Tag Archives: Buffetts

Buffett’s Berkshire buys more Occidental shares

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway stocked up on oil shares this week, adding to the company’s holdings of Occidental Petroleum.

Berkshire bought about 5.9 million more shares of the oil company. The purchases, made on May 2 and May 3, were disclosed in a regulatory finding on Wednesday, according to Bloomberg.

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The share prices were $56 and $58.37 each.

Last weekend, as the Berkshire annual meeting was getting underway, the company announced a 14% stake in Occidental.

Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett (FBN)

Buffett said that he decided Occidental was a “good place” to put money after reading an annual report. 

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY BOOSTS BET ON OIL AHEAD OF SHAREHOLDER MEETING, MAKES CHEVRON 4TH-LARGEST INVESTMENT

That investment comes in addition to the preferred stake that it acquired in 2019 when the oil company was putting together its deal for Anadarko Petroleum Corp.

Berkshire now has a 15.2% interest.

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
BRK.A BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY INC. 494,343.00 +13,145.25 +2.73%
OXY OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM CORP. 61.60 +2.38 +4.02%
CVX CHEVRON CORP. 167.63 +5.30 +3.26%

Occidental was the best-performing stock in the S&P 500 during the first quarter.

Over the weekend, Berkshire also increased its stake in Chevron.

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Oil prices are getting a boost following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Vicki Hollub, CEO of Occidental Petroleum, speaks during the 23rd World Petroleum Congress conference at the George R. Brown Convention Center on Dec. 8, 2021 in Houston. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images) (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images / Getty Images)

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Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway agrees to buy insurance company Alleghany for $11.6 billion

Warren Buffett at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting in Los Angeles, California. May 1, 2021.

Gerard Miller | CNBC

Warren Buffett is making moves.

Berkshire Hathaway said Monday morning it agreed to buy insurance company Alleghany for $11.6 billion, or $848.02 per share, in cash. The Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate said the deal “represents a multiple of 1.26 times Alleghany’s book value at December 31, 2021,” as well as a 16% premium to Alleghany’s average stock price in the past 30 days. The deal is expected to close in the fourth quarter of this year.

Through its subsidiaries, New York-based Alleghany is involved in a number of different insurance businesses, including wholesale specialty, property and casualty, and reinsurance.

“Berkshire will be the perfect permanent home for Alleghany, a company that I have closely observed for 60 years,” Buffett, Berkshire’s chairman and CEO, said in a statement.

Alleghany CEO Joseph Brandon — who previously led Berkshire-owned General Re — hailed the deal as a “terrific transaction for Alleghany’s owners, businesses, customers, and employees,” noting that “the value of this transaction reflects the quality of our franchises and is the product of the hard work, persistence, and determination of the Alleghany team over decades.”

Alleghany and its units will operate independently after the deal closes.

The deal may surprise some Berkshire shareholders, as Buffett and his right-hand man — Vice Chairman Charlie Munger — have expressed frustration in their search for a big acquisition. In his 2022 annual letter to shareholders, Buffett said he and Munger found little that “excites” them in terms of large acquisitions.

To be sure, $11.6 billion is a small number when compared with Berkshire’s massive cash hoard of $146.72 billion at the end of 2021.

“This is Berkshire’s largest full acquisition in a while, although the amount being spent ($11.6B) is relatively small and certainly doesn’t constitute the type of ‘elephant deal’ Buffett has repeatedly talked about,” Adam Crisafulli of Vital Knowledge said in a note.

Alleghany is being advised by Goldman Sachs and Willkie Farr & Gallagher through the transaction’s completion.

Monday’s deal comes after Berkshire’s Class A shares hit a record high last week, closing above $500,000 for the first time.

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Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway buys $1.5B more Occidental stock week (NYSE:OXY)

Billionaire Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Corp. (NYSE:BRK.A)(NYSE:BRK.B) and its subsidiaries boosted their stake in red-hot Occidental Petroleum (NYSE:OXY) by another $1.5B billion over the past week just as oil prices were peaking, a new filing shows.

Buffett’s firm – which bought some $3B of OXY stock less than two weeks ago – disclosed in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing that its units added another 27.1M shares to their stake this past Wednesday through Friday.

