Buffett’s advice: Buy suppliers, not producers – sells Exxon, buys refinery

During the gold booms of yore, the money was always made by those who supplied food, picks and shovels – not the wildcatters. That is the kind of logic never lost on the world’s most successful investor, Warren Buffett, who is applying the principle to his native America’s “shale gale”. The latest regulatory findings show Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has been buying shares in Phillips 66, the refinery arm of what was previously Phillips Conoco. The value of this investment now exceeds a $3.7bn stake in oil supplier Exxon Mobil which Berkshire sold in February. – Alec Hogg

S&P 500By Dan Murtaugh, Bradley Olson and Noah Buhayar

(Bloomberg) – Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. sees a green light at the intersection of low oil prices and record driving.

In its most significant energy investment in two years, Berkshire has amassed a $4.5 billion stake in Phillips 66, making it the biggest shareholder in the largest U.S. oil refiner. Berkshire owns almost 58 million shares in Phillips 66, more than 10 percent of the total outstanding, up from the 7.5 million it reported at the end of the first quarter, according to a regulatory filing issued late Friday by the Omaha, Nebraska-based company.

The bet on Phillips 66 is a wager that an unexpected and significant rally by refiners during the shale boom will continue as low oil prices spur demand for gasoline, diesel and other petroleum products produced by the so-called downstream sector. Since oil fell by half last year, gasoline demand in the U.S. has surged to an 8-year high, as drivers see per-gallon prices fall below $3 and take to the road.

“As oil prices have dropped, it’s obvious to people in the business that refiner stocks are your best bet,” Carl Larry, head of oil and natural gas for Frost & Sullivan LP, said by phone from Houston. “When people say the oil industry is failing — well, upstream might be, but downstream has never been better.”

An index of four refiners on the Standard & Poor’s 500 is up 12 percent this year, compared with the larger energy index, which is down 18 percent. Phillips 66 closed at $77.23 on Friday in New York, up 7.7 percent this year. The increase at Phillips 66 has trailed the results of some other U.S. refiners — Valero Energy Corp. has gained 19 percent this year and Tesoro Corp. has climbed 26 percent. Marathon Petroleum Corp. is up 4.6 percent for the year.

The number of miles traveled on U.S roadways rose to the highest level ever in June, according to the Federal Highway Administration. Previously, American drivers facing higher prices, the 2008 financial crisis and a program that paid for replacing older cars with more fuel-efficient models were spurring forecasts that U.S. demand had peaked.

Berkshire has been interested in Phillips 66 since the company was formed after being spun out of ConocoPhillips in 2012. Berkshire held more than 27 million shares in the refiner for more than a year. About two-thirds of that holding was swapped for one of Phillips 66’s businesses last year in a transaction designed to limit Berkshire’s tax liability.

Since the spinoff, Phillips has more than doubled in value along with a number of other refiners, surging as new U.S. drilling produced an abundance of crude, allowing the companies to purchase oil domestically for less than it was selling abroad.

“Lower oil prices are precipitating an upwards revised forecast for world demand,” Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates LLC in Houston, said by phone. “Refiners are going to see decent margins going forward.”

The company still faces questions about what will happen with DCP Midstream LLC, a pipeline and processing partnership it co-owns with Spectra Energy Corp. The two owners have disagreed on whether to put more money into the venture, which has suffered from low natural gas prices and high debt.

Berkshire may have been rebuilding the holding for some time. Buffett’s company said in May that it had 7.5 million shares of the refiner as of the end of March. In a subsequent filing, detailing its stock portfolio at the end of the second quarter, Berkshire showed no stake in Phillips 66 and said it had omitted some data that was reported confidentially to regulators.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sometimes allows companies to withhold information from the public to limit copycat investing while a firm is building or cutting a position. Buffett requested confidential treatment in 2011 filings, as he spent more than $10 billion amassing a stake in International Business Machines Corp. He did the same while building a holding in Exxon Mobil Corp. in 2013. Berkshire sold its entire $3.7 billion position in the biggest U.S. oil company during the fourth quarter last year, as crude prices collapsed.

The filing on Friday didn’t say whether it was Buffett or one of his deputy investment managers, Todd Combs or Ted Weschler, who built the most-recent stake in Phillips 66.

Like their boss, Combs and Weschler are known for concentrating their portfolios in just a handful of stocks and holding them for long periods. They also tend to be opportunistic in their purchases, buying stocks when events cause them to trade below what they’re truly worth.

Buffett didn’t respond to a request for comment sent to an assistant outside normal business hours. Dennis Nuss, a spokesman for Phillips 66, said the company doesn’t comment on specific investors.

Even at $4.5 billion, the Phillips 66 stake is only a medium-size investment in Berkshire’s stock portfolio. Buffett built holdings in Wells Fargo & Co. and Kraft Heinz Co. that are each worth more than $20 billion. Berkshire also owns more than $10 billion in stock in Coca-Cola Co., IBM and American Express Co.

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