The 90-year-old billionaire on Saturday admitted he âpaid too muchâ when his Berkshire Hathaway Inc spent $ 32.1 billion in 2016 to buy aircraft and industrial parts maker Precision Castparts Corp, its largest acquisition.
Berkshire wrote off $ 9.8 billion of Precisionâs value last August, as the coronavirus pandemic sapped demand for air travel and the Portland, Oregon-based unitâs products.
In his annual letter to investors, Buffett said he bought âa fine company – the best in its business,â and Berkshire was âluckyâ to have Precision Chief Executive Mark Donegan still in charge.
But Buffett said he was âsimply too optimistic about PCCâs normalized profit potential.â
Precision shed more than 13,400 jobs, or 40% of its workforce, in 2020, and only recently has begun to improve margins, Berkshire said.
âI was wrong … in judging the average amount of future earnings and, consequently, wrong in my calculation of the proper price to pay for the business,â Buffett wrote. âPCC is far from my first error of that sort. But itâs a big one.â
Two years ago, Buffett admitted he âoverpaidâ for Kraft Foods when Berkshire and private equity firm 3G Capital merged it in 2015 with their H.J. Heinz Co to form Kraft Heinz Co.
And in his 2008 annual letter, Buffett called his 1993 purchase of Dexter Shoe his âworst dealâ ever, saying he had bought a âworthless businessâ and compounded his error by using Berkshire stock rather than cash to fund the acquisition.
âIâll make more mistakes in the future – you can bet on that,â he wrote.
Tom Russo, a longtime Berkshire investor, welcomed Buffettâs candor.
âI admire Warren for taking personal responsibility for Precision Castparts,â he said. âFew managers are willing to admit their responsibility rather than pass on blame.â