The company said it paid between $51.02 and $58.58 to buy the stock in a series of transactions.

The disclosure came just a week after BRK.A revealed in an earlier SEC form that its units bought 60M of OXY shares between March 2 and 4 at prices ranging from $47.07 to $56.45.

Those stock buys and BRK.A’s latest purchases give Buffett’s companies a total of about 118.3M OXY common shares, plus warrants granting the right to acquire some 83.9M additional common shares at about $59.62 each. Berkshire units also own 100,000 OXY preferred shares.

The company had owned about 30M OXY shares and 83.9M warrants prior to its March purchases.

Buffett is loading up on energy giant Occidental (OXY) just as the company’s stock price has been soaring as oil prices take off due to the Russia-Ukraine War and sanctions against Moscow.

Russia is one of the world’s largest producers, and questions about whether it can continue to export oil and gas sent West Texas Intermediate crude oil (CL1:COM) to 14-year highs of around $130 a barrel earlier this week. Those gains also drove OXY to a $59.60 52-week high on Thursday just as Buffett was buying.

WTI later pulled back to end Friday at $109.33 a barrel, while Occidental (OXY) finished the week at $57.95, down 0.3% on Friday’s session and 2.8% from its Thursday intraday peak.

Still, the oil giant’s shares remain at about a three-year high, while West Texas Intermediate is trading at its highest levels in some 13-1/2 years.

As for Occidental (OXY), Seeking Alpha contributors have a wide range of views as to where the stock goes from here. Contributor The Value Portfolio gives OXY a “Buy” rating, while Logan Kane calls the stock a “Hold” and Paul Franke makes the case for selling or shorting the firm.

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Buffett’s Berkshire bought Activision stock before Microsoft deal

Warren Buffett

Gerald Miller | CNBC

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway purchased about $1 billion worth of shares in Activision Blizzard in the fourth quarter, according to a regulatory filing, jumping in before Microsoft agreed to buy the video-game publisher for $68.7 billion.

Berkshire owns 14.66 million shares valued at $975 million as of the end of 2021, the filing shows.

Microsoft announced its intent to acquire Activision Blizzard in mid-January for $95 per share, sending the stock up 25% to above $82, though it’s since fallen a bit. It would be the largest deal ever by a U.S. technology company.

Buffett is poised to notch a handsome profit should the deal close. The stock reached as low as $56.40 in the fourth quarter after the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing filed a suit alleging that Activision and its subsidiaries fostered a sexist culture and paid women less than men.

Activision also said in November that it was delaying the releases of Diablo IV and Overwatch 2. And it was hit with disappointing reviews of its new game Call of Duty: Vanguard, released the same month.

Bill Gates, the co-founder and former CEO of Microsoft, stepped down from the boards of Berkshire and Microsoft in 2020. Gates is a longtime friend of Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway’s chairman and CEO. They rank fourth and sixth, respectively, among the world’s richest people, according to Forbes.

WATCH: Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger on Berkshire Hathaway’s unique management style

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Supply chain problems crimp profit at Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway; cash sets record

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc said on Saturday that global supply chain disruptions kept a lid on its ability to generate profit, while rising equity prices caused it to sell some stocks and boost its cash hoard to a record.

Operating profit rose 18% but missed analyst forecasts, as a resurgence in COVID-19 cases fueled by the Delta variant of the coronavirus caused goods shortages and crimped consumer spending, while damage from Hurricane Ida and European flooding boosted underwriting losses at the Geico car insurer and other insurance units.

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Net income, meanwhile, fell 66%, reflecting lower gains from stock holdings such as Apple Inc and Bank of America Corp.

Berkshire repurchased $7.6 billion of its own stock in the third quarter and $20.2 billion this year, as rising stock markets made buying whole companies increasingly expensive.

The buybacks, which appeared to continue in October, suggest that Buffett, a 91-year-old billionaire, sees greater value in his own Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate, whose businesses include the BNSF railroad and namesake energy unit.

