logo
Buffett's Berkshire sells one-third of VeriSign stake for $1.23 billion

Buffett's Berkshire sells one-third of VeriSign stake for $1.23 billion

Time of Indiaa day ago
Berkshire Hathaway
sold about one-third of its stake in
VeriSign
, an
internet infrastructure
and domain name registry company that
Warren Buffett
's conglomerate has invested in since 2012, VeriSign said on Monday.
The sale of 4.3 million VeriSign shares at $285 each generated gross proceeds of about $1.23 billion, reducing Berkshire's ownership stake to 9.6% from 14.2%.
Buffett's company may sell an additional 515,032 shares to meet demand, and VeriSign will receive no proceeds from the sale, VeriSign said.
VeriSign, based in Reston, Virginia, said the sale was intended to reduce Berkshire's stake to below 10%, a threshold that triggers regulatory obligations.
The price was a 6.9% discount to VeriSign's closing price of $305.98. In after-hours trading, VeriSign shares fell 5.9% to $288.00. Berkshire did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside business hours.
Buffett's company owned about 13.29 million VeriSign shares as of March 31, a regulatory filing shows.
That stake was worth about $4.07 billion before the sale, based on the $305.98 closing price. VeriSign traded at less than one-sixth that level when Berkshire began buying.
Berkshire ended March with $347.7 billion of cash, and through that month was a net seller of stocks for 10 straight quarters.
It had nevertheless been adding to its VeriSign stake as recently as January.
Berkshire's smaller investments in technology-related companies have often been spearheaded by Buffett's portfolio managers, Todd Combs and Ted Weschler.
Buffett, 94, has run Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire since 1965. He is expected to step down as chief executive at the end of the year and be replaced by Vice Chairman Greg Abel, 63. Buffett would remain chairman.
JPMorgan Securities underwrote the VeriSign share sale.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Munich firm Celonis to cash in on India's GCC prowess
Munich firm Celonis to cash in on India's GCC prowess

The Hindu

time15 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Munich firm Celonis to cash in on India's GCC prowess

Celonis, a Munich-based process mining and process intelligence firm that offers realistic business contexts to customers with the help of digital twins, says it is bullish on India's growing global capability centre landscape: home to over 2,000 GCCs, accounting for 60% of GCCs round the globe. Alexander Rinke, Co-Founder & Co-CEO, Celonis said India was emerging as world's epicentre of process-powered enterprise AI and Celonis was currently engaged with over 150 GCCs in India, including that of Dell Technologies, Wells Fargo, Mercedes-Benz, Siemens, Merck and ABB, to name a few. 'We have built strong partnerships with leading system integrators like TCS, PwC, EY, Deloitte, and Capgemini in India. We are also deeply invested in the academic ecosystem here. More than 130,000 learners across nearly 340 Indian universities have already engaged with our Celonis Academy. For us, India is not just a market but a hub of innovation, talent, and community,'' he told The Hindu. He said process mining was a way to understand how businesses worked by extracting data from their systems by visualising how processes actually flow. Most companies have a general idea of how things should work, but the reality is often quite different. ''Process mining reveals that gap. Process intelligence is built on that foundation. It combines the raw process data with business context to create what we call a living digital twin of your operations. This gives you full transparency and a shared language across departments to spot inefficiencies, remove friction, and take action,'' Mr. Rinke explained. He said Celonis' Process Intelligence Platform, through Process Mining, was capable of creating business context for its clients and offering them a digital twin of their business operations. ''It's a system-agnostic, bias-free platform that provides a common language for understanding and improving how a business runs. It is the key enabler for companies to maximise the ROI from their AI investments,'' Mr. Rinke claimed. Mr. Rinke was in India at the opening of Celonis' Garage, an innovation hub in Bengaluru which collaborates with ecosystem partners comprising customers, technology partners, startups and academic institutions to identify, validate and incubate ideas that can evolve into scalable solutions for global enterprises.

Hackers installed malware on laptop of Bengaluru crypto exchange CoinDCX's staffer to steal Rs 384 crore: police
Hackers installed malware on laptop of Bengaluru crypto exchange CoinDCX's staffer to steal Rs 384 crore: police

Indian Express

time15 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Hackers installed malware on laptop of Bengaluru crypto exchange CoinDCX's staffer to steal Rs 384 crore: police

