#1711
Re: El Bar de los Pufforeros. Inversión de la A a la Z: Fondos, ETF, planes de pensiones, acciones, metales preciosos...
El historial esta desde 1956 que se creo el indice, pero hay que buscarlo.
Berkshire’s stock portfolio was ridiculously expensive in 1998, matched by the stock market and likewise by Berkshire’s own shares. Berkshire paid $22 billion in stock for General Reinsurance, of which $14.5 billion was goodwill. That’s a pretty healthy premium for the tangible equity of an insurance company. Must be a catch. Berkshire issued General Re shareholders 272,200 shares of equivalent A shares at $80,882 per share, 2.9 times Berkshire’s March 31, 1998 book value. The catch, part of it: Berkshire’s intrinsic worth was only about half that price, meaning Berkshire bought General Re for a little more than $11 billion, not the $22 billion headline price. Berkshire’s use of its overvalued stock as currency was but one important aspect of the deal. The rest of the catch: The stock portfolio was extremely expensive as well. Fully 75% of Berkshire’s $47.5 billion investment portfolio was invested in very highly appreciated, fundamentally overvalued common stocks. Against a cost basis of $7.2 billion, the large $36.2 billion stock portfolio comprised a whopping 115% of Berkshire’s entire book value.
Prior to the acquisition, 90% of Gen Re’s investment portfolio was invested in fixed-income securities, typical of most insurer’s invested assets. When the portfolios were consolidated, stocks combined at only half of the overall investment mix at year-end 1998, down from a three-quarters weighting in Berkshire’s portfolio prior to the deal. Consolidated equities closed 1998 at $37.3 billion, only $1 billion more than Berkshire owned alone prior to the deal. The fixed-income balance, however, ballooned to $31.2 billion, up from $10.3 billion the year before.
Buying General Re tripled the size of Berkshire’s insurance float, General Re’s float of $14.9 billion being twice as large as Berkshire’s $7.4 billion. Combined float totaled $22.7 billion and increased invested assets at Berkshire by more than 50%, bringing an additional $25 billion into the portfolio. It was an astounding transaction, paying $22 billion in stock which was worth only about half that and adding $15 billion in float which financed an additional $25 billion in investment assets. By design, in my opinion, stocks as a percentage of Berkshire’s book value declined from 115% to only 69%. As a percentage of firmwide assets, the allocation to stocks declined to 30% from 65% without paying a dime in capital gains taxes, then at a rate of 35%.