Warren
Buffett doesn’t seem to have much
financial luck with airline companies. The billionaire CEO of Berkshire
Hathaway Inc. has decried airline investing ever since he
got burned buying convertible preferred stock in USAir Group Inc. in 1989.
Berkshire
eventually had to write down the $358 million investment in the commercial
airline operator. In his 1996 annual letter to
shareholders, Mr. Buffett wrote: “My analysis of USAir’s business was both
superficial and wrong. I was so beguiled by the company’s long history of
profitable operations, and by the protection that ownership of a senior security
seemingly offered me, that I overlooked the crucial point: USAir’s revenues
would increasingly feel the effects of an unregulated, fiercely-competitive
market whereas its cost structure was a holdover from the days when regulation
protected profits. These costs, if left unchecked, portended disaster, however
reassuring the airline’s past record might be.” Despite the misfortunes of USAir,
Berkshire sold its shares in 1998 for a “hefty gain,” according to the company’s
2007 annual report.
It
was a theme he returned to in his 2007 letter, where he said that a
durable competitive advantage in the airline industry “has proven elusive ever
since the days of the Wright Brothers.”
“Indeed,
if a farsighted capitalist had been present at Kitty Hawk, he would have done
his successors a huge favor by shooting Orville down,” he joked. “The airline
industry’s demand for capital ever since that first flight has been insatiable.
Investors have poured money into a bottomless pit.”
More
recently, Berkshire-owned private-jet operator NetJets Inc. has been a source
of worry for Mr. Buffett. Although
NetJets operates in the private aviation market, it deals with many of the same
issues as commercial airlines, including high fixed costs such as fuel, and
unionized labor.
NetJets
is in midst of contract negotiations with several unions representing pilots,
flight attendants and other employees. Negotiations have been especially testy
with the pilots’ union, which contends that cuts proposed by the jet company are
“unjustifiable” at a time when business has turned around and NetJets is seeing
higher revenue and earnings growth. For its part, NetJets says cost reductions
“are necessary” because Berkshire requires a greater return on revenue from the
company.
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The
company was nearly felled in 2009 when its wealthy customers cut back on
private-jet use. Mr. Buffett has said the company would have “gone broke” had
Berkshire not guaranteed its $1.9 billion debt load. Things have improved since
then. With the economy bounding back, customers have returned to buying shares
in NetJets planes in exchange for flying hours.
However,
it isn’t one of Mr. Buffett’s best deals. Despite being profitable, NetJets has
not managed to pay a single penny to Berkshire as a dividend in the 16 years
that the conglomerate has owned it, according to a person close to Berkshire.
Its net worth is also worth considerably less than the $725 million in cash and
stock that Berkshire paid for NetJets in 1998. That would likely have been true
for any company that Berkshire bought using its own stock, given the massive
appreciation in Berkshire’s A shares. In this case, Berkshire hasn’t made its
money back on the purchase even excluding the jump in its shares since
1998.
Source: WSJ blog
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