(ResourceInvestor)
- With the market abuzz with anticipation of what Wall Street
legend Warren Buffett intends to do with Berkshire Hathaway’s
$40 billion in cash, a small, but perhaps very significant
little bit of news may have been overshadowed.
At
the company’s shareholder meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on Saturday,
Chairman Warren Buffett announced that the company has divested
its silver holdings.
David
Morgan, author of “The Morgan Report,” sent a note to clients
quoting an anonymous source at the Berkshire meeting who confirmed
the sale.
According
to the source, no sell price, date or addition data were given
other than the announcement that the company not longer owned
any silver.
The
source said Buffett didn't really talk about silver other
than he sold it, but said he would rather hold businesses
that have earnings.
According
to news sources today, Buffett told shareholders, “We had
a lot of silver at one time but we don't have it now.”
In
1997, Buffett purchased an estimated 130 million ounces for
delivery in 1998. In February 1998, the silver price jumped
to a high of $7.81/oz, rallying 50% since mid-1997.
The
CPM Group estimated earlier this year that Buffett still held
somewhere between 100 and 129 million ounces.
Buffett
said that Berkshire had not benefited from the particularly
steep rise in silver prices.
“I
bought it very early, I sold it very early. Other than that
it was perfect,” he joked.
Silver
hit a 23-year peak of $14.68 two weeks ago. On Friday, July
silver futures closed at $13.89 an ounce.
Buffett
said he detected speculative participation in the recent run
up in prices, particularly metals.
“What
the wise man does at beginning, the fool does in the end...
any asset that has a big move based on fundamentals will attract
speculators...,” he said, according to sources.
“Something
like copper is speculative on both sides of the market, and
responding more to speculative than fundamental forces,” he
added.
However,
it might important to note the timing of Barclays’ silver
ETF iShares Silver Trust, which just launched on April 28.
Jason
Hommel, Editor of “Silver Stock Report” previously told Resource
Investor that “we just don’t know” where the silver will come
from to back the ETF, and it is possible that Warren Buffett
could be the supplier, which isn’t causing a shortage in the
market.
Furthermore,
the SEC seemed to easily dismiss the opposition by the Silver
Users Association and comments from sources about the illiquidity
of the silver market in its 32-page order.
Many
analysts estimated that the ETF would need perhaps as much
as 130 million ounces of silver to cover investment demand
- the same amount Buffet originally bought in 1997.
Barclays’
Christine Hudacko could not be reached for comment.
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