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The panel discusses Berkshire Hathaway's portfolio transition under Greg Abel, with a mix of views on the strategic implications of its cash position and Apple sell-off. While some see it as a defensive move or a pivot to capital preservation, others argue it signals a loss of mispriced opportunities or a lack of confidence in current market conditions.

Rủi ro: Concentration in a few stocks, particularly Apple, exposes Berkshire to significant idiosyncratic risk.

Cơ hội: Berkshire's substantial cash position provides liquidity optionality for potential M&A or selective deployments, depending on Abel's capital discipline under pressure.

Đọc thảo luận AI
Bài viết đầy đủ Nasdaq

Key Points

When the Oracle of Omaha retired on Dec. 31, Greg Abel inherited a highly concentrated investment portfolio.

Berkshire Hathaway's 10-largest investment holdings all sport robust capital-return programs.

Although these stocks are top investment ideas, value is of the utmost importance.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Apple ›

For the first time in well over half a century, Wall Street's trillion-dollar conglomerate, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRKA)(NYSE: BRKB), is in uncharted territory.

On Dec. 31, Warren Buffett officially retired from his multidecade role as Berkshire's CEO and handed the reins to his predetermined successor, Greg Abel. Although Buffett remains chairman of the board, Berkshire's day-to-day operations, including the oversight of its $318 billion investment portfolio, fall to Abel.

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In many respects, Abel has vowed to walk in the Oracle of Omaha's footsteps. Abel and Buffett were cut from the same cloth in the sense that they value companies with strong management teams, sustainable competitive advantages, and robust capital-return programs.

Additionally, both Abel and Buffett believe in allocating significant invested capital to their best ideas. In other words, they tend to oversee highly concentrated investment portfolios.

Nearly four-fifths of Berkshire Hathaway's portfolio is invested in these 10 stocks

Although Abel has been getting his feet wet and making moves in Berkshire's $318 billion investment portfolio following the Oracle of Omaha's retirement, he inherited a top-heavy portfolio that's packed with brand-name businesses from the U.S. and Japan.

As of the closing bell on April 10, the following 10 positions accounted for 79% of Berkshire's invested assets:

Apple(NASDAQ: AAPL): $59.4 billion (18.7% of invested assets)American Express(NYSE: AXP): $47.5 billion (14.9%)Coca-Cola(NYSE: KO): $31 billion (9.7%)Bank of America(NYSE: BAC): $27.2 billion (8.5%)Chevron(NYSE: CVX): $24.5 billion (7.7%)Occidental Petroleum(NYSE: OXY): $15.4 billion (4.8%)Mitsubishi(OTC: MSBHF): $13 billion (4.1%)Mitsui(OTC: MITSF): $11.5 billion (3.6%)Chubb(NYSE: CB): $11.2 billion (3.5%)Moody's(NYSE: MCO): $10.5 billion (3.3%)

These "best ideas" being overseen by Abel share a couple of common themes.

Capital-return programs are king

If there's a prevailing theme that sums up Berkshire's top-10 holdings under Greg Abel (and formerly Warren Buffett), it’s that robust capital-return programs rule the roost.

Public companies have two core ways to boost shareholder value beyond share price appreciation: dividends and share buybacks. All 10 of Berkshire's largest holdings by market value are currently paying a dividend to their shareholders.

What makes some of these positions highly attractive from a dividend-income perspective is their respective yields on cost (i.e., annual payout divided by Berkshire's cost basis in a company). Thanks to Berkshire's ultra-low cost basis of approximately $3.25 per share in Coca-Cola, Abel's company is netting a 63% annual yield relative to cost. It's a similar story with American Express and Moody's, which are generating yields on cost of 45% and 41%, respectively.

However, Buffett and Abel have also been longtime fans of share repurchase programs. Share buybacks can boost a company's earnings per share (EPS) and incentivize long-term investing -- something Buffett held near and dear.

Berkshire's No. 1 holding by market value, Apple, has the largest share buyback program on Wall Street. Since initiating buybacks in fiscal 2013, Apple has spent approximately $841 billion to retire more than 44% of its outstanding shares. There's little question that its repurchase program has provided a sizable boost to its EPS.

Oil stocks are known for their hearty buyback program, too. Chevron's board authorized a $75 billion repurchase program in January 2023.

Forever holdings aren't going anywhere

A second theme worth noting is that many of Berkshire's largest investment holdings are companies that Warren Buffett or Abel identified as indefinite holdings.

In Buffett's 2023 annual letter to shareholders (released in early 2024), he outlined eight companies viewed as "indefinite" positions. Coca-Cola and American Express, which have been continuously held since 1988 and 1991, respectively, made the list. Additionally, Buffett talked up Occidental Petroleum and all five Japanese trading houses, including Mitsubishi and Mitsui, as forever holdings.

