วันจันทร์ที่ 7 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2562

Warren Buffett

Dow Jones Drops Nearly 700 Points; When Long-Term Apple Holders Should Sell

A big haircut in the quarterly revenue outlook for Apple sent U.S. shares tail-spinning in what has become a common refrain in stocks today for the past few months. The Dow Jones industrial average and the Nasdaq composite acted as co-leaders of the sell-off, each falling 2.8% to 3% and ending practically at the session's low.

The S&P 500, which dropped 6.2% (excluding dividends) in 2018, sank more than 2.4%. Intense buying in defensive areas of the market — think dairy and meat, property REITs, gold mining and telecom services — provided little solace for most investors. The Dow Jones utility average rose nearly 0.1% after falling almost 1.7% on Wednesday.
Dow Jones industrial component Verizon Communications (VZ), formerly on IBD Leaderboard, edged up 0.3%. The stock is trying to reclaim its rising 50-day moving average. Watch for a potential new base to form.
Curiously, small caps performed relatively better but still caved in price. The Russell 2000 fell 1.3%. The S&P SmallCap 600 fell 1.8%, snapping a five-day winning streak.
Volume ran higher vs. the same time Wednesday on both main exchanges, according to early data, signifying heavy institutional profit-taking.
Perhaps institutions are selling shares of multinational corporations much harder, given the clear evidence mounting in China of a growth slowdown. U.S. and China have called a 90-day truce on the trade war and have until March 1 to find a way to end the festering battle on import tariffs.

Apple Leads Dow Jones Lower

Apple gapped down at the open and remained near session lows, falling as much as 10%. The iPhone, iPad, Macbook and digital services giant cut its revenue guidance for the just-ended fiscal first quarter to $84 billion, down from $91 billion. This means Apple's top line is likely to fall nearly 5% on a year-over-year basis.
Such a drop in the top line would be the first since a 9% decline in the fiscal fourth quarter that ended in September 2016.
The Street, before the bombshell news from CEO Tim Cook shared late Wednesday, had been expecting fiscal Q1 profit to rise 20% to $4.65 a share. That comes after adjusted EPS gains of 18%, 24%, 16%, 30%, 40% and 41% in the prior six quarters. The consensus revenue growth forecast for the December-ended holiday quarter prior to the revised forecast came in at $91.49 billion, up 4%.
As the Stock Market Today column had noted frequently in the past, Apple began its impressive run after staging a clean breakout from a first-stage (or early stagecup with handle on Jan. 6, 2017. The buy point at the time: 118.12. Since that breakout, the megacap tech rallied as much as 97% to its peak of 233.47 on Oct. 3 last year. Along the way, Apple built a series of additional bases, such as the flat base, and gentle pullbacks to the 10-week moving average. These actions presented new buy points along Apple's 21-month price run.
This breakout coincided with a turnaround in Apple's fundamentals. Exactly two years ago, Apple had reported its first quarter of year-over-year gains in both profits (up 2%) and sales (up 3%) in four quarters.
The complexion of Apple's chart action completely changed during the week ended Nov. 2. The stock cleaved through its 10-week moving average near 220.57, falling more than 4% for the week in volume that shot up 51% above its 10-week average. Apple hardly tried to rally back above this key support-and-resistance level; thus, a key IBD sell signal was born.

Apple Stock Strategy Now: Avoid A Full Round Trip Of Profits

Given the strong advance since that breakout, Apple shareholders who bought at the proper breakout point must draw a line in the sand. A solid gain should never be allowed to turn into a loss.
At the day's low of 142.08, Apple has now fallen 39% from a 233.47 peak.
Typical base patterns such as the cup with handle and double bottom generally show a decline of no more than 30% to 33%. But this often is the case in a bull market. With the bears in control, one can expect some corrections in top growth stocks to exceed that range. Breakouts from deep bases do work, but the probabilities are lower.

Warren Buffett lives in a modest house that's worth .001% of his total wealth — here's what it looks like

Located in a quiet neighborhood of Omaha, Nebraska lies the home of billionaire Warren Buffett. He bought the house for $31,500 in 1958 or about $250,000 in today's dollars. It's now worth an estimated $652,619. He calls it the "third-best investment he's ever made." Following is a transcript of the video.
This is the home of billionaire Warren Buffett. Located in a quiet neighborhood of Omaha, Nebraska. He bought the house for $31,500 in 1958, $250,000 in today's dollars. It's now worth an estimated $652,619. He calls it the "third-best investment he's ever made."
It's 6,570 sq. feet and has 5 bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms. Fences and security cameras guard the property. Why hasn't Buffett moved to a more extravagant home? He told BBC, "I'm happy there. I'd move if I thought I'd be happier someplace else."

