Decade or more ago, Apple flagged they were heading to in-housing the profits in VLSI when they cut ARM out of the deal behind the chips for the iPod. Nobody should be surprised if somebody with big money in TSMC sees Apple (who buy a lot of their product) as a better investment. (they kept the IPR tie-in within limits but stopped using them to be the foundry and started adding their own FPGA and the like to arm cores. So it was functionally diluting)
TSMC are going to be exposed to high risk re-building in the USA (making VLSI plants is very very expensive and yield can be many years in the hunting), and have bottlenecks (water access) in Taiwan as well as the war risk. Maybe Berkshire sees them as a dropping value shere for a bit. I doubt they won't return, maybe later on when TSMC shares are better value? Berkshire is a hold company, not a trade-at-a-rate-of-knots company.
I'm not sure why Berkshire thinks banks are a bad bet: they have made bank (sorry) this last downturn, and will continue to. A lot of profit in them yet, and with interest rates going high, people will be flocking to them for income generating products like annuities. Maybe I misunderstand the risk here but I would think a bank is a better bet right now than listed property trusts.
If I am not mistaken, Berkshire is huge in re-insurance and in general goods and services. If they move out of the insurance market and cite global warming risk, thats the signal everyone needs to see that its a real risk, not some fancy.
Is Berkshire invested in the dutch chip-making tool maker side of things? Thats got to be the shovel-seller in the goldrush.
[edit: I am hazy on exactly what is the role between Apple, ARM-UK holdings, Wolfson, TSMC and their history of chip design so please don't beat me up if you know ARM was never the foundry. The point was, Apple used UK VLSI designs, secured designs, and then moved into the territory to internalise profit. exactly what they did I don't know but I do know they marginalised work that was done for them]
Correct me if I'm wrong but retail banks historically aren't cash cows, they return about 1% of assets on deposit. They generally have to pass on the better interest rates to their customers. In a world where the risk-free rate is like 5%, it probably makes sense to divest of banks and look for higher yields in something like Apple. Their stock pump may have just been reflective of transient economics. Just speculating, this isn't my area.
[edit] Also, personal savings rates are crashing in the US and revolving debt utilization is way up. Maybe Berkshire is worried about cyclical defaults and withdrawals of principal? Even if bank ROA is up, lower deposits mean lower revenues. [1]
If you hold enough deposits, 1% is pretty good. Remember, these assets aren't "your" assets. you hold shares in the bank. the 1% isn't a rate of return on the share pool. Banks pay dividends reliably.
So? Investors don't have to lower-bound value bank stock at its deposits.
(God I hate google and its insistence on corporate search results, I search for "how much money does bank of america have on deposit" and all the results are about making deposits on bankofamerica.com)
Bank of America has $1.9t in deposits, but its equity value is $285b. So a 1% return on deposits = 6.66% return for investors (excluding other costs and other revenue (account fees?))
Side note re: search, Bing Chat answers your question (cut and paste from your quote):
Bank of America has different types of deposits, such as interest-bearing deposits, non-interest-bearing deposits, and mobile deposits. According to the annual Summary of Deposits from the FDIC, Bank of America had $1.36 trillion in total deposits as of June 2019(1), making it the largest US bank by deposits. However, this number may have changed since then. The Bank of America mobile check deposit limit is $10,000 per month for accounts opened for three months or longer, and $2,500 per month for accounts opened for fewer than three months(2).
What a strange mix of corporate financials and retail product specs. The first sentence implies that “mobile deposits” are of a kind with interest- and non-interest bearing deposits. The last sentence talk about the process of making a deposit into your own account.
The middle two sentences actually answer the question regarding the total volume of deposits across the bank.
Verdict: Still useful! Non sequitor-ish, but better than SEO spam :)
Aside: I would expect equity value of a bank to be predominantly dependent on returns, since many banks don’t have a lot of assets (except perhaps investment assets that produce returns and the assets themselves are valued on their returns).
