Precision Castparts produces investment castings in nickelbased super alloys titanium and stainless steels for airframe structures engine housings and fasteners as well as hightemperature rotating blades and stationary vanes for the hot sections of jet aircraft engines and industrial gas turbines

Buffett’s Firm Paying $32 Billion for Precision Castparts

Aug. 10, 2015
All-cash deal for investment casting and forging group is a long-term bet on civil aerospace manufacturing sector Sustained market strength Berkshire’s largest acquisition Aerospace structural parts, hot section components

Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the multinational holding company controlled by celebrity investor Warren Buffet, has acquired Precision Castparts Corp. in an estimated $32-billion all-cash deal that reportedly will be the largest purchase to-date for the conglomerate. Accounting for the debt incurred by the buyer, the purchase is valued at $37.2 billion.

Buffet reportedly claimed this purchase would be the final, major acquisition for Berkshire in the foreseeable future, though smaller deals may be possible.

Buying PCC gives Berkshire Hathaway a solid presence in the civilian aerospace manufacturing sector, one with a diverse range of capabilities and a scale of production

that make it comparatively free from new competitors or emerging new technologies.  Jet builders Airbus and Boeing, along with smaller producers like Bombardier, Embraer, and Mitsubishi, and their suppliers like GE Aviation, Rolls-Royce, and Pratt & Whitney, are managing thousands of orders to deliver new aircraft over the next decade.

"I've admired (PCC’s) operation for a long time. For good reasons, it is the supplier of choice for the world's aerospace industry, one of the largest sources of American exports," Buffett offered in a release.

Berkshire already holds a 3% share in PCC, making it one of the largest stakeholders of the Portland-based manufacturing group, but it agreed to pay $235/share for a controlling interest.

Directors of PCC and Berkshire have already endorsed the acquisition. Shareholder approval and regulatory clearance are still pending, but the deal is anticipated to close in Q1 2016.

Precision Castparts will become an operating unit of Berkshire. No changes in its management or organization have been indicated.

Portland-based PCC produces complex metal components for aerospace and energy markets, with three divisions that focus on investment castings, forgings, and fasteners and airframes. From 2010 through 2013, the company conducted a series of acquisitions that expanded its position in the aerospace materials and components supply chain — capped by its $2.9-billion purchase of the integrated titanium metal producer, Timet.

After a pause of several quarters, Precision Castparts returned to the acquisition mode last month with deals to buy Composites Horizons LLC, a manufacturer of high-temperature carbon and ceramic composite components, including ceramic matrix composites, used in aerospace engines; and Noranco, a producer of machined and fabricated parts for aerospace engine, landing gears, and airframes.

PCC’s investment cast products are nickel-based super alloy, titanium, and stainless steel structural parts for airframes, stationary parts for jet engines, defense projects, medical devices, and general industrial markets. A separate business unit produces high-temperature rotating blades and stationary vanes for the hot sections of jet aircraft engines and industrial gas turbines.

Precision Castparts has other divisions producing large and complex forgings for aerospace, IGT, and general industrial markets; extruded, seamless pipe for energy markets; and fasteners for aircraft structures, energy, and industrial power segments.

About the Author

Robert Brooks | Content Director

Robert Brooks has been a business-to-business reporter, writer, editor, and columnist for more than 20 years, specializing in the primary metal and basic manufacturing industries. His work has covered a wide range of topics, including process technology, resource development, material selection, product design, workforce development, and industrial market strategies, among others.