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Warren Buffett says he has prostate cancer

By Korea Herald

Published : April 18, 2012 - 18:35

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Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett
OMAHA, Nebraska (AP) ― Billionaire Warren Buffett said Tuesday he has been diagnosed with early-stage prostate cancer, but he tried to reassure his company’s shareholders that the condition is “not remotely life-threatening.”

The 81-year-old chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. said in a letter to shareholders that the two-month radiation treatment he and his doctors plan to start in mid-July will restrict his travel but shouldn’t otherwise affect his routine.

“I feel great ― as if I were in my normal excellent health,” Buffett said. “And my energy level is 100 percent. I discovered the cancer because my PSA level (an indicator my doctors had regularly checked for many years) recently jumped beyond its normal elevation and a biopsy seemed warranted.”

Buffett said he was diagnosed April 11 and has received tests including a CAT scan, a bone scan and an MRI. He said the tests showed no indication of cancer elsewhere in his body.

Cancer experts say Buffett’s diagnosis shouldn’t be a major concern because it appears his doctors caught the disease early. Still, the news will remind Berkshire investors of Buffett’s mortality.

“The chance of dying of prostate cancer for Mr. Buffett in the next 10 years is probably 2 or 3 percent, so the prognosis is great,” said Dr. Ralph deVere White, director of the Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of California, Davis.

Buffett is known for a no-nonsense approach to investing. He is one of the world’s richest men and, in recent years, has become one of its most generous philanthropists.

Buffett’s stake in Berkshire Hathaway was worth $44.6 billion as of Tuesday’s closing prices before the announcement.

Jeff Matthews, the author of “Secrets in Plain Sight: Business and Investing Secrets of Warren Buffett” and a Berkshire shareholder, said he isn’t panicking, and he doesn’t think most other shareholders will either.

“I think 99.9 percent of Berkshire’s investors will read the press release and take Buffett’s statement at face value,” Matthews said. “I actually think this doesn’t change the picture much at all.”

Matthews said anyone who panics and sells Berkshire stock because of this news probably doesn’t know the conglomerate and the hands-off way Buffett lets the company’s more than 80 subsidiaries operate.

Plus, Buffett and Berkshire’s board have a succession plan. Berkshire plans to split Buffett’s job into three parts ― CEO, chairman and several investment managers ― when the company does need to replace him.