> equity value of a bank to be predominantly dependent on returns
bingo. Though you have to worry about leverage (ie: risk). Really sucks when a small change results in catastrophic losses (though everyone loves it on the way up).
Insurance is a core tenet of Buffett’s investing philosophy. He uses the “float” from premiums to plow into other investments and then he has the entire cash flow juggernaut of Berkshire to cope in the years when insurance has claims loss. And he’s gotten so amazing at it that he’s able to underwrite risky/exotic policies and profit handsomely from it.
Climate change is definitely a hot topic with insurers but it’s not going to cause them to go broke.
Thats kind-of what I mean: if Berkshire "invites" its RE investments to cease laying off climate change risks, or to make immense profit for the risk, then the worldwide re-insurance market is going to move, and everyone holding waterfront property is going to find premiums jump no matter what because Re-insurance spreads risk: everyone winds up paying for that spread, down at the coal face.
"oh sorry, the cost of re-insurance jumped 10x, your premiums have to go up" is a hell of a signal.
Someone maybe, and maybe they'll pay if they want to keep working in Turkey, but...
many of the builders were given amnesty for violating construction rules, and then arrested after the earthquake. There's video of Erdogan boasting about how much more housing was put in from the amnesty. So maybe Reinsurers claim most of those buildings aren't covered, because of building violations? That's what they'd do in Florida.
I don’t know the rules in Turkey but in the Netherlands insurers cannot insure major disasters like earthquakes, war and nuclear explosions, because although the events are extremely rare a single one would bankrupt the companies.
Geico is such a cash cow because unlike most insurance businesses, there is vary little variance. The average claim is low and it's smoothed out by having so many customers. There are no large ,discrete events. All it needs to do is raise premiums to ensure large annual , recurring profits no matter what.
> I suspect we'll see a TSMC sabotage in the coming months
What evidence exists to show that China is preparing to annex Taiwan? Satellite troop movements? Natural resource hoarding? Anything at all?
If China, or anyone, invaded Taiwan it would be fantastically easy to cripple tsmc fabs. Kill their engineers en masse. Blow up the lithography machines. Unleash a targeted virus like stuxnet designed for the hardware in the facilities on their networks. An important question remains, does China have the footing to not only fill the vacuum in their supply chain but to also weather the sanctions and quite possibly engage the us and its allies without turning cities to irradiated glass and starting nuclear winter?
I seriously doubt that China is secretly prepared to meet their own domestic demand for advanced silicon let alone call bluff of the five eyes.
That said, maybe xi is actually more out if touch than Putin and we’ll be cowering in fallout shelters come summer.
IMO TSMC doesn't really play much a role in the Taiwan issue. It's all about geopolitics. Taiwan is right off the east coast of China, and also right in the midst of all major East Asian sea trade routes. And the US is continuing to ply them with tens of billions of dollars in weapons and overtly looking to turn it into a defacto launching pad for US forces. That's a rather severe threat from China's perspective, regardless of whether Taiwan was a manufacturing center of the world, or just another Guam.
Sure but that's been true for decades. The question is, what's new? Here in Taiwan it's business as usual. Twenty years ago, "idk about buying property, what if the PRC invades?" Ten years ago, "what if the PRC invades?" Meanwhile earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes, etc, causing disruptions here in Taiwan and everywhere else in the world.
So what's changed today that makes a PRC invasion more likely than a major earthquake, which we already just live in peace with the possibility of?
I'm going to avoid answering this, largely because it's impossible to do so succinctly. Obviously a massive amount has changed as I'm sure you know, too much to cover succinctly. And then there are also the subjective factors. As but one example, how one thinks the war in Ukraine is going, for instance, is going to inform their opinion on China's self-perceived relative strength/weakness.
Ultimately, if you believe a conflict is probable, it comes down to a question of timing. China will want to make a move when the US is at a weak point and/or distracted with other obligations. Similarly, the less favorable (to China) maintaining the status quo is, the more inclined they will be to act.
