@slick - The thread becomes very long and a waste of online estate so let me respond here.
You are concentrating on the
airline stocks that constitute less than 4% of the LISTED portfolio. And an even smaller % when the unlisted portfolio is included. And even tinier when the $120bn cash/treasuries is included.
I estimate
max of 1.5% (of all assets) before the COVID19 crisis.
BUT I will address it.
WB is not being sly but making smart moves in that others can also buy shares in USA airlines eg Delta, Southwest, etc.
He is seeing an opportunity but that also comes with risk while others look but do not see.
As for the bailout of airlines, I agree that they (shareholders, executives and board) should pay the price for taking loans to buyback shares. They should have only used excess cash to do so and at prices that made sense but not those done to benefit a few e.g. CEO, CFO, etc with options. I hope they are forced to regurgitate their unearned bonuses.
That said, there is a case for some compensation for the airlines since the bans were not of their own making but limited to certain parameters and factors e.g. employees pay, etc. If there were no bans then they would have continued flying. Nevertheless, this does not mean a bailout that makes executives even richer as happened in 2008 with the banks. That should be a NO-NO.
The primary reason WB can invest today is his
foresight in keeping $120bn of dry gunpowder. This cash cost a lot to keep it in cash aka cash drag for years.
Excluding the airlines (1.5% of the portfolio), there are multiple other sectors he can buy into on the cheap. I expect some sweet deals from firms requiring short-term funding. Others will be up for sale and will complement BH-owned firms. What he calls bolt-on acquisitions.
2020 will be a tough year for BH e.g. Precision Castings (Boeing is its largest customer), BNSF (drop in oil shipments), WF, JPM, USB (loan defaults) and many others but they can make it through to come out stronger thanks to the $120bn cash to cushion them. Some competitors will die. Some will sell themselves to BH.
We should learn from WB on having a diversified yet focused portfolio, not paying too much and some dry gunpowder. Sadly, I have not taken all the lessons to heart especially the dry gunpowder!
Greedy when others are fearful. Very fearful when others are greedy - to paraphrase Warren Buffett