WALTER SCOTT JR., BUSINESS PARTNER OF WARREN BUFFETT, DEAD AT 90

“One of the big parlor games is, what is Berkshire’s next big acquisition,” said Cathy Seifert, a CFRA Research analyst with a “hold” rating on Berkshire. “I think we just saw it: it bought back $20 billion of its own stock.”

Berkshire has also been a net seller of stocks, and sold about $2 billion more stock than it bought in the quarter. It ended September with $149.2 billion of cash and equivalents.

Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and CEO Warren Buffett speaks during an interview with Liz Claman on the Fox Business Network (AP Photo/John Peterson, File)

“I sure hope there will be more buybacks, because there’s not much evidence of capital being put to work,” said Jim Shanahan, an Edward Jones & Co analyst who rates Berkshire a “buy.”

DISRUPTIONS

Third-quarter operating profit rose to $6.47 billion, or about $4,331 per Class A share, from $5.48 billion, or about $3,488 per share, a year earlier.

GLOBAL BILLIONAIRES BOOM TO NEW RECORD, USA LEADS PACK

Analysts on average forecast $4,493 per share, according to Refinitiv I/B/E/S.

Net income fell to $10.3 billion, or $6,882 per Class A share, from $30.1 billion. Buffett believes the huge quarterly swings in net results are usually meaningless, and result from accounting rules he doesn’t control.

Berkshire said supply chain disruptions have boosted prices for materials and freight, forcing businesses such as Clayton Homes mobile homes and Acme bricks to raise prices – and caused a shortage of truck drivers at McLane grocery distribution.

It said the disruptions also significantly reduced new vehicle sales at its auto dealer unit and boosted costs for its consumer products businesses, though profit is rising from Forest River RVs, Brooks running shoes and Duracell batteries.

WARREN BUFFETT’S BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY UPS KROGER STAKE WHILE TRIMMING DRUG HOLDINGS

In part because of Delta and the disruptions, some caused by labor shortages https://www.reuters.com/business/with-bond-buying-taper-bag-fed-turns-wary-eye-inflation-2021-11-03, U.S. gross domestic product rose at a 2% annualized rate in the third quarter according to the government advance estimate, down from 6.7% in the second quarter.

Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger (File photo)

“The supply chain creates choke points that inevitably will affect loads at Berkshire’s railroad, and is creating shortages in its housing businesses,” said Tom Russo, a partner at Gardner Russo & Quinn in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, which has owned Berkshire stock since 1982.

CATASTROPHE LOSSES

Results reflected what analyst Shanahan called an “extraordinarily high” $2.2 billion of catastrophe losses, mainly from Ida and flooding, though other insurers also suffered large losses.

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY’S CHARLIE MUNGER CRITICIZED FOR $1.5B ‘WINDOWLESS’ DORM — AND HE COULDN’T CARE LESS

Geico alone lost $289 million pretax from underwriting, hurt by Ida and an increase in vehicle crashes.

In contrast, BNSF managed to boost profit 14% to $1.54 billion, as higher volumes in industrial goods and coal offset lower grain exports.

Buffett’s failure to buy more stocks and companies has disappointed some investors and analysts.

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
BRK.A BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY, INC. 434,000.00 +898.00 +0.21%

It stems in part from how special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs), which take private companies public, are driving up prices of acquisition targets.

“It’s a killer,” Buffett said https://www.reuters.com/article/us-berkshire-results-spacs-idCAKBN2CI3GB at Berkshire’s annual meeting on May 1.

CFRA Research analyst Seifert said Berkshire won’t be sidelined forever, and might in 2022 eye acquisitions in sectors it has long favored, including industrial and consumer staples.

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“Given the number of high-profile misses, such as Precision Castparts and Kraft Heinz, one can understand some of Berkshire’s reticence,” she said, referring to the aircraft parts maker and food company.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Mike Harrison, David Holmes and Grant McCool)

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Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway scores $1.2 billion gain on Chevron in under 10 weeks

Warren Buffett.

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has racked up a $1.2 billion gain on its Chevron investment in under 10 weeks.

The famed investor’s company owned a 2.5% stake in the oil-and-gas group worth $4.1 billion at the end of December, it revealed in a regulatory filing last month. Chevron’s stock price has surged 29% since then as crude prices have rebounded, boosting the value of Berkshire’s stake to $5.3 billion.

