Why Warren Buffett Is Buying – And You Should Be Too
Posted on November 18, 2011 at 05:00 AM EST
Legendary investor Warren Buffett recently made news with his purchase of International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE: IBM ), though I can't say I'm surprised. Despite criticism that he's buying into a top-heavy market, that IBM is at a premium, and that he's losing his touch , chances are Buffett knows exactly what he's doing. And guess what, it's exactly what I've been counseling investors to do since this crisis began - bolster defenses by putting money to work in companies that are backed by trillions of dollars in tailwinds, and have solid defensible businesses (Buffett calls these "moats"). According to a Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE: BRK.A , BRK.B ) filing made Monday but dated Sept. 30, 2011, Buffett also waded into General Dynamics Corp. (NYSE: GD ), DirecTV (Nasdaq: DTV ), CVS Caremark Corp. (NYSE: CVS ), Intel Corp. (Nasdaq: INTC ) and Visa Inc. (NYSE: V ). In the third quarter, Buffett funneled $10 billion into Berkshire's IBM stake, which now stands at 5.5%. Of course, Berkshire maintains a $13.5 billion stake in The Coca-Cola Co. (NYSE: KO ) that remains the firm's largest. Buffett Pulls the Trigger As a long time Buffett watcher, I am somewhat surprised that he picked up Intel and IBM, if only because the Oracle of Omaha has a well-documented aversion to tech. Still, I can see the logic. Both companies are global giants poised to profit from the whirlwind of growth set to take place thousands of miles from our shores in the decades ahead. There are technical similarities, too. For instance, IBM's price has risen more than 29% this year. As a result, at least five analysts have removed their buy recommendations because they believe the stock may have run its course, according to Bloomberg News and YahooFinance . At the moment, less than 50% of the analysts who cover IBM recommend buying the stock. Back in 1988, it was much the same situation. Coke had more than doubled in size and analysts had much the same reaction when it came to doubts about further growth. Many openly bashed the stock's prospects and completely ignored the global growth potential that today is Coke's mainstay. Coke is up tenfold since then. Enough said. Here's what I think Buffett sees: To continue reading, please click here...