Leucadia National Corp. (NYSE:LUK)
A diversified holding company engaged in a variety of businesses, including manufacturing, real estate activities, medical product development, winery operations and residual banking and lending activities that are in run-off.
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Investment fund with value orientation.
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The lower this stock goes, the more I love it. One of the best long term plays in the marketplace today.
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These guys are winners, plain and simple.
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What if you could have bought Berkshire-Hathaway in the 1970s?
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Leucadia National is a holding company with interests in a wide variety of very profitable companies. It is relatively unknown, and vastly undervalued. If only I had some cash, the following would not be true. (I have no financial interest in this company.)
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Quick before Warren Buffet dies, move your Berkshire money over here. This is the new Berkshire.
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It is holding company, some one smart to pick stock for you and it is off the high right now.
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these two go buffet one better by going after really distressed companies and setting them arightl a real american dream approach at
fairholme.
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LUK run by one of the finest investment minds in the world. Lots of ups and downs year to year but 25% return over past 27 years. I don't think the ole boy has lost his touch suddenly. At 20% off 52 week peak the current peak is a buying op.
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Solid investors
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Excellent management, diversified investments, experts at buying neglected companies, usually in neglected sectors, turn them around and then sell them for a premium.
Founders are major shareholders and top managers.
Quoted by some as the new "Berkshire Hathaway", but with market cap around $7 billion, still has a lot of room to grow.
Moderate institutional ownership at about 60% of float. Would prefer lower than 50%, according to Peter Lynch.
A bit excessive management compensation.
Have not looked into dilution of stocks.
Difficult to model cash flows over the future, because major acquisitions and selling of companies are made once every several years, with no insight as to when they will happen. However, one can use statistical data over the past in order to smooth out future cash flows.
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