> Obviously a massive amount has changed as I'm sure you know, too much to cover succinctly.
This is exactly why I put my foot down and challenge hard whenever I hear, "oh, well, you know, the China situation in Taiwan."
No, I don't know. And nobody can tell me. Why is that? All I get is hand waving.
I'm not trying to be reductionist or asking people to oversimplify, but I do think it should be possible to answer the question of "what indicators of invasion are strong enough to prevent investment in Taiwan companies" with something succinct. Typically people go the route of "increased air traffic from PLA jets" or something, though that's historically consistent and also hasn't resulted in invasion in 3 decades. Not even local regime change caused an invasion when Taiwan switched to democratic rule.
> subjective factors
I argue that these "subjective factors" are really just artifacts of a media system that prefers to distort reality as a far more interesting and violent place than it really is. I argue that instead of Taiwan being a very exciting, about-to-be-invaded-any-minute-now place, it's actually a very mundane place, facing the same catastrophic risks of any other mundane place, such as Miami or San Francisco (or both I guess, since Taiwan faces both typhoon and earthquake risk. Still pretty mundane compared to how the media portrays us).
I enjoy gametheorying as much as anyone else, but I'm noticing that this vague handwavy subjective "invasion risk" is having real effects, and that annoys me. I've had people say, "I'd visit, but I'm worried about the China situation." What? Really? But you'll get in a car and face down unknown numbers of drunk drivers every day? I don't get it and I'll be honest, it annoys me a bit. So, hence why I push back so hard.
I don't think anybody's claiming Taiwan is violent or especially "interesting." I spent a while there myself and quite enjoyed it - the best public transport I've experienced anywhere in the world, completely bemusing escalator behavior, sewer smell tofu and all. But the nasty thing about war is it's not like there's some visible meter that fills up, and once it reaches the top - war starts.
It starts when one side believes they have a strategic advantage, and often it comes exceptionally fast. Ask most people who are familiar with the situation in Russia/Ukraine, including Ukrainians and Russians, whether they thought Russia would invade in 2022, even just days before it happened, and most would have laughed at the idea of it. Even Zelensky was [publicly] overtly rejecting the US claims of an imminent invasion.
With Taiwan both sides are being increasingly provocative. There was absolutely zero purpose in sending Pelosi to Taiwan. It was essentially just daring China to stop her. It's somewhat similar to how in the leadup to the war in Ukraine numerous Western vessels were semi-regularly violating Russia's territorial waters (based on Crimea), essentially daring them to escalate. The CCP, for their part, have also stepped up their rhetoric and there were even leaked (more probably "leaked") plans for an invasion of Taiwan. Even if disinformation, it's obviously designed to provoke. Basically both sides are poking and prodding one another, to feel each other out. I don't think it's simply posturing.
There are also somewhat practical indicators. China has been accelerating an ongoing process of de-dollarizing itself, engaging in simulations of 'Russia like' sanctions on its economy, stockpiling food [ostensibly for COVID lockdowns], expanding their nuclear arsenal, increasing conventional arms production [ostensibly for export], and more. And while I'm skipping most of the geopolitics stuff for brevity, I would at least mention the obvious indicators that the Mideast (Saudi Arabia and UAE in particular) seem to be moving hard towards the 'Eastern bloc.' This sort of an alliance opens up doors that are big enough to start speaking hyperbolically in terms of outcomes.
I don't think they'll "invade", a word that's mostly used here in the west, mostly in the US, China doesn't seems to want a war, Taiwan even less, its population rejected the pro-US government [1]
On the other hand, the US proved that they are willing to replace the goverment of a country and arm it
> I seriously doubt that China is secretly prepared to meet their own domestic demand for advanced silicon let alone call bluff of the five eyes.