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 21 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2561

Warren Buffett: ‘Tesco was a huge mistake’

Billionaire investor’s fund Berkshire Hathaway owns 4.1% of supermarket but falling share price has cost it £465m in a year


Renowned US investor Warren Buffett has said he made a “huge mistake” by investing in Tesco, as the problems mount at Britain’s largest retailer.
Tesco shares have slumped 45% this year as the supermarket issued four shock profit warnings and last week became embroiled in an accounting scandal, admitting it had overstated its profits by £250m. The retailer has been the worst performer in the FTSE 100 index this year and its shares are at an 11-year low.
Buffett, pictured, known as the Sage of Omaha and one of the world’s richest people, is Tesco’s third-largest shareholder, with a 4.1% stake, held through his Berkshire Hathaway investment business. However, the value of Buffett’s stake has fallen by about $750m (£465m) this year.

Buffett first bought into Tesco in 2006 – when Tesco was expanding rapidly in the UK and across the globe and was planning to open a new chain in the US – and steadily increased his holding.
However its US business, called Fresh & Easy, was eventually closed down altogether at a total cost of £1.8bn.
Undaunted by a shock profit warning from the company, Buffett raised his stake to over 5% when others were selling the stock. Tesco was the only stock in his top 15 picks that recorded a loss last year. Buffett told CNBC: “I made a mistake on Tesco. That was a huge mistake by me.”
The UK’s financial regulator has launched a full-scale investigation into the accounting scandal that has plunged Tesco even deeper into crisis. The retailer’s new boss, Dave Lewis, is tasked with restoring Tesco’s battered reputation as well as fixing its business amid rapidly declining sales.
Meanwhile, star UK fund manager Neil Woodford – who decided to sell his stake in Tesco in 2012 after its first profit warning – said last week it could be a long time before any of the British supermarkets became good investment prospects again.
Elsewhere in the grocery sector, Sainsbury’s shares fell again on Thursday, trading down nearly 4% at 224.8p, after its new boss, Mike Coupe, revealed a slump in sales and warned that Britain’s supermarkets are facing a “perfect storm” of problems.

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credit:   https://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/oct/02/warren-buffet-tesco-huge-mistake

Warren Buffett Just Obliterated Bitcoin in Four Words

Warren Buffett Just Obliterated Bitcoin in Four Words
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett is taking his already harsh criticism of Bitcoin to another level.
Buffett, who has previously said that cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin will almost certainly “come to a bad ending,” was asked over the weekend at the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting about comments made by business partner Charlie Munger—who has called Bitcoin “turds” and compared it to rat poison.
Buffett didn’t mince words. Bitcoin is “probably rat poison squared,” Buffett replied.
On Monday, Buffett appeared on CNBC to explain that he was so down on Bitcoin, and cryptocurrencies in general, because they don’t produce anything—so they’re essentially investments based on pure speculation.
“When you buy non-productive assets, all you’re counting on is that the next person is going to pay you more, because they’re even more excited about another next person coming along,” Buffett said. “The asset itself is creating nothing.”
Buffett has said in the past that he and many investors really don’t understand BitcoinOn CNBC Monday, he added that cryptocurrencies’ mystique actually entices investors—because it seems like magic when, say, the price of Bitcoin rose 36% in April. (Mind you, that increase came after Bitcoin’s price had fallen to one-third of its all-time high near $20,000, which it hit last December.)
“It’s better if they don’t understand it,” Buffett said Monday. “If you don’t understand it you get much more excited.”

credit:  http://time.com/money/5267647/warren-buffett-bitcoin-invest/

Warren Buffett says bitcoin is 'rat poison'

Warren Buffett says bitcoin is 'rat poison'

Tell us how you really feel, Mr. Buffett.