The police investigating the alleged theft of cryptocurrency worth $44 million from CoinDCX, a cryptocurrency exchange operated by Bengaluru-based Neblio Technologies, said on Wednesday that hackers had installed malware on a company laptop used by Rahul Agarwal, an employee of the firm they have arrested over the crime. The police said the hackers installed malware on the pretext of giving Agarwal, a Jharkhand native who had worked with CoinDCX for the past three years, a part-time job. In a police complaint filed on July 22, Hardeep Singh, Vice-President, Public Policy and Government Affairs, Neblio Technologies, said that someone hacked into the company's wallet to transfer cryptocurrency worth $44 million (Rs 384 crore) at around 2.37 am on July 19 to six accounts. A police officer said the hackers tasked Agarwal, who had held a good position in the company, with writing reviews and also gave him other online tasks in return for good money. While Agarwal initially used his personal laptop, he later switched to his office laptop, on which the hackers managed to install the malware without his knowledge, according to the officer. The hackers thus gained access to CoinDCX and diverted money from its wallet. The police officer said, 'Agarwal was totally in the dark about the theft that has happened by hacking into his laptop. It was late for him to realise that he was used as a tool to siphon such a huge amount of cryptocurrency.' An internal investigation revealed that Agarwal had earned about Rs 15 lakh and when the company confronted him, he explained it as income from a part-time job he had been doing. The police are in a dilemma about establishing the money trail as there is barely any regulation on cryptocurrency in India or elsewhere in the world. 'If it was a bank transfer, we could find a money trial. But it seems to be impossible as the origins of the wallets (to which the cryptocurrency was transferred) is also not from India. If the crypto exchanges failed to share the data of the wallets, it would be a tough task,' the officer said. Neeraj Khandelwal, a co-founder of the firm, said during a live session on July 21, 'We've launched a Recovery Bounty Programme, committing 25 per cent of any recovered funds to those who help us. This is a fight against bad actors for the entire industry, and we invite the community to help us.' The bounty would amount to $11 million, around Rs 96 crore, according to the company. The Whitefield CEN police have registered a case under sections 66 (computer-related offences), 43 (penalty and compensation for damage to computer, computer system etc), 66(c) (identity theft) and 66(d) (cheating by personation by using computer resource) of the Information Technology Act as well as 303 (theft), 316 (4) (criminal breach of trust), 318 (4) (cheating), and 319 (2) (cheating by personation) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita.

Sebi confirms Gensol fraud, finds promoters diverted funds, falsified records
Sebi confirms Gensol fraud, finds promoters diverted funds, falsified records

Economic Times

time15 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Sebi confirms Gensol fraud, finds promoters diverted funds, falsified records

Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on Monday passed a confirmatory order against Gensol Engineering and its promoter-directors Anmol Singh Jaggi and Puneet Singh Jaggi upholding the April order that had prima facie found them indulging in fund diversion and falsifications of documents. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on Monday passed a confirmatory order against Gensol Engineering and its promoter-directors Anmol Singh Jaggi and Puneet Singh Jaggi upholding the April order that had prima facie found them indulging in fund diversion and falsifications of a 33-page order, the regulator noted that the company and Jaggi brothers failed to effectively rebut the findings of the April 15 interim order regarding falsification of Conduct Letters and diversion/ mis-utilisation of funds by the listed solar EPC and EV leasing firm."I find that the chaprima facie findings regarding diversion / mis-utilization of funds of Gensol have not been successfully rebutted by Noticees. I also note that a detailed investigation in this matter is being carried out. Further, a forensic auditor has already been appointed to examine the books of accounts of Gensol and its related parties. The concrete findings of the investigation and the forensic auditor are yet to emerge. As has been submitted by Noticees themselves, the findings of the forensic audit will serve to corroborate the factual position and provide greater clarity on the matters under scrutiny," the order rejected the arguments put forward by the brothers who challenged the order saying that it was not investigation began in June 2024 following a complaint alleging price manipulation and fund misuse. Sebi's probe revealed that Gensol submitted fake Conduct Letters to credit rating agencies ICRA and CARE Ratings , purportedly issued by lenders IREDA and PFC, to conceal debt servicing defaults. These letters were later disowned by the lenders.A major concern highlighted by Sebi was the diversion of funds from term loans amounting to Rs 977.75 crore, mostly meant for the purchase of 6,400 electric vehicles (EVs). Gensol claimed it procured 4,704 EVs, costing Rs 567.73 crore, yet transferred Rs 775 crore to Go-Auto—the alleged supplier—leaving over Rs 207 crore trail of funds, according to Sebi, showed that money sent to Go-Auto was routed back to Gensol and then allegedly diverted to entities controlled by the Jaggi family. Notably, part of the funds was used to purchase luxury real estate, including an apartment in DLF's premium Camellias project, and for personal expenses such as foreign currency purchases and luxury Sebi noted that Gensol misled the public by announcing pre-orders for 30,000 EVs that were in fact non-binding MoUs, and its Pune-based EV manufacturing facility showed no active production during regulator has confirmed restrictions placed on the company and its promoters from accessing the securities market. It has also directed a forensic audit of Gensol and related findings suggest serious breaches of the SEBI Act, 1992, PFUTP Regulations, and LODR norms, including misuse of shareholder funds and inadequate disclosures on related party transactions. The matter remains under further investigation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store