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June 15th, 2010FinanceWhat does warren buffett think? by Jerry Rodgers
Did you see Charlie Roseâs interview with Warren Buffett? On October 1, the two of them met in San Diego for a brief chat about the economy and the financial markets. Earlier that day Buffett had announced that his holding company, Berkshire Hathaway, would invest $3 billion in General Electric. The great investor was realistic about todayâs economy â and also optimistic.
âItâs like a great athlete thatâs had a cardiac arrest.â Thatâs Buffettâs view of the U.S. economy right now. What led to the heart attack? He puts it as simply as he can: â300 million Americans, their lending institutions, their government, their media, all believed that house prices were going to go up consistently. And that got billed into a $20 trillion residential home market.âEveryone leveraged up, and when âyou have a 20% fall in value of a $20 trillion asset, thatâs $4 trillion. And when $4 trillion [in] losses lands in the wrong part of this economy, it can gum up the whole place.â Now, with so many major financial institutions trying to deleverage, âthere is only one institution in the world that can leverage up in [a] countervailing force to that, and thatâs the United States Treasury.â
âAn economic Pearl Harbor.â Dire words? Well, in Buffettâs view, that was what the last month or so on Wall Street had meant for the country. âIn my adult lifetime, I donât think Iâve ever seen people as fearful economically as they are right now. They are not wrong to be worried.â When something like this hits, he added, âYou better spring into action with the best people you have.â He praised the initiative and vision of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson â and FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair, in his view the unsung hero of the crisis. For the next administration, âitâs more important who the Treasury Secretary is than who the Vice President is.â
Will taxpayers get their money back? âI would bet on it.â Buffett feels that the Treasury Departmentâs plan to purchase hundreds of billions of mortgage-related assets will turn a profit given that they will buy them at market, and also âbecause the United States government has staying power and it has a low cost of borrowing.â The Bush administrationâs plan is, in short, âthe kind of stuff I love to do.â He noted that âif I could take 1% of that $700 billion pot and take the gain or loss from it and be their partner, and they would buy the stuff at market, Iâd make a lot of money.â
âFinancial weapons of mass destruction.â Buffett is no fan of derivatives. âThey destroyed AIG. They certainly contributed to the destruction of Bear Stearns and Lehman.â He feels that if AIG had resisted the temptation of derivatives, it âwould be doing fine today.â He later added that the Federal Reserve structured its $85 billion loan to AIG âvery, very well â they have put themselves in a position where they are very likely to get their money back, maybe more â I mean I want to hire the guy that made that deal. Heâd fit in well at Berkshire.â
The âchoiceâ America is making. In Buffettâs assessment, the U.S. is âto some extent, making a choice between future inflation and getting off the floor. And weâre likely to have more inflation in the future as a consequence of the things we do to fight the present situation.â He cautions that âunemploymentâs going to go up under any circumstances.â
âYou want to be greedy when others are fearful.â Personally, Buffett sees many attractive opportunities right now. Cash reserves are certainly important, âbut when people talk about cash being king, itâs not king if it just sits there and never does anything. There are times when cash buys more than other times, and this is one of [them].â In addition, Buffett reminds us of the inverse of his principle: âYou want to be fearful when others are greedy. Itâs that simple.â
âOh, I think confidence will come back.â When Rose asked him what might ânever be the sameâ about Wall Street or the American economy, Buffett replied optimistically. âWeâve got all the ingredients for a sensational future. Itâs just that right now the athleteâs on the floor. But this is a super athlete.â
âI donât want any viewer to [think] a magic wand exists in Congress,â he stated. âSo theyâre going to see some more bad news. But if we do this, weâre doing the right thing. And if [we do], the system will work over time.â
Play the video. See the entire interview at charlierose.com/shows/2008/10/1/1/an-exclusive-conversation-with-warren-buffett. Or go to cnbc.com/id/26982338/page/2/ for a full transcript. And donât forget to ask your financial advisor for his or her perspective on recent financial developments and the way they may affect you.
Jerry M. Rodgers is passionate writer and loves writing about Retirement and Financial Planning.He is quite impressed with the John Jastremski and his company.
Article Source: http://www.earticlesonline.com/Article/What-does-warren-buffett-think-/1113760
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