That's the same people who; 10 years ago said "i don't think China will be able to put into orbit a space station, let alone visiting the moon"
I mean nationalization. As the world economy fractures and countries take more control over their supply chains nationalization of industry will take place. China does it all the time. Russia is planning on doing it. The US is talking about doing it (and has to some extent) to combat China's influence domestically.
It's going to increase dramatically all over the world, deglobalization means supply chains are a security concern as much as if not more than an economic concern now.
> ^ HN strips the ! from the link, so please add it at the end of the URL.
That's because it's not a valid URL char, just browsers do the translation for you. You'll want to URL-encode it. Replace `!` with its url-encoding %21:
I watched a Peter Zeihan video recently where he claimed that Apple is the one American manufacturer who refused to move its supply chains out of China positioning themselves for considerable risk in the coming political and economic climate.
I'd be curious to know to what extent Berkshire considers this a risk.
Peter Zeihan is important to read/watch, but only as part of a fully comprehensive analysis. He's at one end of the spectrum, and that's insufficient to inform.
You need to listen to China bulls too. Absorb multiple perspectives and synthesize your own model of how things piece together and move.
That may be the case in the past, but the factors that enabled the Chinese manufacturing (low to medium range) dominance are largely declining: abundant growing labor force, stable world trading and geopolitical environment.
Yeah they’re definitely losing that edge, which is why I said “has been”. But I think they still have a bit of an edge, particularly for electronics, at the moment.
Amazing how he did such a reversal on tech. Even at 80-90 years old and widely regarded as the GOAT, he saw he still had stuff to learn. He finally came around to tech. Also, he said he regretted not buying Google earlier.
Data is still the new oil. Sleeping giants Apple and Microsoft have properties with hoards of data and captive users. Apple has somewhat successfully convinced its users that all their data is safe with Apple. Their tactics to lock out data competitors is working which makes theirs more valuable. I think we will see them soon capitalize on this.
Somewhat of a shameless plug but I run a website that reports on the holdings & changes of these kind of portfolios[1] and read that the SEC now supports position values from 12 to 16 digits[2]. In other words, managers can now report in the trillions instead of the billions.
61 comments
[ 0.16 ms ] story [ 137 ms ] threadTSMC are going to be exposed to high risk re-building in the USA (making VLSI plants is very very expensive and yield can be many years in the hunting), and have bottlenecks (water access) in Taiwan as well as the war risk. Maybe Berkshire sees them as a dropping value shere for a bit. I doubt they won't return, maybe later on when TSMC shares are better value? Berkshire is a hold company, not a trade-at-a-rate-of-knots company.
I'm not sure why Berkshire thinks banks are a bad bet: they have made bank (sorry) this last downturn, and will continue to. A lot of profit in them yet, and with interest rates going high, people will be flocking to them for income generating products like annuities. Maybe I misunderstand the risk here but I would think a bank is a better bet right now than listed property trusts.
If I am not mistaken, Berkshire is huge in re-insurance and in general goods and services. If they move out of the insurance market and cite global warming risk, thats the signal everyone needs to see that its a real risk, not some fancy.
Is Berkshire invested in the dutch chip-making tool maker side of things? Thats got to be the shovel-seller in the goldrush.
[edit: I am hazy on exactly what is the role between Apple, ARM-UK holdings, Wolfson, TSMC and their history of chip design so please don't beat me up if you know ARM was never the foundry. The point was, Apple used UK VLSI designs, secured designs, and then moved into the territory to internalise profit. exactly what they did I don't know but I do know they marginalised work that was done for them]
[edit] Also, personal savings rates are crashing in the US and revolving debt utilization is way up. Maybe Berkshire is worried about cyclical defaults and withdrawals of principal? Even if bank ROA is up, lower deposits mean lower revenues. [1]
[1] https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=VtLo
https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/BAC/bank-of-americ...
Its other big bank holdings, Amex, Citi, Bank of NY Mellon, and US Bank also have healthy double digit profit margins.
https://www.cnbc.com/berkshire-hathaway-portfolio/
So? Investors don't have to lower-bound value bank stock at its deposits.
