Buffett Says Economy `on Floor' After Cardiac Arrest (Update1)
By Erik Holm and Andrew Frye



Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire Warren Buffett, the world's
preeminent stock picker, said the U.S. economy is ``flat on the
floor'' after a cardiac arrest as companies struggle to secure funding
and unemployment increases.

``In my adult lifetime I don't think I've ever seen people as fearful,
economically, as they are now,'' Buffett said today in an interview
with Charlie Rose to be broadcast tonight on PBS. ``The economy is
going to be getting worse for a while.''

The biggest housing slump since the Depression has spurred a wave of
defaults and a yearlong contraction in global credit markets,
squeezing companies' capacity for investment. Buffett's Berkshire
Hathaway Inc., based in Omaha, Nebraska, agreed in the past two weeks
to buy $8 billion in preferred shares from General Electric Co. and
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to help the companies fund their businesses.

The credit freeze is ``sucking blood'' from the U.S. economy, Buffett
said.

The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Washington Mutual
Inc., and the emergency sales of Merrill Lynch & Co. and Wachovia
Corp. fueled fears about the vulnerability of firms that rely on
capital markets for short-term funding.

Buffett is taking advantage of fragile stock markets, the lack of
available credit and his own reputation as a picker of successful
companies to extract outsized payments for Berkshire's cash and
endorsement. He has told shareholders that his strategy is to be
``greedy when others are fearful.''

`Seizing Opportunity'

``He's seizing the opportunity,'' said Tom Kersting, an analyst for
Edward Jones & Co in St. Louis. ``His philosophy is always to keep
some powder dry. That allows him to take advantage of the current
turmoil we're in and take advantage when others can't.''

For both Goldman and GE, Buffett's endorsement comes with a cost. Both
companies agreed to pay Berkshire a 10 percent dividend on his
preferred shares, and each gave him warrants to buy their common stock
at any point in the next five years at a price that's a discount to
where it's currently trading.

To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Holm in New York at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Andrew Frye in New York at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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