Berkshire began buying Chevron shares in the third quarter of 2020. It secured regulatory permission to not include the stock in its 13-F portfolio update for that period, as it was still building the position.

The company purchased 44.3 million Chevron shares in the third quarter, and another 4.2 million shares last quarter, it disclosed in filings last month. The energy stock ranked among its 10 biggest holdings by market value at the end of 2020, Buffett said in his latest letter to shareholders.

Buffett’s decision to back Chevron is paying off so far, but it remains somewhat surprising. After all, Buffett expressed doubts about the oil sector’s prospects at Berkshire’s annual meeting last year, following his painful bet on Occidental Petroleum.

“If you’re an Oxy shareholder, or any shareholder in any oil-producing company, you’ll join me in having made a mistake so far in terms of where oil prices went,” he said. “Who knows where they go in the future?”

Buffett also stepped in to help Occidental beat out Chevron in a bidding war for Anadarko Petroleum in 2019. His subsequent bet on Chevron suggests there’s no bad blood left over from the clash.

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Warren Buffett’s Tone Deaf Annual Letter Skirts Controversies

Warren Buffett’s annual letters are seen as chance to offer investors help in understanding his thinking.

Warren Buffett’s 15-page annual letter to shareholders on Saturday made mention of the pandemic that ravaged the globe in 2020 exactly once: One of his furniture companies had to close for a time because of the virus, the billionaire noted on page nine.

Buffett likewise steered clear of politics, despite the contested presidential election and riots at the U.S. Capitol, and never touched on race or inequality even after protests and unrest broke out in cities across the nation last year. He also avoided delving into the competitive deal-making pressures faced by his conglomerate, Berkshire Hathaway Inc., a topic routinely dissected in past year’s letters.

“Here you have a company with such a revered leader who’s held in such high regard — whose opinion matters, who has businesses that were directly impacted by the pandemic, insurance companies that were influenced by global warming and social inflation — and there was not one word about the pandemic,” Cathy Seifert, an analyst at CFRA Research, said in a phone interview. “That to me was striking. It was tone deaf and it was disappointing.”

Buffett, 90, has been unusually quiet since last year’s annual meeting in May amid a multitude of issues facing Americans. His annual letters are often seen as a chance to offer investors help in understanding his thinking on broad topics and market trends, in addition to details on how his conglomerate is faring.

But the Berkshire chief executive officer carefully weighs his words, and some topics, such as the pandemic, risk veering into highly controversial political territory, Jim Shanahan, an analyst at Edward D. Jones & Co., said in an interview.

“There’s been a lot of comments about the pandemic and the impact on the businesses, but by not saying something in the letter, I think it’s just a way to try and avoid saying something that could be perceived as a political statement, which he’s been less willing to do in recent years,” Shanahan said.

A representative for Buffett didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment placed outside routine office hours.

Buffett also stayed quiet on topics that are key to his conglomerate, such as the market environment amid a tumultuous year — and the work of key investing deputies like Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, according to Cole Smead, whose Smead Capital Management oversees investments in Berkshire.

“There’s more found by what’s not in the letter,” said Smead, the firm’s president and portfolio manager. “I think just time and time again in this letter were sins of omission.”

Here are other key takeaways from Buffett’s letter and Berkshire’s annual report:

1. Buffett Relies on Buybacks Instead of Deals

Berkshire repurchased a record $24.7 billion of its own stock as Buffett struggled to find better ways to invest his enormous pile of cash.

And there’s more where that came from: The conglomerate has continued to buy its own stock since the end of last year, and is likely to keep at it, Buffett said Saturday in his annual letter.

“That action increased your ownership in all of Berkshire’s businesses by 5.2% without requiring you to so much as touch your wallet,” Buffett said in the letter, which pointed out that the company “made no sizable acquisitions” in 2020.

Berkshire did make a small amount of progress in paring the cash pile, which fell 5% in the fourth quarter to $138.3 billion. Buffett has struggled to keep pace with the flow in recent years as Berkshire threw off cash faster than he could find higher-returning assets to snap up, leading to the surge in share repurchases.

