Chinese investor pays $2.1M to eat
with Buffett
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A Chinese investment
fund manager won the chance to have lunch with billionaire Warren Buffett by
bidding $2.1 million in the most expensive charity auction ever held on eBay.
Zhao Danyang of the Hong
Kong-based Pureheart China Growth Investment Fund won
the auction, which ended the evening of June 27 with a bid of $2,110,100.
A spokeswoman for the Glide Foundation, which receives all
the proceeds from the auction, identified the winner June 28.
It appears that Zhao and Buffett share similar investment
philosophies.
The auction will provide a significant boost to Glide,
which provides social services to the poor and homeless in San Francisco. The
foundation operates on a $12 million annual budget, spokeswoman Denise Lamott said.
“It almost feels like a miracle,” Glide’s founder Reverend
Cecil Williams said in a statement. “We are amazed and ready to continue our
work of breaking the cycles of poverty.”
Last year’s lunch brought in $650,100.
A group of Glide staff members and supporters gathered in
a small hotel ballroom June 27 to watch the auction results. Lamott said there were shouts of celebration when the bids
topped $1 million.
“It was absolutely unbelievable,” Lamott
said.
Zhao and up to seven friends will dine with Buffett at the
Smith & Wollensky steakhouse in New York City
whenever the two men can schedule it. Last year’s winners collected their prize
only June 25.
The investment philosophy Zhao’s fund describes on its Web
site is similar to Buffett’s approach of finding companies with an enduring
competitive advantage that are selling for significantly less than they are
worth.
Buffett, chairman and chief executive of Berkshire
Hathaway Inc., is primarily known for his investing success. Berkshire owns
more than 60 subsidiaries including insurance, clothing, furniture, jewelry and
candy companies, restaurants, natural gas and corporate jet firms and has major
investments in such companies as Coca-Cola Co., Anheuser-Busch Cos. and Wells
Fargo & Co.
But Buffett is also known for his philanthropy.
In 2006, he announced his plan to give away the bulk of
his nearly $49 billion fortune over time. Most of his shares of Berkshire stock
will go to five charitable foundations, with the largest going to the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation.
Lamott
said eBay officials confirmed that this year’s lunch with Buffett was the most
expensive charity item the site has ever sold.
Previously, the most expensive charity item ever sold on
eBay was a letter from Democratic senators blasting conservative talk show host
Rush Limbaugh for using the phrase “phony soldiers” on his program.
The letter signed by 41 senators sold for $2.1 million on
eBay October 2007.
The proceeds from Limbaugh’s auction went to the Marine
Corps-Law Enforcement Foundation, which provides scholarships to children of
Marines or federal law enforcement personnel who were killed while serving
their country. Limbaugh matched the bid.
Buffett has been auctioning off lunches online for six years
but began auctioning the lunches for Glide off-line in 2000. He offers only one
lunch a year.
Williams called Buffett’s dedication to the charity
lunches amazing.
“Thank you, Warren Buffett, for your
deep compassion and sensitivity that empowers us to transform the lives of so
many people in need,” Williams said.