(God I hate google and its insistence on corporate search results, I search for "how much money does bank of america have on deposit" and all the results are about making deposits on bankofamerica.com)
Bank of America has $1.9t in deposits, but its equity value is $285b. So a 1% return on deposits = 6.66% return for investors (excluding other costs and other revenue (account fees?))
Bank of America has different types of deposits, such as interest-bearing deposits, non-interest-bearing deposits, and mobile deposits. According to the annual Summary of Deposits from the FDIC, Bank of America had $1.36 trillion in total deposits as of June 2019(1), making it the largest US bank by deposits. However, this number may have changed since then. The Bank of America mobile check deposit limit is $10,000 per month for accounts opened for three months or longer, and $2,500 per month for accounts opened for fewer than three months(2).
Learn more: 1. retailbankerinternational.com 2. gobankingrates.com
The middle two sentences actually answer the question regarding the total volume of deposits across the bank.
Verdict: Still useful! Non sequitor-ish, but better than SEO spam :)
One of them is wrong (or at least outdated), I don't know enough about BoA to know which though.
bingo. Though you have to worry about leverage (ie: risk). Really sucks when a small change results in catastrophic losses (though everyone loves it on the way up).
I get the same result whether I'm in incognito mode or not. Are you perhaps running an adblocker that's removing this?
Climate change is definitely a hot topic with insurers but it’s not going to cause them to go broke.
"oh sorry, the cost of re-insurance jumped 10x, your premiums have to go up" is a hell of a signal.
https://www.npr.org/2023/02/13/1156512284/turkey-earthquake-...
I suspect we'll see a TSMC sabotage in the coming months
https://www.theregister.com/2022/01/05/taiwan_should_destory...
We have that, and also Huawei's EUV patent, Apple perhaps has something hidden yet to be announced
https://www.techspot.com/news/97072-huawei-patents-euv-litho...
What evidence exists to show that China is preparing to annex Taiwan? Satellite troop movements? Natural resource hoarding? Anything at all?
If China, or anyone, invaded Taiwan it would be fantastically easy to cripple tsmc fabs. Kill their engineers en masse. Blow up the lithography machines. Unleash a targeted virus like stuxnet designed for the hardware in the facilities on their networks. An important question remains, does China have the footing to not only fill the vacuum in their supply chain but to also weather the sanctions and quite possibly engage the us and its allies without turning cities to irradiated glass and starting nuclear winter?
I seriously doubt that China is secretly prepared to meet their own domestic demand for advanced silicon let alone call bluff of the five eyes.
That said, maybe xi is actually more out if touch than Putin and we’ll be cowering in fallout shelters come summer.
So what's changed today that makes a PRC invasion more likely than a major earthquake, which we already just live in peace with the possibility of?
Ultimately, if you believe a conflict is probable, it comes down to a question of timing. China will want to make a move when the US is at a weak point and/or distracted with other obligations. Similarly, the less favorable (to China) maintaining the status quo is, the more inclined they will be to act.
This is exactly why I put my foot down and challenge hard whenever I hear, "oh, well, you know, the China situation in Taiwan."
No, I don't know. And nobody can tell me. Why is that? All I get is hand waving.
I'm not trying to be reductionist or asking people to oversimplify, but I do think it should be possible to answer the question of "what indicators of invasion are strong enough to prevent investment in Taiwan companies" with something succinct. Typically people go the route of "increased air traffic from PLA jets" or something, though that's historically consistent and also hasn't resulted in invasion in 3 decades. Not even local regime change caused an invasion when Taiwan switched to democratic rule.
> subjective factors
I argue that these "subjective factors" are really just artifacts of a media system that prefers to distort reality as a far more interesting and violent place than it really is. I argue that instead of Taiwan being a very exciting, about-to-be-invaded-any-minute-now place, it's actually a very mundane place, facing the same catastrophic risks of any other mundane place, such as Miami or San Francisco (or both I guess, since Taiwan faces both typhoon and earthquake risk. Still pretty mundane compared to how the media portrays us).