2. Apple Is as Valuable to Berkshire as BNSF Railroad

Berkshire’s $120 billion investment in Apple Inc. stock has become so valuable that Buffett places it in the same category as the sprawling railroad business he spent a decade building.

He began building a stake in the iPhone maker in 2016, and spent just $31.1 billion acquiring it all. The surge in value since then places it among the company’s top three assets, alongside his insurers and BNSF, the U.S. railroad purchase completed in 2010, according to the annual letter.

“In certain respects, it’s his kind of business,” said James Armstrong, who manages assets including Berkshire shares as president of Henry H. Armstrong Associates. “It’s very much brand name, it’s global, it’s an absolutely addictive product.”

Buffett had always balked at technology investments, saying he didn’t understand the companies well enough. But the rise of deputies including Combs and Weschler has brought Berkshire deep into the sector. In addition to Apple, the conglomerate has built up stakes in Amazon.com Inc., cloud-computing company Snowflake Inc., and Verizon Communications Inc.

3. Buffett Concedes Error in $37.2 Billion Deal

Buffett admitted he made a mistake when he bought Precision Castparts Corp. five years ago for $37.2 billion.

“I paid too much for the company,” the billionaire investor said Saturday in his annual letter. “No one misled me in any way — I was simply too optimistic about PCC’s normalized profit potential.”

Berkshire took an almost $11 billion writedown last year that was largely tied to Precision Castparts, the maker of equipment for aerospace and energy industries based in Portland, Oregon.

The pandemic was the main culprit. Precision Castparts struggled as demand for flights plummeted, prompting airlines to park their jets and slash their schedules. Less flying means lower demand for replacement parts and new aircraft. Precision slashed its workforce by about 40% last year, according to Berkshire’s annual report.

4. Profit Gains Thanks to Railroad, Manufacturers

Despite the pandemic’s effects continuing to hit Berkshire’s collection of businesses, the conglomerate posted a near 14% gain in operating earnings in the fourth quarter compared to the same period a year earlier.

That was helped by a record quarter for railroad BNSF since its 2010 purchase and one of the best quarters for the manufacturing operations since mid-2019.

5. Good-bye Omaha, Hello Los Angeles

Berkshire’s annual meeting has for years drawn throngs of Buffett fans to Omaha, Nebraska, where the conglomerate is based. This year, the show is moving to the West Coast.

While still virtual because of the pandemic, the annual meeting will be filmed in Los Angeles, the company said Saturday.

That will bring the event closer to the home of Buffett’s longtime business partner, Charlie Munger. Buffett and Munger will be joined by two key deputies, Greg Abel and Ajit Jain, who will also field questions.

Buffett and Abel, who lives closer to Berkshire’s headquarters, last year faced “a dark arena, 18,000 empty seats and a camera” at the annual meeting, Buffett said in his letter. The 90-year-old billionaire said he expects to do an in-person meeting in 2022

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Cuts Apple Stake And Buys These Drugmaker, Telecom Stocks Instead

