per share (from $114,214 at the end of 2012). Berkshire Hathaway did not repurchase shares in 2013 because it did not reach the 120% of intrinsic value threshold.
Berkshire Hathaway’s share price ended 2013 at $177,900.00 versus $134,060.00 at the end of 2012. That is a share price gain of 32.7%. While Buffett keeps talking about the gains in intrinsic value, the raw math simply shows one conclusion – Berkshire’s share price rose by 32.7% in 2013, but the book value rose by 18.2%.
At the end of 2012, we had observed that Berkshire Hathaway’s book value grew by 14.4% and that the stock price premium to book value was 17.4%. At the end of 2013, Berkshire Hathaway’s premium was a whopping 31.8%. That being said, we observed in the full Buffett stock holdings for 2014 that the public stock holdings had reached a value of $104.8 billion – the first time we have seen this over $100 billion.
Again, Buffett talks up intrinsic value as the real yardstick. After all, he is not going to give short sellers and critics a reason to bash him. Berkshire Hathaway purchased additional shares of Wells Fargo & Co. (NYSE: WFC) to a 9.2% stake versus 8.7% a year earlier, and International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE: IBM) to a 6.3% stake versus 6.0%. Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) is far from being one the “Big Four” holdings, but that may change in time.
Buffett explained the shortfall against the broad market. He said, “Charlie Munger, Berkshire’s vice chairman and my partner, and I believe both Berkshire’s book value and intrinsic value will outperform the S&P in years when the market is down or moderately up. We expect to fall short, though, in years when the market is strong – as we did in 2013. We have underperformed in ten of our 49 years, with all but one of our shortfalls occurring when the S&P gain exceeded 15%.”
In 2013, Berkshire Hathaway’s total assets rose to $484.931 billion, up 13.4% from the $427.452 billion at the end of 2013. Total year-end liabilities in 2013 were $260.446 billion, up 10.4% from $235.864 billion in 2012.
Berkshire Hathaway earned $3,035 per share in the fourth quarter, but the adjusted earnings per share was $2,297. Net income was $4.99 billion. Berkshire’s insurance float increased to $77 billion in 2013.
More highlights include:
Lastly, for the M&A readers, Berkshire Hathaway’s acquisition criteria is as follows:
Source: http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/2013ar/2013ar.pdf
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