It's not that
Berkshire (BRKA)
needs or requested assistance from the Fed -- nor that the relatively
tiny bond purchases will move the needle for Buffett's massive company.
Other blue-chip names including
Walmart (WMT),
Boeing (BA),
ExxonMobil (XOM) and
Coca-Cola (KO)also had their bonds bought by the Fed facility, which
launched this month. CNN owner
AT&T (T) is also on the list.
"Warren
Buffett, don't worry, the Fed's got your back," Peter Boockvar, chief
investment officer at Bleakley Advisory Group, wrote in a note to
clients Monday. "Monetary policy has now reached a new low in the US."
Buffett, whose real-time net worth
Forbes pegs at $69.8 billion,
is the fourth-richest person in the world. He owns 37% of the Class A
shares of Berkshire Hathaway, a holding company with stakes in
Apple (AAPL),
Bank of America (BAC),
Wells Fargo (WFC) and other major corporations.
Of
course, Berkshire, along with many other companies whose bonds were
purchased, already benefits from extremely cheap borrowing costs.
Berkshire's extremely strong balance sheet means it has no problems
finding buyers for its bonds.
"This
is really embarrassing," said Danielle DiMartino Booth, CEO and chief
strategist at Quill Intelligence. "Warren Buffett doesn't need a
backstop from the Fed."
2008 response on steroids
But
the fact that the Fed provided the backstop anyway shows how the
central bank's response to the pandemic is even more dramatic than its
daring rescue during the Great Recession. A dozen years ago, the central
bank dropped rates to zero, purchased mountains of US Treasuries and
mortgage bonds and funded the bailout of insurance giant AIG.
Now,
the Fed is for the first time directing the purchase of corporate
bonds, including risky junk bonds, through its Secondary Market
Corporate Credit Facility. It set up a special purpose vehicle, managed
by
BlackRock (BLK) and funded with $25 billion from the US Treasury Department, to do the buying.
The
mere announcement that the Fed would be scooping up corporate bonds was
enough to unlock that market when it froze in March.
Carnival (CCL),
Ford (F)
and other companies that had been locked out of the borrowing markets
suddenly had access to affordable capital. And the Fed's March 23
announcement helped put a floor beneath the US stock market, which
bottomed that day and has since surged.
The Fed has stressed that its emergency interventions in financial markets have a real-world benefit to everyday Americans.
"We
want to support market functioning because when markets are working,
companies can borrow, people can borrow," Fed chief Jerome Powell told
lawmakers June 17.
Powell added
that when companies have access to credit, "they're less likely to take
cost-cutting measures" such as laying off workers.
However,
unlike the Paycheck Protection Program that provided forgivable loans
to small businesses, the Fed's corporate bond-buying program does not
have strings attached requiring them to hold onto employees. In other
words, there is nothing stopping a company whose bonds are now owned by
the Fed vehicle from laying off thousands of workers.
Apple, Amazon and Google could be next
The
Fed facility, which is overseen by the New York Fed, on Sunday revealed
which bonds were purchased through June 16, including ones issued by
Caterpillar (CAT), Ford,
Dollar General (DG),
Home Depot (HD)and
Marriott (MAR).
This is not new debt issued by those companies: The bonds were already trading in markets. (The
NY Fed announced the launch on Monday of a separate program that will in fact buy newly-issued bonds).
The Fed facility also purchased $5.7 million of bonds issued by
Berkshire Hathaway Energy, a division of Buffett's conglomerate that owns utilities such as PacifiCorp, MidAmerican Energy and Nevada's NV Energy.
The
NY Fed also released an index of 794 companies
that fit the criteria for having their bonds get scooped up by the
emergency facility in the future. The NY Fed has indicated it intends to
track that index, which includes tech titans
Amazon (AMZN), Apple and Google as well as media giants
Comcast (CMCSA),
Walt Disney (DIS) and CNN parent WarnerMedia.
The US subsidiaries of a number of foreign corporations also made the cut, including
Toyota (TM),
Volkswagen (VLKAF) and Mercedes-Benz parent
Daimler (DDAIF). These auto makers are all major employers of US workers, particularly in the Southeast.
Winners and losers
The
goal of the program is not to bail out specific companies but to make
sure creditworthy firms have access to capital. Without it, a tidal wave
of bankruptcies would happen all at once, potentially crashing the
economy into a depression.
"This
is a very clever tool," David Kotok, chairman and chief investment
officer at Cumberland Advisors, told CNN Business. "The Fed wants to
give incentives and inducements to Berkshire, Verizon, Apple and the
rest to become more economically active."
Still, Kotok fears this intervention will distort the functioning of the capital markets.
"The
Fed is now in the business of picking corporate winners and therefore
by definition also losers," Kotok told CNN Business. "The corporate
winners have the market perception that the wind is at their back,
otherwise why would the Fed buy our bonds?"
That
perception in the marketplace, Kotok said, will give the winners
additional financial firepower in the form of cheaper borrowing costs.
And by contrast, companies that didn't make the cut for the Fed's list
will find it relatively harder to borrow.
"The divide between the winners and losers has now widened," Kotok said.
Editor's note: This story has been updated to clarify which Berkshire Hathaway shares Warren Buffett owns