I enjoy gametheorying as much as anyone else, but I'm noticing that this vague handwavy subjective "invasion risk" is having real effects, and that annoys me. I've had people say, "I'd visit, but I'm worried about the China situation." What? Really? But you'll get in a car and face down unknown numbers of drunk drivers every day? I don't get it and I'll be honest, it annoys me a bit. So, hence why I push back so hard.
It starts when one side believes they have a strategic advantage, and often it comes exceptionally fast. Ask most people who are familiar with the situation in Russia/Ukraine, including Ukrainians and Russians, whether they thought Russia would invade in 2022, even just days before it happened, and most would have laughed at the idea of it. Even Zelensky was [publicly] overtly rejecting the US claims of an imminent invasion.
With Taiwan both sides are being increasingly provocative. There was absolutely zero purpose in sending Pelosi to Taiwan. It was essentially just daring China to stop her. It's somewhat similar to how in the leadup to the war in Ukraine numerous Western vessels were semi-regularly violating Russia's territorial waters (based on Crimea), essentially daring them to escalate. The CCP, for their part, have also stepped up their rhetoric and there were even leaked (more probably "leaked") plans for an invasion of Taiwan. Even if disinformation, it's obviously designed to provoke. Basically both sides are poking and prodding one another, to feel each other out. I don't think it's simply posturing.
There are also somewhat practical indicators. China has been accelerating an ongoing process of de-dollarizing itself, engaging in simulations of 'Russia like' sanctions on its economy, stockpiling food [ostensibly for COVID lockdowns], expanding their nuclear arsenal, increasing conventional arms production [ostensibly for export], and more. And while I'm skipping most of the geopolitics stuff for brevity, I would at least mention the obvious indicators that the Mideast (Saudi Arabia and UAE in particular) seem to be moving hard towards the 'Eastern bloc.' This sort of an alliance opens up doors that are big enough to start speaking hyperbolically in terms of outcomes.
On the other hand, the US proved that they are willing to replace the goverment of a country and arm it
> I seriously doubt that China is secretly prepared to meet their own domestic demand for advanced silicon let alone call bluff of the five eyes.
That's the same people who; 10 years ago said "i don't think China will be able to put into orbit a space station, let alone visiting the moon"
[1] - https://www.dw.com/en/taiwan-president-resigns-as-party-head...
"Nationalizing an industry" means a country's government coming to own and operate said industry. See, for example, railroads of ye olde days.
It's going to increase dramatically all over the world, deglobalization means supply chains are a security concern as much as if not more than an economic concern now.
Not really. Semiconductor yields are highly correlated between different sites [1].
[1] https://en.wikichip.org/wiki/intel/copy_exactly!
^ HN strips the ! from the link, so please add it at the end of the URL.
That's because it's not a valid URL char, just browsers do the translation for you. You'll want to URL-encode it. Replace `!` with its url-encoding %21:
https://en.wikichip.org/wiki/intel/copy_exactly%21
I'd be curious to know to what extent Berkshire considers this a risk.
50% rejection rate for iPhone casings produced in India shows Apple’s challenge
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34795500 (147 comments)
Another thing to note is that historically, HN is a terrible place to get financial / stock market advice.
You can say that again haha.
You need to listen to China bulls too. Absorb multiple perspectives and synthesize your own model of how things piece together and move.
List of public holdings, for the curious: https://whalewisdom.com/filer/berkshire-hathaway-inc
How does Berkshire get a price of $111 per share?
Current price is $153.
153 * 20.8 million shares is $3.2 bill
[1] https://last10k.com/sec-filings/brka/0000950123-23-002585.ht...
[2] https://www.sec.gov/oit/announcement/edgar-release-2241