Buffett Bailout 2.0? Berkshire Hathaway Misses Earnings By Most Since Lehman

It looks like it is time for Warren to get on the Obamaphone and make it clear this is unacceptable…  

Berkshire Hathaway announced (a 10% decline) $2,367 (Adjusted) EPS, missing estimates of $3,038 by 22.09% – the biggest disappointment since Nov 2008…

 

 

Worst still, Net  for the Omaha, Nebraska-based insurance and investment company fell to $4.01 billion, or $2,442 per share, from $6.4 billion, or $3,889 per share, a year earlier – a stunning 37% plunge.

The driver of the weakness appears to be a fall in the paper value of its investments and its insurance companies reported an underwriting loss.

Berkshire's insurance underwriting , which includes Geico, swung to a $38 million loss.

In the same period a year earlier the business had posted a $411 million after-tax profit.

*  *  *

Perhaps, as David Stockman previously noted, Warren's ride on the coat-tails of Fed exuberance is over.

During the 27 years after Alan Greenspan became Fed chairman in August 1987, the balance sheet of the Fed exploded from $200 billion to $4.5 trillion. Call it 23X.

Let's see what else happened over that 27 year span. Well, according to Forbes, Warren Buffet's net worth was $2.1 billion back in 1987 and it is now $73 billion. Call that 35X.

During those same years, the value of non-financial corporate equities rose from $2.6 trillion to $36.6 trillion. That's on the hefty side, too—- about 14X.

 

 

Corporate Equities and GDP – Click to enlarge

When we move to the underlying economy that purportedly gave rise to these fabulous gains, the X-factor is not so generous. As shown above, nominal GDP rose from $5.0 trillion to $17.7 trillion during the same 27-year period. But that was only 3.5X

Next we have wage and salary compensation, which rose from $2.5 trillion to $7.5 trillion over the period. Make that 3.0X.

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