Active 4th Quarter for Berkshire Hathaway’s Stock Portfolio

Published on February 16, 2010 at 5:58 pm

Warren Buffett is not known for frenetic trading, so the fourth quarter of 2009 was a particularly active time for Berkshire Hathaway’s portfolio of publicly traded stocks. There were changes in eighteen of the forty three positions held at the start of the quarter.

Berkshire Hathaway submitted the company’s quarterly 13F Report to the Securities and Exchange Commission this afternoon listing positions held as of December 31, 2009.  The 13F filing only covers holdings that trade in the United States.  The report includes shares of foreign issuers only if those shares are held as ADRs that trade on a United States stock exchange. Shares that trade on foreign exchanges are not reported on this form.

Rail Shares Liquidated and Oil Stakes Trimmed

As previously reported, Berkshire liquidated positions in Norfolk Southern and Union Pacific to pave the way for regulatory approval of the Burlington Northern Santa Fe acquisition which was completed last Friday.

The company trimmed positions in CarMax, Conoco Phillips, Exxon Mobil, Gannett, Ingersoll Rand, Johnson & Johnson, Moody’s, Proctor & Gamble, Sun Trust Bank, United Health Group, and Wellpoint while adding to positions in Becton Dickinson, Iron Mountain, Republic Services, Wal Mart, and Wells Fargo.  There were no newly established positions during the quarter.

It is particularly interesting to note Berkshire’s sale of Exxon Mobil shares given that the company just started acquiring Exxon stock during the second quarter of 2009.

Net Seller During Quarter

In the aggregate, Berkshire was clearly a net seller of stocks during the quarter in terms of market value.  However, it may be incorrect to view the liquidations as a call on the valuation of the overall stock market.  Instead, it is likely that Warren Buffett intended to raise some cash to partially fund the Burlington Northern Santa Fe acquisition.

Resources:

The following spreadsheets summarize the 13-F data in a format that is easier to read compared to the raw 13-F filing.

Berkshire Hathaway 13-F Filing – Excel 2007 Format
Berkshire Hathaway 13-F Filing – Excel 2003 Format

The author owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway.

Related posts:

  1. Berkshire Makes Modest Q1 Changes; Portfolio Up Sharply in First Half of Q2 Berkshire Hathaway shareholders hoping for major purchases of publicly traded...
  2. Berkshire’s Portfolio Results in Q1 2009 Despite a rally in March, the overall stock market was...
  3. Berkshire Adds Exxon and Nestle; Reduces Conoco and Moody’s in Q3 During the third quarter, Berkshire made further purchases of Exxon...
  4. Berkshire Hathaway Reduced Kraft Position During First Quarter In a 13F Filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission...
  5. Berkshire Stock Holdings – Q1 Performance Berkshire Hathaway's stock holdings, as reflected in the 13F filing...

Short URL: http://www.rationalwalk.com/?p=5071

Print This Post Print This Post
Contact the Author

© Copyright and Disclaimer

Posted by Ravi Nagarajan on Feb 16 2010. Filed under Berkshire Hathaway. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Comments are closed

Search Archive

Search by Date
Search by Category
Search with Google
Manual of Ideas

Value Investing Congress

  Seeking Alpha Certified

© Copyright 2010, The Rational Walk