The price of bitcoin took a dive after Warren Buffett renewed his criticism of the cryptocurrency — even comparing it to rat poison.
Bitcoin had been closing in on $10,000, but it fell nearly 6% Sunday and was down another 2% Monday to just over $9,300.
Buffett, the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB), has been a bitcoin bear for years. He has often compared the cryptocurrency to gold, saying that both assets are strictly speculative and don't produce earnings and dividends like stocks do.
Before the Berkshire annual meeting on Saturday, Buffett told CNBC that bitcoin was "probably rat poison squared."
During the meeting itself, Buffett joked that "if you had bought gold at the time of Christ and you figure the compound rate on it, it's a couple tenths of a percent." What Buffett was saying about bitcoin was that you can buy it, but it will never produce anything of value.
He also responded to a question from the audience about bitcoin by saying that it and other crytpocurrencies "will come to bad endings."
Berkshire vice chairman and longtime Buffett confidant Charlie Munger was even more blunt.
"I like cryptocurrencies a lot less than you do," Munger said to Buffett. "To me, it's just dementia. It's like somebody else is trading turds and you decide you can't be left out."
Munger has also referred to bitcoin as poison. At the shareholder meeting of The Daily Journal(DJCO), a newspaper publisher in Los Angeles where Munger serves as chairman, he called it "noxious."
Strong words. But to be fair to bitcoin bulls, both Buffett and Munger have been wrong about the cryptocurrency. Buffett in particular.
He first called bitcoin a "mirage" in 2014 — back when it was trading for about $600. So even with the recent pullback, bitcoin has drastically outperformed the broader market, not to mention Berkshire stock and top Berkshire holdings like Apple (AAPL).
That's why some cryptocurrency experts think that investors should ignore Buffett's and Munger's repeated bitcoin bashing.
"What I do find monumentally baffling is that two of the world's most successful investors cannot see the intrinsic value of some form of cryptocurrency," Nigel Green, CEO of financial consulting firm deVere Group, wrote in a report early Monday.
"Do they honestly believe that there is no place for, and no value of, digital, global currencies in an increasingly digitalized and globalized world?" Green added.


Warren Buffett explains one thing people still don't understand about bitcoin


Warren Buffett explains one thing people still don't understand about bitcoin

When it comes to bitcoin, billionaire investor Warren Buffett wants to make one thing clear: Unlike buying stocks, bonds or real estate, buying bitcoin is not an investment.
That's because it lacks intrinsic value, Buffett says.
"If you buy something like bitcoin or some cryptocurrency, you don't have anything that is producing anything," Buffett says in an interview with Yahoo Finance. "You're just hoping the next guy pays more. And you only feel you'll find the next guy to pay more if he thinks he's going to find someone that's going to pay more.
"You aren't investing when you do that, you're speculating."
Famous for his "buy and hold" investment strategy, the Berkshire Hathaway CEO built his company — and his $82.8 billion net worth — backing companies that have substantive value.
"Put together a portfolio of companies whose aggregate earnings march upward over the years, and so also will the portfolio's market value," Buffett wrote in his 1996 letter to shareholders. "If you aren't willing to own a stock for ten years, don't even think about owning it for ten minutes."
To be an investment, what you're buying has to be worth something on its own, Buffett says.
For example, "If you buy something [like] a farm, an apartment house or an interest in a business and look to the asset itself to determine whether you've done something — what the farm produces, what the business earns ... it's a perfectly satisfactory investment," Buffett explains to Yahoo Finance. "You look at the investment itself to deliver the return to you.
"If you ban trading in farms, you could still buy farms, and have a perfectly decent investment," Buffett says.
Bitcoin, however, only increases in value by being bought and sold, he argues. Its value comes from what people are willing to pay.
"[I]f you ban trading in ... bitcoin, which nobody knows exactly what it is, people would say, 'Well why in the world would I buy it?'"

"The idea that it has some huge intrinsic value is just a joke in my view," Buffett said.
In 2017, bitcoin soared from below $1,000 at the start of the year to over $19,000 in December, catching the attention of everyone from J.P. Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon to NFL players. Tuesday, bitcoin traded near $8,900 according to CoinDesk's price index.
Buffett sees a bleak future for the digital currency.
"In terms of cryptocurrencies, generally, I can say with almost certainty that they will come to a bad ending," Buffett told CNBC in January."When it happens or how or anything else, I don't know."
Of course, Buffett has been wrong about backing new technologiesbefore. He missed opportunities to invest in Google and Amazon, decisions he now calls mistakes.
"I did not think [founder Jeff Bezos] could succeed on the scale he has," Buffett said to shareholders in May 2017.
Crypto-enthusiasts argue that Buffet doesn't understand blockchain-based coins, and he has admitted as much.
Still, many other investing experts like CNBC's Jim Cramer, Kevin O'Leary and Tony Robbins, also call buying cryptocurrencies a gamble. They suggest thinking of it like rolling the dice in Las Vegas.
"As long as you can afford to lose everything you put into it, go with it," O'Leary told CNBC Make It in December, 2017.
That mindset is alright with Buffett.
"There's nothing wrong with it if you want to gamble [that] somebody else will come along and pay you more money tomorrow," Buffett tells Yahoo Finance. "That's one kind of game. That is not investing."
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credit:  https://www.cnbc.com/2018/05/01/warren-buffett-bitcoin-isnt-an-investment.html