- Warren Buffett's Top Three Investment Rules for the Average American
- Warren Buffett's Complete Sun Valley CNBC Interview - Transcript and Video
- Warren Buffett Tells CNBC Consumer Sales Remain "Very, Very Soft"
- Warren Buffett: Economy Needs Another Dose of Viagra
- Canada's Salida Capital Revealed As Winning $1.68M Bidder for Warren Buffett Lunch
- Warren Buffett Lunch Winner: I Won't Profit From Stock Tip Windfall
- Value of Warren Buffett's Annual Gift to Gates Foundation Falls Along With Berkshire's Stock
- After Warren Buffett 'Promoted' to Mattress Salesman, Nervous Nellie Sales 'Pretty Good'
- Warren Buffett Down, S&P Up, As First Half Buzzer Sounds
- Warren Buffett Wearing "Belt and Suspenders" As Tide Went Out - KBW Analyst
RSS FEED
|
CNBC'S MOST SHARED
- Unemployed? Bored? Make Money Playing Beer Pong
- WPP's Sir Martin Sorrell on the Ad Recession
- The Highest Grossing (Inflation Adjusted) Movies of All Time
- Social Networking's 'Naked' Truth
- Geek Squad V. Gizmodo
- Merrill's McCann Seen as UBS Wealth Frontrunner
- Warren Buffett's Top Three Investment Rules for the Average American
- Why You Should Watch Fund Flows
- Four Things You Should Be Doing Now To Break Out
- Eric Schmidt on Government Scrutiny and Economic Recovery
- Market 360: The Week's Best & Worst
- Geek Squad V. Gizmodo
- Brandt: Google Chrome OS in the Post-PC Age
- Other People Are Weirder Than We Are
- Bank Failures: Is The Nightmare Over? (Video)
- California Here I Go? No.
- Roginsky: No More Mr. Nice Guy
- Commercial Conundrum
- Why the Credit Pendulum Is Stuck at 'Stupid'
- Stimulus Will Kick in Later this Year: President Obama
- Lender CIT Group Hires Premier Bankruptcy Adviser
- Government Selling Bank Stakes for Too Cheap: Panel
- Buffett's Top 3 Investment Rules for Average Americans
- Market Insider: Earnings Loom in the Week Ahead
- Bulls Get Summertime Blues, But It's Hot Fun for Bears
- As Banks Fail, Strong Institutions Become More Visible
- GM IPO in Second Quarter 2010 at the Earliest: CFO


![]() |
Gail Burton / AP The Constellation Energy building in Baltimore. (2005 file photo) |
Last September, Constellation was in big trouble. Its stock was under enormous pressure as the Baltimore-based company faced a liquidity crunch that could have put it into bankruptcy.
MidAmerican Energy Holdings, a subsidiary of Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, came to the rescue with a quick infusion of one billion dollars and a deal to buy the entire company for $4.7 billion, or $26.50 a share. That looked like another "Buffett Bargain," with the stock trading over $100 a share just about 10 months before.
At the time, EDF made some noises about mounting a challenge for its U.S. joint-venture partner, but nothing happened, until now.
Today, EDF is offering to pay $4.5 billion for 50 percent of Constellation's nuclear business. That's just $200 million less than the price Buffett is paying for the entire company. The French company is also offering an up-front $1 billion cash investment in Constellation and says it's willing to buy another $2 billion of the company's non-nuclear assets.
EDF calculates that its proposal values Constellation at around $52 a share, almost double Buffett's offer. Indeed, EDF argues MidAmerican's offer "significantly undervalues" Constellation. It wants that company's board to drop the Buffett deal and accept its "superior" proposal.
That could indeed happen. The two offers aren't even close.
Buffett does have the advantage of being ready to go with cash in hand and without the possible regulatory complications of a French company buying U.S. nuclear assets. But that advantage appears to be dwarfed by the sheer size of EDF's offer.
One possibility: Buffett responds by raising his own offer, setting up a bidding war for Constellation. The New York Times quotes one analyst on that possibility: "Warren Buffett has a lot of funds at his disposal... Two very strong parties bidding for Constellation can only drive the final price higher."
Don't count on it, however. It's just not Buffett's style. He likes bargains, not bidding wars.
Plus, he presumably won't be all that upset if the MidAmerican deal doesn't go through.
Under the terms of their deal, Constellation would have to give MidAmerican almost 10 percent of its common stock, make a payment of almost $600 million in cash and pay 14 percent on MidAmerican's $1 billion cash infusion. That should be enough to dry any Buffett tears.
As the always-insightful David Faber noted on CNBC TV this morning, Buffett is a tough negotiator who likes to create win-win situations for himself. If EDF's bid ultimately fails for whatever reason, he gets Constellation for his bargain price. If EDF succeeds, he gets the big break-up fee. Either way, there's no bidding war.
Current Berkshire stock prices:
Class A: [US;BRK.A
Loading...
()
]
Class B: [US;BRK.B
Loading...
()
]
Questions? Comments? Email me at
- Taking On Dr. Doom: Warren Buffett's 'Buy and Hold' Strategy Is Alive and Well (December 1)
- Berkshire Hathaway Shares Bounce Back Above $100,000 (November 26)
- Buffett's Bank Bets "Paying Off" - Bloomberg (November 26)
- Warren Buffett Tops Business Week's Ranking of American Philanthropists (November 26)
- Warren Buffett Promises More Info On Berkshire's Derivatives In Annual Report (November 24)
- Barron's: Berkshire Hathaway's Stock Price Plunge Finally Makes It "Cheap" Again (November 23)
- Berkshire Hathaway Bounces Back By 16% For Best Day In Decades (November 21)
- Berkshire Hathaway Subsidiary Keeps Coachmen Alive By Acquiring RV Business (November 21)