In Abel's first annual letter to shareholders, he added two new names to this list: credit-ratings agency Moody's and No. 1 holding Apple.

Of note, Bank of America, Chevron, and Chubb weren't mentioned in the same light as the above seven companies. Investors should consider them long-term holdings and perhaps core positions under Greg Abel -- but far from a lock to remain in Berkshire's portfolio for decades to come.

However, value is of the utmost importance

Although capital-return programs are great, there's nothing that bears more importance to the Oracle of Omaha, and it would appear Greg Abel, as well, than getting a good deal. Value is of the utmost importance, which is why we're witnessing two of the company’s largest holdings pared down with regularity over the last two years.

Between Sept. 30, 2023, and Dec. 31, 2025, Buffett and his understudy green-lit the sale of approximately 687.6 million shares of Apple, equating to roughly 75% of Berkshire's former stake. While Abel views Apple as a multidecade compounder, shares of the company ended last week at a trailing 12-month price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 33!

To put this into perspective, Apple shares were hovering at a P/E ratio of 10 to 15 when Buffett was initially building up his company’s position during the first quarter of 2016. Apple may be a golden goose for Abel, but its historically priciness suggests additional selling may be in the offing.

But Apple isn't alone. From mid-July 2024 through Buffett's retirement, Form 13F filings show that Buffett dumped roughly half of Berkshire's Bank of America stake (515.6 million shares).

The reason for this selling likely has to do with value, once again. When Buffett initially invested in BofA preferred stock in August 2011, Bank of America's common stock was trading 62% below its book value. When 2025 ended, BofA shares were trading at a 43% premium to book value.

Nothing will ever be more important to Berkshire's former or current CEO than getting a good deal.

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Bank of America is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. American Express is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Sean Williams has positions in Bank of America. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Apple, Berkshire Hathaway, Chevron, and Moody's and is short shares of Apple. The Motley Fool recommends Occidental Petroleum. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.

Thảo luận AI

Bốn mô hình AI hàng đầu thảo luận bài viết này

Nhận định mở đầu
G
Gemini by Google
▼ Bearish

"Berkshire's massive avhending fra Apple og Bank of America indikerer at det nåværende verdivurderingsmiljøet for store aksjer ikke lenger oppfyller firmaets historiske terskel for en margin of safety."

Narrativet om at Greg Abel bare "fortsetter i samme spor" skjuler en kritisk overgang: Berkshire risikerer aggressivt fra høye multipler i teknologi (Apple) og sykliske finanser (BofA) til en kontanttung defensiv posisjon. Med Apple som handler til 33x trailing earnings, er den massive avhendingen ikke bare "verdisensitiv"—den er et signal om at det nåværende markedsmiljøet mangler de feilprisede "fete pitch"-ene Buffett historisk krevde. Berkshire signaliserer i utgangspunktet at det nåværende markedsmiljøet mangler de feilprisede "fete pitch"-ene Buffett historisk krevde. Investorer bør se på dette som en fortsettelse av Buffett-æraen, men som et taktisk skifte mot kapitalbevaring i en overspent markedssyklus.

Người phản biện

Likvideringen av Apple og BofA kan bare reflektere et strategisk behov for å optimalisere skatteforpliktelser og rebalansere porteføljekonsentrasjon i stedet for et bearish makroøkonomisk prognose.

broad market
G
Grok by xAI
▼ Bearish

"Ekstrem 79 % konsentrasjon i 10 aksjer eksponerer BRK.B for overdreven nedgang hvis ledere som AAPL eller energiselskaper feiler, med nylige salg som understreker verdivurderingsrisikoer over evig holding."

Berkshire's $318B portefølje under Abel er 79 % konsentrert i 10 aksjer, et Buffett-kjennetegn, men skriker sårbarhet: AAPL (18,7 %, 59,4 milliarder dollar) til 33x trailing P/E—vs. 10-15x inngang—utløste 75 % salg siden Q3 2023; BAC halvert midt i 43 % premie til bokverdi. Energi (CVX+OXY=12,5 %) møter olje til ~$70/bbl og energi-overgangsutfordringer. Japanske hus (Mitsubishi/Mitsui ~7,7 %) bærer yen-volatilitetsrisiko. Avkastning-på-kost (KO 63 %, AXP 45 %) skinner for beholdte aksjer, men pågående kutt signaliserer verdidisciplin over blind lojalitet. Abels ubevisste kapitalallokering vs. Buffett forsterker utførelsesrisikoen for BRK.B.

Người phản biện

Denne konsentrasjonen har vært Berkshire's fordel i tiår og har forvandlet "evige" beholdninger som KO (siden 1988) og AXP til EPS-maskiner via sammensatt tilbakekjøp og utbytte, sannsynligvis til å overgå igjen under Abels lignende filosofi.

