TRUMP TAX CUT FUELS RECORD PROFIT FOR BUFFETT'S BERKSHIRE
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire
Hathaway Inc on Saturday reported a record quarterly and annual profit, fueled
by a big cut in the U.S. corporate income tax rate championed by President
Donald Trump.
Fourth-quarter net
income increased roughly fivefold to $32.55 billion, or $19,790 per Class A
share, from $6.29 billion, or $3,823 per share, a year earlier.
Quarterly operating
profit for the Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate fell 24 percent to $3.34
billion from $4.38 billion.
Berkshire attributed
roughly $29.11 billion of its net income to the reduction of the corporate tax rate,
to 21 percent from 35 percent, that Trump signed into law in December. Many
U.S. companies’ reported results have been skewed by the law’s impact.
“Buffett has been
quick to say that he thinks that the tax policy changes were going to help
Berkshire and be positive overall,” said Bill Smead, chief executive of Smead
Capital Management in Seattle, a Berkshire shareholder. “It is a bit ironic his
candidate would not have any interest in this whatsoever.”
Buffett supported
Hillary Clinton, a Democrat, in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. “Buffett
doesn’t dwell very long on the politics,” Smead said.
Book value per Class
A share, which reflects assets minus liabilities and which Buffett considers a
good yardstick for Berkshire’s intrinsic worth, also benefited from the tax
cut, rising 13 percent in the fourth quarter to $211,750.
For all of 2017,
Berkshire’s net income rose 87 percent to $44.94 billion. Operating profit,
however, fell 18 percent to $14.46 billion, hurt by a rare loss from insurance
underwriting.
Berkshire’s Class A
shares closed at $304,020.01 on Friday, and its Class B shares closed at
$202.76. Both are up a little over 2 percent this year, but are down nearly 7
percent from their record highs set on Jan. 29.
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