• News/Talk
  • Music
  • Entertainment

Marketplace

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Listen to the show

Buffett buys manufacturing giant

Warren Buffett

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway agreed to buy 60% of the manufacturing giant Marmon Holdings. At $4.5 billion it's the biggest deal Buffett's done outside the insurance business. Jill Barshay reports.

Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and CEO Warren Buffett listens during a hearing before the Senate Finance Committee on Nov. 14, 2007. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

More on Investing, Wall Street

TEXT OF STORY

AMY SCOTT: Billionaire investor Warren Buffett announced a new purchase on Christmas Day. Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway agreed to buy 60 percent of the manufacturing giant Marmon Holdings. At $4.5 billion it's the biggest deal Buffett's done outside the insurance business. Our New York Bureau Chief Jill Barshay has more.


JILL BARSHAY: The company Buffett is buying is owned by the Pritzker family of Chicago. The Pritzkers may be better known for their Hyatt hotel chain. But they also built Marmon into a conglomerate of 125 manufacturing and service companies. It's in everything from water treatment to transportation. Forbes Magazine says Marmon is the 36th largest private company in the U.S.

Ned Armstrong is an analyst of industrial companies at FBR Capital Markets.

Ned Armstrong: They keep a pretty low profile, but I would say they're pretty well known within the markets they compete.

Armstrong says industrial companies like Marmon are doing pretty well. Both Asian countries and oil companies are expanding and ordering the kinds of building materials that Marmon makes.

Armstrong: I think to the degree that it's Berkshire Hathaway doing the buying. I think people will see that as validation that there's value in old "rust belt" type of companies.

Buffett may be better known for owning insurance companies like GEICO. But manufacturing is not new to him. Bob Miles has written three books on Warren Buffett and his investing strategy. He says Buffett bought a similar diversified manufacturing company in Ohio 20 years ago. Buffett still owns it.

Bob Miles:: He's the ultimate capitalist, buying old economy industries. The average company he's purchased started in 1909.

But Miles says one of Buffett's biggest investment mistakes was an American manufacturing company: an old New England textile mill. Buffett ended up shutting it down. The mill's name: Berkshire Hathaway.

In New York, I'm Jill Barshay for Marketplace.

Music From This Show

  • New Fast Aden Buy
  • Banderilla Calexico Buy
  • Preservation The Kinks Buy
  • Tonight I Have to Leave It Shout Out Louds Buy
  • I Spy Earle Hagen Buy

Marketplace Confessional

"I disagree with Diana Nyad, who told Bob Moon today that Americans are not interested in Wimbledon because there are so few Americans playing. I love watching tennis, no matter who is playing. I have watched tennis for years, but the networks toy with us, creating drama rather than showing the match. Oftentimes, televised matches end precisely when the allotted time expires, even if they have to cut and splice. When they don't, as happened in a Nadal match last weekend, we were left hanging at the end of two sets, as NBC switched to women's golf. I don't have cable TV, so I couldn't switch to MSNBC as was suggested. It's enough to make me turn off the TV and read about the matches online."

The Specials

Conversations from the Corner Office

Marketplace goes one-on-one with CEOs, company founders, head honchos...

Sit in

Working

Intimate profiles of workers in the global economy.

Meet them

Consumer Consequences game

Find out what the world would look like if everyone lived like you. An interactive game from American Public Media.

Play

Marketplace on iTunes U

Marketplace is now available in iTunes U, Apple's online education platform. Get free, downloadable content in subjects like History, Science, Business and more. Study up

Sustainability

What is "sustainability?" It boils down to this: Don't eat your seed corn.

Learn more

 ©2008 American Public Media