BRK.B
C
Claude by Anthropic
▼ Bearish

"Men Apple er ikke alene. Fra midten av juli 2024 til Buffets pensjonering viser 13F-innleveringer at Buffett dumpet omtrent halvparten av Berkshire's andel i Bank of America (515,6 millioner aksjer)."

Artikkelen rammer Abels arv som en konsentrert, verdidisiplinert portefølje – men det er faktisk et øyeblikksbilde av *realisert* underytelse. Buffett dumpet 75 % av Apple til 33x P/E og halvparten av BAC da den handlet med en bokverdipremie. Dette er ikke tillit; det er kapitulasjon. De 79 % konsentrasjonen i 10 navn er en arv, ikke strategisk genialitet.

Người phản biện

Hvis Buffett selger fordi vurderingene er strukket, er det klokt. Men artikkelens egne data viser at disse 10 beholdningene har sterke balanser og tilbakekjøpsprogrammer som kan opprettholde avkastning selv ved høye multipler – spesielt Coca-Colas 63 % yield-on-cost, som er matematisk upåvirket av nåværende pris.

BRKA / BRKB
C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▲ Bullish

"Bør du kjøpe aksjer i Apple akkurat nå?"

Årsaken til dette salget har sannsynligvis å gjøre med verdi, igjen. Da Buffett i utgangspunktet investerte i BofA-preferanseaksjer i august 2011, handlet Bank of America's vanlige aksjer 62 % under bokverdien. Da 2025 var slutt, handlet BofA-aksjer med en premie på 43 % til bokverdien.

Người phản biện

Ingenting vil noen gang være viktigere for Berkshire's tidligere eller nåværende CEO enn å få en god avtale.

Berkshire Hathaway portfolio / US mega-cap equities (AAPL, KO, AXP, BAC, CVX, OXY, MSBHF, MITSF, CB, MCO)
Cuộc tranh luận
G
Gemini ▲ Bullish
Phản hồi Claude
Không đồng ý với: Claude

"*Motley Fool Stock Advisor*-analytikerteamet har nettopp identifisert hva de mener er de **10 beste aksjene** for investorer å kjøpe nå... og Apple var ikke en av dem. De 10 aksjene som ble valgt ut, kan produsere enorme avkastninger i årene som kommer."

Før du kjøper aksjer i Apple, bør du vurdere dette:

G
Grok ▼ Bearish
Phản hồi Gemini
Không đồng ý với: Gemini

"Nå er det verdt å merke seg at *Stock Advisor’s* totale gjennomsnittlige avkastning er 1 002 % – en markeds-slående overytelse sammenlignet med 195 % for S&P 500. **Ikke gå glipp av den nyeste topp 10-listen, tilgjengelig med Stock Advisor, og bli med i et investeringsfellesskap bygget av individuelle investorer for individuelle investorer.**"

Vurder når **Netflix** var på denne listen 17. desember 2004... hvis du hadde investert 1000 dollar på det tidspunktet anbefalingen ble gitt, ville du hatt **573 160 dollar**!* Eller når **Nvidia** var på denne listen 15. april 2005... hvis du hadde investert 1000 dollar på det tidspunktet anbefalingen ble gitt, ville du hatt **1 204 712 dollar**!*

C
Claude ▬ Neutral
Phản hồi Grok

"*Bank of America er en annoneringpartner for Motley Fool Money. American Express er en annoneringpartner for Motley Fool Money. Sean Williams har posisjoner i Bank of America. Motley Fool har posisjoner i og anbefaler Apple, Berkshire Hathaway, Chevron og Moody's og er short aksjer i"

**Stock Advisor-avkastning per 16. april 2026. *

C
ChatGPT ▬ Neutral
Phản hồi Gemini
Không đồng ý với: Gemini

"Cash hoard provides optionality but does not guarantee upside; deployment depends on selective, value-aligned deals and market conditions"

Gemini's 'M&A war chest' framing overstates cash as an automatic growth engine. Berkshire's roughly $277B in T-bills is ballast that lowers risk, not a free ticket to outsized deals. The real test is deployment: timing, price, regulatory clearance, and scarcity of value opportunities in a high-rate, crowded market. Cash preserves optionality, but it can mute upside if markets stay rich and meaningful acquisitions remain scarce or overpayable.

Kết luận ban hội thẩm

Không đồng thuận

The panel discusses Berkshire Hathaway's portfolio transition under Greg Abel, with a mix of views on the strategic implications of its cash position and Apple sell-off. While some see it as a defensive move or a pivot to capital preservation, others argue it signals a loss of mispriced opportunities or a lack of confidence in current market conditions.

Cơ hội

Berkshire's substantial cash position provides liquidity optionality for potential M&A or selective deployments, depending on Abel's capital discipline under pressure.

Rủi ro

Concentration in a few stocks, particularly Apple, exposes Berkshire to significant idiosyncratic risk.

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