In This Article:
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Warren Buffett invested a vital $3 billion in Dow Chemical at the height of the financial crisis.
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In return, Berkshire Hathaway received preferred stock paying a yearly dividend of 8.5%.
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Buffett's company ultimately made an estimated $3 billion profit from stock sales and dividends.
Warren Buffett poured $3 billion into Dow Chemical in the depths of the financial crisis, helping the manufacturer to complete an acquisition at a time when investors, lenders, and companies were taking cover.
Here's the story of one of Buffett's signature deals, which provided much-needed cash to an ailing company – and earned him a healthy return.
Financial chemistry
Dow agreed to buy Rohm and Haas for nearly $19 billion including debt in July 2008, and roped in Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway to help with the financing. The acquisition was part of Dow's strategy to shift its focus away from bulk chemicals toward higher-margin, specialty chemicals.
Buffett agreed to put up $3 billion in exchange for 3 million Series A convertible preferred shares, which paid an 8.5% dividend, or $255 million a year. Preferred shares often offer larger dividends than common shares, and holders take priority when it comes to dividend payouts.
Dow had the option to convert some or all of Berkshire's preferred stock into common stock starting in April 2014, at a ratio of 24.201 common shares for each preferred share. The maker of chemicals, plastics, agroscience products, and advanced materials could only do so if its stock price exceeded $53.72 for 20 trading days in a 30-day period.
Adverse reaction
Dow's takeover proved to be poorly timed. Lehman Brothers collapsed two months later, causing credit markets to seize up, asset prices to plunge, and shockwaves to reverberate through the housing market and the wider US economy.
The chemicals giant had planned to cover a big chunk of the deal's cost using $9 billion of proceeds from a joint venture with Kuwait's Petrochemical Industries. However, the state-run company scrapped the partnership in December 2008, sending Dow stock plunging.
"The world fell apart," Buffett told CNBC in 2017, recalling that Dow tried and failed to back out of acquiring Rohm and Haas. "We closed the deal to buy the stock in April 2009, by which time the market had totally disintegrated."
Given the collapse in Dow's stock and its weakened prospects, Buffett found himself paying the equivalent of a dollar for 60 cents, he said.
"We showed up with $3 billion for something that was worth about $1.8 billion maybe at the time," Buffett noted. "Which is one reason people offer us deals – they know we'll be around at the closing."