Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. added an investment in Kinder Morgan Inc. throughout the fourth quarter, snapping up shares from the pipeline operator since it’s market price plunged.
Shares in Kinder Morgan were up almost 10 per cent at US$17.16 in trading Wednesday.
Berkshire held 26.5 million shares from the company as of Dec. 31, based on a regulatory filing Tuesday disclosing U.S. stock holdings. The stake was worth $395.9 million after 2015.
Kinder Morgan’s shares fell 65 per cent last year amid a slump in energy prices. The company, which hauls gas and oil through a pipeline network of sufficient length to circle the globe three times, slashed its dividend in December for the first time to avoid a credit downgrade to junk status. The Houston-based company also said last month that it could sell assets to boost cash.
“It strikes me like a business that’s up his alley,” said Jeff Matthews, an investor and author of Buffett-related books. “It’s a business that’s going to continue for quite a long time,” he explained. And the stock has “gotten crushed,” creating a chance to buy at an attractive price.
Oil drillers, gold miners and rig operators have sacrificed dividends to save cash amid tumbling prices in oversupplied commodity markets. When Kinder Morgan cut its dividend, it pledged to not issue any new shares through the end of 2018.