PostHole
Compose Login
You are browsing eu.zone1 in read-only mode. Log in to participate.
rss-bridge 2026-03-01T12:20:34+00:00

All the highlights from Berkshire CEO Abel's first shareholder letter

After two months on the job, new Berkshire Hathaway CEO Greg Abel emphasizes he won't be making major changes to the way the company has operated for decades under Warren Buffett's leadership.


Markets

  • Pre-Markets
  • U.S. Markets
  • Europe Markets
  • China Markets
  • Asia Markets
  • World Markets
  • Currencies
  • Prediction Markets
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Futures & Commodities
  • Bonds
  • Funds & ETFs

Business

  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Health & Science
  • Media
  • Real Estate
  • Energy
  • Climate
  • Transportation
  • Investigations
  • Industrials
  • Retail
  • Wealth
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Small Business

Investing

  • Personal Finance
  • Fintech
  • Financial Advisors
  • Options Action
  • ETF Street
  • Buffett Archive
  • Earnings
  • Trader Talk

Tech

  • Cybersecurity
  • AI
  • Enterprise
  • Internet
  • Media
  • Mobile
  • Social Media
  • CNBC Disruptor 50
  • Tech Guide

Politics

  • White House
  • Policy
  • Defense
  • Congress
  • Expanding Opportunity
  • Europe Politics
  • China Politics
  • Asia Politics
  • World Politics

Video

  • Latest Video
  • Full Episodes
  • Livestream
  • Top Video
  • Live Audio
  • Europe TV
  • Asia TV
  • CNBC Podcasts
  • CEO Interviews
  • Digital Originals

Watchlist

Investing Club

  • Trust Portfolio
  • Analysis
  • Trade Alerts
  • Meeting Videos
  • Homestretch
  • Jim's Columns
  • Education
  • Subscribe

PRO

  • Pro News
  • Josh Brown
  • Mike Santoli
  • Calls of the Day
  • My Portfolio
  • Livestream
  • Full Episodes
  • Stock Screener
  • Market Forecast
  • Options Investing
  • Chart Investing
  • Subscribe

Livestream

  • Make It

select

  • USA
  • INTL

Livestream

Livestream

Watchlist

Create free account

Markets

Business

Investing

Tech

Politics

Video

Watchlist

Investing Club

PRO

Livestream

Buffett Watch

Buffett Watch

All the highlights from Berkshire CEO Abel's first shareholder letter

Alex Crippen@alexcrippen

WATCH LIVE

In this article

  • BRK.B
  • BRK.A

(This is the Warren Buffett Watch newsletter, news and analysis on all things Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway. You can sign up here to receive it every Friday evening in your inbox.)

Abel: Berkshire's culture and values 'remain unchanged and will continue into perpetuity'

In his first letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, new CEO Greg Abel didn't try to emulate Warren Buffett's folksy, conversational writing style.

He did, however, emphasize he won't be making major changes to the way the company has operated for decades under Buffett's leadership.

At the top of his letter, Abel called Buffett "arguably the greatest investor of all time," and acknowledged that "Warren is obviously a very hard act to follow."

Berkshire Vice Chairman Greg Abel speaks with shareholders during the Berkshire Hathaway Inc. annual shareholders' meeting, in Omaha, Nebraska, U.S., May 2, 2025.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Abel wrote that last month, he "sent a letter to our employees to emphasize that Berkshire's cultures and values remain unchanged and will continue into perpetuity."

"We are committed to strengthening the great legacy" built by Buffett and Charlie Munger, "ensuring it endures through our commitment to excellence."

Abel said Munger's comment at the 2021 annual meeting that "Greg will keep the culture" will "forever resonate with me" as a "reminder that our culture is our most treasured asset, a call to maintain what defines Berkshire, and a challenge to ensure our culture continues."

No change on buybacks or dividends

Any investors hoping Abel would be more specific about criteria for buybacks didn't get satisfaction.

His sentence on the subject could have been written by Buffett himself: "We will buy back Berkshire shares when they trade below our estimate of intrinsic value, conservatively determined, ensuring that repurchases enhance per-share value for continuing owners."

There were no buybacks during the fourth quarter, extending a streak that goes back to May 2024.

Abel also disappointed any shareholders hoping he might reverse Buffett's longstanding opposition to using some of Berkshire big cash pile to pay a dividend.

"Our approach to cash dividends continues to be that Berkshire will not pay dividends so long as more than one dollar of market value for shareholders is reasonably likely to be created by each dollar of retained earnings."

No 'retreat from investing'

Abel vowed to maintain Buffett's "fortress-like balance sheet, ensuring Berkshire's foundation is never compromised."

Calling the cash Berkshire's "dry powder," he acknowledged there will "undoubtedly be incremental opportunities to deploy our owner's capital without compromising Berkshire's resilience. My role is to ensure our liquidity levels and capital deployment remain intentional and deliberate."

"Many times in Berkshire's history, some observers have suggested that our substantial cash position signals a retreat from investing. It does not. We continue to evaluate many opportunities and will remain patient and disciplined in pursuing the right ones for the benefit of our owners."

Greg Abel speaks during the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on May 3, 2025.

CNBC

Berkshire still has a lot of cash

Berkshire's overall cash decreased 2.2% in the fourth quarter to $373.3 billion as of December 31.

Excluding BNSF's cash and subtracting T-bills payable, it increased 4.1% to $369.0 billion.

Operating earnings fell 29.8% from last year's fourth quarter, coming in at $10.2 billion. Insurance underwriting was down 54%, insurance investment income fell 25%, while BNSF gained 5.3% and manufacturing, service and retailing edged 3.3% higher.

Ajit, Kraft, and the who's running the portfolio

Abel praised Ajit Jain's "judgment and disciple" over four decades but didn't provide any clues on who may ultimately succeed him as Berkshire's insurance chief.

He also gave no indication on whether Berkshire still plans to reduce or eliminate its stake in Kraft Heinz now that its new CEO shelved plans to split the company in two, saying only the return "has been well short of adequate."

Abel did confirm the responsibility for Berkshire's equity portfolio "ultimately resides with me as CEO," with Ted Weschler continuing to manage about 6% of the investments, including those previously overseen by Todd Combs wholeft in December for a new job at JPMorgan.

Warren Buffett and Greg Abel walkthrough the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on May 3, 2025.

David A. Grogen | CNBC

New additions to annual meeting Q&A

There will be some new faces joining the Q&A sessions at the company's shareholder meeting on May 2 in Omaha.

Abel and Jain will do the morning session as would be expected, but the afternoon session will include Abel, BNSF's Katie Farmer, and Adam Johnson, who runs NetJets and is president of consumer products, service, and retailing, a new position created late last year.

Early reviews

In an email to Warren Buffett Watch, Gabelli Funds portfolio manager Macrae Sykes praises Abel for covering all of Berkshire's major segments in the letter, saying he "showed humility" and "expressed clarity in communication and confidence in his role as the new CEO."

He also likes the inclusion of Farmer and Johnson in a Q&A. "Nice to see the delegation of communication responsibilities and emergence of leadership beyond Greg and Ajit."

[...]


Original source

Reply