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From: | "David & Jill Stevenson" <djstevo@quicksilver.net.nz> |
Date: | Sat, 10 Jan 2004 11:50:44 +1300 |
You present a good contrast between AMP and Warren
Buffett`s Berkshire Hathaway . I am sure the comparison has not
been lost on AMP shareholders over the years . Is it that
Berkshire have less emphasis on Life Insurance and more on Fire and General
cover which latter are of cost plus nature into future years (
and also allow reinsurance protection) and can never be substituted
or abandoned, no matter how public attitudes change.? Changing public
philosophy to life insurance requirements over the last twenty years must
have had a profound effect on traditional insurance companies. Unlike
AMP`s attempt at geographical diversification Warren Buffett is hardly
another example . He has an uncanny instinct to identify what he likes and
invests heavily .His home-spun homilies belie his consummate
finesse.
Your reference to Deutsche
Bank reminds me that their Investment Services advisory arm was possibly
involved in facilitating Graeme Hart`s original entry into Burns Philp several
years ago. I don`t use the word "disastrous" as a qualification as the Jury may
be still out on that one. But the point I make is that their involvement with
Hart and related guarantees cushioned the share price fall collapse on him
personally. The nature of the protection , I believe, was some buy back
arrangement if the share price fell below a given level I imagine
that recourse was not followed but Deutshe alternatively would have had to
perform overtime to salvage the situation.
Regarding GPG, their strategy does
appear difficult to fathom. Personally, I feel they may have waded into an
investment without due process and then taken their eye off the eight ball
dissipating energies by locking horns with Perry Corp., and CITIC . The
Forests now having value only as kindling wood with todays deteriorating
exchange rate. It is hard to determine whether, allied to their direct holding
in FFS, and their more substantial investment in Rubicon ,that
forests were the greater strategy or whether there is
more significant underlying value in Rubicon`s non forestry assets. But
what reliance can you put on valuations of intellectual property type assets
such as their biotechnology portfolio..
David Stevenson
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