That $56 billion was here somewhere: Berkshire revises cash stake disclosure

Reuters 

By Jonathan Stempel

- Hathaway Inc shareholders might have been forgiven on Saturday for looking at the company's annual report and wondering why some $56 billion of appeared to vanish.

It did not, Chairman Warren assured them.

The Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate has changed how it reports its stake, and no longer includes the overall amount in its consolidated statement of flows.

In his annual shareholder letter, said has about $86 billion of and equivalents, roughly triple the $28 billion shown on the flow statement. had reported $84.8 billion there as of Sept. 30.

Investors care about the stake because it shows Berkshire's capacity to make big acquisitions, or purchases such as a big new investment in iPhone maker Apple Inc, without having to sell existing businesses or investments.

insists on a $20 billion cushion, in part for protection should natural or man-made catastrophes force big payouts by the company's insurance units.

So who was to blame for the reporting change?

Accountants and auditors.

In a footnote, said it had invested "significant amounts" last year in U.S. Treasury bills maturing in more than three months.

said it had previously classified such Treasury bills as equivalents, noting that they are highly liquid and not that sensitive to interest-rate changes.

But after consulting "relevant accounting literature" and talking with its independent auditors, "we have concluded that, notwithstanding our view of the substance of such instruments, these U.S. Treasury Bills technically do not meet a 'bright line' definition of equivalents" under generally accepted accounting principles," said.

As a result, is now reporting its longer-dated Treasury bills with its consolidated balance sheets.

It reported $58.3 billion of Treasury bills there, versus just $4.6 billion a year earlier. also revised prior flow statements to reflect the change.

"We believe that these changes have no effect whatsoever on our financial condition," said.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

That $56 billion was here somewhere: Berkshire revises cash stake disclosure

REUTERS - Berkshire Hathaway Inc shareholders might have been forgiven on Saturday for looking at the company's annual report and wondering why some $56 billion of cash appeared to vanish.

By Jonathan Stempel

- Hathaway Inc shareholders might have been forgiven on Saturday for looking at the company's annual report and wondering why some $56 billion of appeared to vanish.

It did not, Chairman Warren assured them.

The Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate has changed how it reports its stake, and no longer includes the overall amount in its consolidated statement of flows.

In his annual shareholder letter, said has about $86 billion of and equivalents, roughly triple the $28 billion shown on the flow statement. had reported $84.8 billion there as of Sept. 30.

Investors care about the stake because it shows Berkshire's capacity to make big acquisitions, or purchases such as a big new investment in iPhone maker Apple Inc, without having to sell existing businesses or investments.

insists on a $20 billion cushion, in part for protection should natural or man-made catastrophes force big payouts by the company's insurance units.

So who was to blame for the reporting change?

Accountants and auditors.

In a footnote, said it had invested "significant amounts" last year in U.S. Treasury bills maturing in more than three months.

said it had previously classified such Treasury bills as equivalents, noting that they are highly liquid and not that sensitive to interest-rate changes.

But after consulting "relevant accounting literature" and talking with its independent auditors, "we have concluded that, notwithstanding our view of the substance of such instruments, these U.S. Treasury Bills technically do not meet a 'bright line' definition of equivalents" under generally accepted accounting principles," said.

As a result, is now reporting its longer-dated Treasury bills with its consolidated balance sheets.

It reported $58.3 billion of Treasury bills there, versus just $4.6 billion a year earlier. also revised prior flow statements to reflect the change.

"We believe that these changes have no effect whatsoever on our financial condition," said.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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