Warren Buffett becomes world’s second-richest person

Berkshire Hathaway lifts his personal fortune to $73bn as shares hit record high.

Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett (left) and friend Bill Gates, founder of Microsoft. Rick Wilking / Reuters
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Warren Buffett has taken the No 2 slot in the world richest list after shares of Berkshire Hathaway hit a record high on Friday.

The Omaha, Nebraska-based company has soared 27 per cent this year as the dozens of operating businesses the 84-year-old chairman bought over the past five decades churned out record profits.

“The all-time closing high stock price today is due to a widening appreciation of what Berkshire really is – a fortress,” said Mr Buffett’s biographer Andrew Kilpatricksaid. With about $60 billion in cash at the company, “he could make a whopper of an acquisition at any moment”.

Berkshire’s Class A shares traded above $200,000 for the first time in August after a rally that followed the release of the company’s annual report, in which Mr Buffett wrote that the company’s actual worth has been rising faster than suggested by metrics such as book value. Since that milestone, the shares have climbed another 13 per cent, elevating Mr Buffett’s fortune to $73.7bn, $300 million more than Mexico’s Carlos Slim.

Berkshire’s performance dwarfs that of America Movil SAB, the mobile-phone company controlled by Mr Slim, which is up 6 per cent for the year. Mexico’s richest man needs to divest a large portion of America Movil assets in the country to reduce its market share below 50 per cent and avoid profit-reducing penalties put in place as part of an overhaul of the nation’s telecommunications market.

The new rules force America Movil to cut its fees and share infrastructure with its competitors.

Mr Buffett trails only Bill Gates as the world’s wealthiest person. Mr Gates’s fortune is estimated at $87.2bn.

Barring a downturn in global markets, Berkshire should finish 2014 with a flourish. It agreed last month to buy the Duracell battery business from Procter & Gamble in a stock swap, and in October said it would buy Van Tuyl Group, the largest closely held US car dealer. The company also intends to provide $3bn in financing for Burger King Worldwide’s planned takeover of Tim Hortons and earn 9 per cent annual interest on the investment if the deal goes through.

Berkshire’s $26.5bn purchase of railway BNSF, struck during the depths of the financial crisis in 2009, is on pace to see all the cash it spent taking the company private returned by the end of this year. Buoyed by an onshore oil boom, BNSF has become a cash machine, paying more than $15bn in dividends to Berkshire through September 30, according to quarterly regulatory filings.

“Whatever you may have heard about our country’s crumbling infrastructure in no way applies to BNSF or railroads generally,” Mr Buffett said in his 2013 annual letter to shareholders. “America’s rail system has never been in better shape, a consequence of huge investments by the industry.”

Had Mr Buffett held on to all of his Berkshire stock, which he began donating to charity in 2006, he’d have a fortune topping $110bn.

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