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Old 02-07-2008, 09:23 AM   #1
johnnymk
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Buffett: Bank Problems Are 'Poetic Justice'

Breaking News from MoneyNews.com

The woes in the U.S. financial sector are "poetic justice" for bankers who designed and sold complex investments that have since gone sour, billionaire investor Warren Buffett said on Wednesday.

The head of the Berkshire Hathaway Inc. group of companies also played down worries about a credit crunch by saying that recent interest rate cuts mean low-cost funds are readily available.

But he warned that the U.S. dollar will continue to slide unless the country can rein in its yawning trade deficit — the "biggest factor" behind the decline. Still, he said, the U.S. economy will "do very well over time."

Buffett, one of the world's wealthiest people, appeared to see irony in the fact that many of the banks who marketed complex investments which have now crashed are bearing much of the fallout.

"It's sort of a little poetic justice, in that the people that brewed this toxic Kool-Aid found themselves drinking a lot of it in the end," he said.

Buffett, a legendary investor who has amassed a huge fortune through plays in a wide range of industries, has bet against the U.S. dollar in the past.

In 2005, Berkshire had made a $21.8 billion bet that the U.S. dollar would fall. It later unwound that successful position as it found other non-U.S. investments.

Buffett said on Wednesday in Toronto that the turmoil that has rocked the U.S. economy in recent months has imbued the markets with a healthy degree of caution, while the rate-cutting response from central bankers has ensured that cheap money remains available for borrowing.

"I wouldn't quite call it a credit crunch. Funds are available," Buffett said during a question and answer session at a business event. "Money is available, and it's really quite cheap because of the lowering of rates that has taken place."

He added: "What has happened is a repricing of risk and an unavailability of what I might call 'dumb money,' of which there was plenty around a year ago."

Buffet was in Toronto for the Canadian launch of corporate-news firm Business Wire, which Berkshire bought in 2006.

Buffett tends to favor companies with relatively simple businesses, strong management, consistent earnings, good returns on equity, and little debt.

As of late last year, Berkshire's businesses employed about 220,000 people and the number is growing as the group continues to expand its portfolio of companies. The units generated a $10.27 billion profit on revenue of $90.2 billion from January to September.

© Reuters 2007.
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Old 02-07-2008, 10:19 AM   #2
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I really like Mr. Buffett.

Love to read his insights and comments.
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Old 02-07-2008, 11:53 AM   #3
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The Oracle of Omaha- who even though he has billions still lives in a modest house in Nebraska. He feels it keeps him in better touch with what is going on in the economy on a national basis than if he moved into a rich community where everyone is worried about impressing everyone else. I definaltely agree with him. The banks were thrilled for every loan they could get on their books and the revenues they brought in. They reaped record profits off them and now they are giving some of those profits back as they bought lots of fruit which has spoiled and they cannot resell them.

As for the trade deficit, we have had a trade deficit for a long time now. Earlier, the deficit was because the economy had lots of excess money which created demand for more goods than they could find domestically. But lately, the trade deficit is because we do not produce as many items for both domestic consumption (meaning we import more of them) and we also produce less to send abroad. The first circumstance was the sign of a healthy economy. The second has become a structural problem and will only get worse.
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Old 02-07-2008, 01:32 PM   #4
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It makes sense. If you stepped back and looked at things, you would see that there was a problem. America just opened a cash register and handed it out willy-nilly and now its come back to bite us. People have put money into things that aren't worth as much as they believed. And so we're essentially required to lower the prices to make things right. In the mean time, people are afraid to borrow and buy, and others have not got the money to lend because 10% of what they lent out, has no more value.

In time it will balance out. Essentially we should take every house, knock of 5-15% of its value and call it a day.
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