A rock star of the RV industry drove his company to Berkshire Hathaway—and made billions for Buffett’s shareholders.
Warren Buffett remains one of the world’s most prominent investors, known for his long buy-and-hold strategies and massive portfolio of public and private holdings. With interest rates poised to stay where they are in 2025,
One lesson all investors can glean from the legendary Warren Buffett is that successfully navigating the stock market requires patience and the discipline to stick with a long-term strategy. It's normal for stocks to face volatility with the occasional sell-off,
Warren Buffett’s ownership interest in Berkshire Hathaway — as reported in SEC filings for the years 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018 — amounted to 20.5 percent that first year, 19.6 percent the next, and then 18.7 percent, 17.9 percent, and 17.2 percent the last three.
Warren Buffett’s net worth has risen by $15 billion this year, due in part to an extraordinary earnings report from Berkshire Hathaway.
Picking Buffett's brain happens a number of ways. Quarterly filed Form 13Fs allow investors to see which stocks he and his top advisors, Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, have been buying and selling. Likewise, Berkshire's quarterly operating results provide insight on whether Buffett and his team are net buyers or sellers of stocks.
Christopher Ruane has been poring over the latest shareholder letter from investor Warren Buffett. Here's a handful of stock market insights he gleaned.
The lifeline that Warren Buffett just handed Shigeru Ishiba couldn’t come at a better moment for the beleaguered Japanese prime minister.
Berkshire Hathaway has been building up its cash position to its highest-ever levels over the past two years, and that sends some clear messages about what Buffett's thinking about the market. Combined with his net sales of stocks, he seems to think there aren't so many great deals to be had in the market.
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway nearly doubled its cash pile to $334 billion, sold a net $134 billion of stocks, and paid $26.8 billion to the IRS.
Warren Buffett is celebrating the successes of Berkshire Hathaway’s companies last year and in the 60 years since he took over a struggling New England textile company and began converting it into a massive conglomerate.