Warren Buffettâs stance against paying Berkshire Hathaway shareholders a dividend looks to be wearing thin.
In his annual letter to shareholders, Mr. Buffett defended his long-held objection to cash payouts. But the companyâs performance over the last four years has been disappointing, and Mr. Buffett reckons it wonât match its glory days again. Thatâs likely to increase the chances of a cash payout, whether from Mr. Buffett or his successor.
In his must-read missive, Mr. Buffett used a fair bit of ink to beat himself up about the âsubparâ showing in 2012. He and his lieutenants created $24.1 billion of value for shareholders, but it wasnât enough to beat gains in the Standard & Poorâs 500-stock index - a breach of the billionaireâs code of success. If 2013 continues that trend, the Berkshireâs stock will lag the index over a five-year span â" the first time it has ever done that.
This has unnerved some of his friends, according to Mr. Buffettâs letter, who are givng him grief about not paying a dividend. With $42 billion of cash sitting idle at the end of 2012, their impatience is understandable. Last monthâs $28 billion Heinz deal will only chew up $12 billion. He even acknowledges that there are very few potential deals left that would be large enough to increase returns. Better, surely, to give investors some cash back to invest elsewhere.
But for Mr. Buffett, issuing a dividend is akin to admitting failure. In his letter, he argues that selling just 3.2 percent of stock each year should, over a decade, be more profitable - assuming Berkshire keeps delivering double-digit returns - than paying out a third of annual earnings over the same period as a dividend.
Mr. Buffett has built up enormous clout with investors. But the more that subpar growth appears to be the direct result of scale - Berkshire had $73 billion to invest in 2012, compared with $39 million in 1970 - the more their faith is likely to falter. Thatâs likely to be even more th! e case for Mr. Buffettâs successor.
Perhaps Mr. Buffett is hoping that airing his thoughts will alleviate such concerns. He is even, for the first time, allowing a bearish analyst to take part in a panel at Berkshireâs annual meeting in May. Of course, such openness may actually provide more grist for the dividend mill.
Agnes T. Crane is a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. For more independent commentary and analysis, visit breakingviews.com.