TipRanks

2 “Strong Buy” Dividend Stocks Yielding at Least 7%

A number of factors are coming together in the market picture, and indicate a possible change in conditions in the mid-term. These include increases in commodity prices, specifically, oil prices, which have rallied recently. In addition, the January jobs numbers, released earlier this month, were disappointing at best – and grim, at worst. They, do, however, increase the chance that President Biden and the Democratic Congress will push a large-scale COVID relief package through to fruition. These factors are likely to pull in varying directions. The rise in oil prices suggests an upcoming squeeze in supply, while the possibility of further stimulus cash bodes well for fans of market liquidity. These developments, however, point toward a possible price reflationary climate. Against this backdrop, some investors are looking for ways to rebuild and defend their portfolios. And that will bring us to dividends. By providing a steady income stream, no matter what the market conditions, a reliable dividend stock provides a pad for your investment portfolio when the share stop appreciating. And so, we’ve opened up the TipRanks database and pulled the details on two stocks with high yields – at least 7%. Even better, these stocks are seen as Strong Buys by Wall Street’s analysts. Let’s find out why. Williams Companies (WMB) The first stock we’ll look at is Williams Companies, a natural gas processing firm based in Oklahoma. Williams controls pipelines for natural gas, natural gas liquids, and oil gathering, in a network stretching from the Pacific Northwest, through the Rockies to the Gulf Coast, and across the South to the Mid-Atlantic. Williams’ core business is the processing and transport of natural gas, with crude oil and energy generation as secondary operations. The company’s footprint is huge – it handles almost one-third of all natural gas use in the US, both residential and commercial. Williams will report its 4Q20 results late this month – but a look at the Q3 results is informative. The company reported $1.93 billion at the top line, down 3.5% year-over-year but up 8.4% quarter-over-quarter, and the highest quarterly revenue so far released for 2020. Net earnings came in at 25 cents per share, flat from Q2 but up 38% year-over-year. The report was widely held as meeting or exceeding expectations, and the stock gained 7% in the two weeks after it was released. In a move that may indicate a solid Q4 earnings on the way, the company declared its next dividend, to be paid out on March 29. The 41-cent per common share payment is up 2.5% from the previous quarter, and annualizes to $1.64. At that rate, the dividend yields 7.1%. Williams has a 4-year history of dividend growth and maintenance, and typically raises the payment in the first quarter of the year. Covering the stock for RBC, 5-star analyst TJ Schultz wrote: “We believe Williams can hit the low-end of its 2020 EBITDA guidance. While we expect near-term growth in the NE to moderate, we think WMB should benefit from less than previously expected associated gas from the Permian. Given our long-term view, we estimate Williams can remain comfortably within investment grade credit metrics through our forecast period and keep the dividend intact.” To this end, Schultz rates WMB an Outperform (i.e. Buy), and his $26 price target suggests an upside of 13% in the next 12 months. (To watch Schultz’s track record, click here) With 8 recent reviews on record, including 7 Buys and just 1 Hold, WMB has earned its Strong Buy analyst consensus rating. While the stock has gained in recent months, reaching $23, the average price target of $25.71 implies it still has room for ~12% growth this year. (See WMB stock analysis on TipRanks) AGNC Investment (AGNC) Next up is AGNC Investment, a real estate investment trust. It’s no surprise to find a REIT as a dividend champ – these companies are required by tax codes to return a high percentage of profits directly to shareholders, and frequently use dividends as the vehicle for compliance. AGNC, based in Maryland, focuses on MBSs (mortgage-backed securities) with backing and guarantees from the US government. These securities make up some two-thirds of the company’s total portfolio, or $65.1 billion out of the $97.9 billion total. AGNC’s most recent quarterly returns, for 4Q20, showed $459 million in net revenue, and a net income per share of $1.37. While down yoy, the EPS was the strongest recorded for 2020. For the full year, AGNC reported $1.68 billion in total revenues, and $1.56 per share paid out in dividends. The current dividend, 12 cents per common share paid out monthly, will annualize to $1.44; the difference from last year’s higher annualization rate is due to a dividend cut implemented in April in response to the coronavirus crisis. At the current rate, the dividend gives investors a robust yield of 8.8%, and is easily affordable for the company given current income. Among AGNC’s bulls is Maxim analyst Michael Diana who wrote: “AGNC has retained a competitive yield on book value relative to other mortgage REITs (mREITS), even as it has out-earned its dividend and repurchased shares. While turmoil in the mortgage markets at the end of March resulted in losses and lower book values for all mortgage REITs, AGNC was able to meet all of its margin calls and, importantly, take relatively fewer realized losses and therefore retain more earnings power post-turmoil.” Based on all of the above, Diana rates AGNC a Buy, along with an $18 price target. This figure implies a ~10% upside potential from current levels. (To watch Diana’s track record, click here) Wall Street is on the same page. Over the last couple of months, AGNC has received 7 Buys and a single Hold — all add up to a Strong Buy consensus rating. However, the $16.69 average price target suggests shares will remain range bound for the foreseeable future. (See AGNC stock analysis on TipRanks) To find good ideas for dividend stocks trading at attractive valuations, visit TipRanks’ Best Stocks to Buy, a newly launched tool that unites all of TipRanks’ equity insights. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the featured analysts. The content is intended to be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment.

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