Thursday, October 8, 2009

Warren Buffett: Economy is Flat

OMAHA, Nebraska: Billionaire Warren Buffett said Wednesday the economy has not yet had any bounce and will take some time to recover, but he complimented the government’s efforts over the past year to solve the problems.

Berkshire Hathaway’s chairman and chief executive conducted a couple of live television interviews in New York.

The interviews came before his lunch with a Chinese investment manager who bid $2.1 million in a charity auction to dine with the Oracle of Omaha.

Buffett said during an interview on CNBC that all the reports he sees from Berkshire’s retail, manufacturing and utility businesses show the economy has remained fairly flat.


Buffett joked that he had hoped the cataract surgery he had a couple weeks ago would help him see the “green shoots” of recovery others have talked about, but he still hasn’t.

“There were a lot of excesses to be wrung out, and that process is still under way,” Buffett said.

“And it looks to me like that process will be under way for quite a while.”

Buffett said the United States has a good team leading the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve as it fights what he’s called an economic war.

Buffett complimented Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and the president’s economic adviser, Larry Summers, and he said Bernanke has played a key role.

Bernanke’s term ends Jan. 30, and there is speculation that Obama may appoint someone else, possibly Summers, to lead the Fed.

“I don’t see how you can do better” than Bernanke at the Fed, Buffett said.

Bernanke took decisive action at a time when the nation’s economy needed that. Buffett didn’t weigh in on the wisdom of the new financial regulations proposed by President Barack Obama.

Buffett said he first needs to see the details of what’s included in the plan.

But Buffett said the government needs to do something to make sure the economy doesn’t wind up in a situation similar to last September, when the level of borrowing threatened to cripple the economy.

But that will be hard to do, Buffett said, because it’s hard to write rules to prevent excesses.

“It’s in human nature to go to excess,” Buffett said.

Buffett said he’s sure the actions the government has taken in the past year to help the economy will result in high inflation down the road.

But he said the actions were appropriate.

Buffett addressed several other topics in the interviews besides the health of the economy:

_ Apple should have disclosed Steve Jobs’ liver transplant because it’s relevant to investors, and they’re likely to find out anyway.

“Certainly, Steve Jobs is important to Apple. It’s a material fact,” he said on CNBC.

Buffett said he would disclose any serious health issues to Berkshire shareholders.

_ He has no plans before they mature to sell the $5 billion in preferred shares of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. that Berkshire acquired last September.

They pay a 10 percent dividend, and Buffett said, “I think we’ll make a lot of money out of those.”

_ He doesn’t think the United States will lose its AAA credit rating anytime in the next generation. “As long as you’re issuing money and you’re issuing debt in your own currency, you can print money,” Buffett said to the Fox Business Network.

Berkshire Hathaway Inc. owns more than 60 subsidiaries including insurance, clothing, furniture, jewelry and candy companies, restaurants, natural gas and corporate jet firms and has major investments in such companies as Coca-Cola Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. – AP

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