Yet Another Reason Not To Sell Your Berkshire Hathaway Shares 7 comments
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This is almost certainly the wost investment in Berkshire Hathaway of all time - or, on the flipside, "a pretty unethical way to make a buck". Either unethical or extraordinarily lucky, anyway.
Someone, somewhere, for some reason, had a bid in to buy 50 of Berkshire Hathaway's B shares at just under half the market price. Obviously, no one expects such a bid to be filled. But filled it was - something which can happen when "the day's sell orders burn through other, higher, limit orders, and the brokers aren't actively trading". The result? $115,050 in instant profits for the buyer, and a nasty shock for whomever it was who simply decided to sell his shares without setting a lower limit to the price he was getting.
The really crazy thing is that these are the B shares we're talking about - the shares which were specifically issued by Berkshire Hathway so that there would be something more liquid and tradeable than the wildly expensive A shares. So much for that idea, it would seem.
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This article has 7 comments:
There's no evidence of the trade in any intraday data source I've got available. I've also seen enough bad prints intraday in illiquid stocks and ETFs on my watchlist to know that the data providers will correct those mistakes after the close.
The shame is that so many people picked up on this "BRK-BS" and spread it around.
I could not believe it when I saw this. This was back in January. I've been puzzling about this for a while.