Betting on Buffett gets cheaper

By Colin Barr, senior writer


NEW YORK (Fortune) -- Starting Thursday, investors will be able to bet on famed investor Warren Buffett's company without breaking the bank.

Shareholders of Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (BRKA, Fortune 500) met Wednesday to approve a stock split covering one class of Berkshire shares. Effective Thursday morning, the split will cut the price of these shares to around $66 each, from a recent $3,300.

buffett_interview_090227.03.jpg
A share of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway will soon fetch less than $100.

The move, which was approved last year by Berkshire's board, could attract some new investors by eliminating the sticker shock long associated with Berkshire shares.

It could also, some observers have suggested, pave the way for Berkshire to join the S&P 500 since it would increase the amount of shares outstanding. The people in charge of maintaining the S&P 500 have typically been wary of adding stocks with low levels of liquidity.

Berkshire has two classes of stock: Class A shares that recently traded for around $101,700 each, and the Class B (BRKB) shares that are to be split 50-for-1. The Class A shares won't be affected by Wednesday's vote.

Berkshire asked shareholders to approve the split so it could offer Berkshire shares to all investors in Burlington Northern (BNI, Fortune 500), the railway company Berkshire agreed in November to acquire in a deal valued at $34 billion in cash and stock. The deal is scheduled to close early this year.

Splitting the Class B shares will make it cheaper for investors to take Buffett's side in the Burlington bet, which he called an "all-in wager on the economic future of the United States."

The split would mark the second time in the company's 45 years under Buffett that it has made some of its shares more affordable.

In 1996, Berkshire sold the cheaper Class B shares to the public for the first time. The company said it made the move in response to the plans of some investment companies to sell products that would let investors invest in Berkshire without paying the full price of a Class A share, then around $35,000.

At the time, the value of the Class B shares was fixed at 1/30th of a Class A share. That will change to 1/1,500th with Wednesday's vote. Class B shares also carry reduced voting rights and can't be converted into Class A shares.

Buffett warned in his 1996 letter to shareholders that the proposed "Berkshire look-alikes" from other investment firms would have tried to "entice naive small investors and would have charged these innocents high fees and commissions."

Buffett said that the 1996 offering, which raised $565 million for Berkshire, was "generally successful" in drawing in shareholders who would hold the stock for the long term. He said it added about 40,000 shareholders to Berkshire's rolls.

Trading in the Class B shares was light initially, with daily volume rarely rising above a few thousand shares through 1997 -- a fraction of the trading in the more expensive Class A shares.

But as Berkshire began using the Class B shares for acquisitions in the late 1990s, trading picked up. Average daily trading volume in the Class B stock has exceeded a million shares in every month since December 2005. Trading in the pricier Class A shares, by contrast, has only rarely exceeded 300,000 shares. To top of page

Frontline troops push for solar energy
The U.S. Marines are testing renewable energy technologies like solar to reduce costs and casualties associated with fossil fuels. Play
25 Best Places to find rich singles
Looking for Mr. or Ms. Moneybags? Hunt down the perfect mate in these wealthy cities, which are brimming with unattached professionals. More
Fun festivals: Twins to mustard to pirates!
You'll see double in Twinsburg, Ohio, and Ketchup lovers should beware in Middleton, WI. Here's some of the best and strangest town festivals. Play
Company Price Change % Change
Bank of America Corp... 13.24 0.03 0.23%
General Electric Co 23.53 -0.13 -0.55%
Pfizer Inc 29.04 -0.07 -0.24%
Microsoft Corp 34.27 0.12 0.35%
Intel Corp 23.92 -0.13 -0.53%
Data as of 4:02pm ET
Index Last Change % Change
Dow 15,303.10 8.60 0.06%
Nasdaq 3,459.14 -0.28 -0.01%
S&P 500 1,649.60 -0.91 -0.06%
Treasuries 2.01 -0.01 -0.59%
Data as of 6:35pm ET
Sponsors

Sections

The fuss over Apple's complex strategies to avoid taxes put the corporate tax code on display in all its convoluted glory this week. More

The 79 tornadoes that hit over three days in 10 states caused billions in losses, with most of damage concentrated in Moore, Oklahoma. More

Vermont, a patent-rich state, is cracking down on so-called "patent trolling," a growing problem for entrepreneurs nationwide. More

New residents are flocking to these 10 cities, which added the largest number of people between July 2011 and July 2012, according to Census Bureau. More

Market indexes are shown in real time, except for the DJIA, which is delayed by two minutes. All times are ET. Disclaimer LIBOR Warning: Neither BBA Enterprises Limited, nor the BBA LIBOR Contributor Banks, nor Reuters, can be held liable for any irregularity or inaccuracy of BBA LIBOR. Disclaimer. Morningstar: © 2013 Morningstar, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer The Dow Jones IndexesSM are proprietary to and distributed by Dow Jones & Company, Inc. and have been licensed for use. All content of the Dow Jones IndexesSM © 2013 is proprietary to Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Chicago Mercantile Association. The market data is the property of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. and its licensors. All rights reserved. FactSet Research Systems Inc. 2013. All rights reserved. Most stock quote data provided by BATS.