Should Investors Ever Bet Against Warren Buffett? by James Mecir, Benzinga
News that Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE:BRK.A) (NYSE:BRK.B) [FREE Stock Trend Analysis], notably headed by Warren Buffett, is going to acquire Duracell from Procter & Gamble Co (NYSE:PG) has captured the financial media’s limelight Thursday morning.
Here is a bird’s eye view of the fundamentals and a thorough view of Berkshire’s technicals.
What The Bulls See
- Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger, of course.
- Cheap valuation metrics (using “A” share data): A price-to-sales of 1.85, a price-to-book of 1.50 and an enterprise value of $363.99 billion vs. a market capitalization of $359 billion.
- Net profit margins of 11 percent that spin-off levered free cash flow of $27.21 billion annually
- Clean balance sheet metrics: A debt-to-equity ratio of 31.13 percent and a current ratio of 1.02.
- A beta of 0.29, meaning the ride is a lot smoother in Berkshire than with the broader market.
Related Link: Why You Should Take Charlie Munger’s Secret To Success Seriously
What The Bears See
- An aging Warren Buffett and an aging Charlie Munger.
- A PE of around 300 – expensive by any measure, but certainly when compared to estimated 2015 revenue growth of 7 percent and EPS growth 7.8 percent.
Technical Take
Technicians note that Berkshire’s “B” shares are in the midst of a magical ride to the upside and that nothing but overbought conditions really should prevent them from continuing higher. There is a short-term uptrend channel, the upper edge of which may be a place where some selling or profit-taking could take place. That line of projected resistance comes into play at the $150-$152 range, depending on how quickly the stock runs up to test it.
On the downside, initial support for the stock (on the run up to $150) comes in at $141.28-$142.25. For those looking to buy on a pullback following the test of the upper edge of the uptrend channel, the target buy range should be down at the $140-$142 level, again depending on the timing of the test of the trend line.
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