2m 2m 2m 2m 2m 2m 2m
- $371.0BMarket Cap
- 0.74%1-Year Change
- Insurance - DiversifiedIndustry
Berkshire Hath-A (BRK.A)
Key Performance
More- Earnings Score: N/A
- Momentum Score: 44
- True Yield: N/A
- Financial Health Score: N/A
Latest Research & News
What Does Berkshire Hathaway See in This Housing Stock?
Berkshire Hathaway's new CEO Greg Abel announced a $8.5 billion acquisition of homebuilder Taylor Morrison despite current weakness in the housing market. Abel is following Warren Buffett's contrarian investment philosophy by buying when others are fearful, betting on a cyclical recovery while the U.S. faces a shortage of 10 million homes.
06/19/2026, 10:23 AM • The Motley Fool
3 Elite Trillion-Dollar Giants Worth Loading Up On Right Now
The article highlights three trillion-dollar companies—Walmart, Costco, and Berkshire Hathaway—as compelling investment opportunities. Walmart leverages AI and same-day delivery reaching 95% of U.S. households to drive growth. Costco maintains strong member loyalty with rising transaction sizes and membership fees. Berkshire Hathaway, under new CEO Greg Abel, is expanding into homebuilding and increasing its Alphabet stake, positioning itself as an underappreciated consumer story.
06/19/2026, 8:25 AM • The Motley Fool
This Overlooked Warren Buffett Stock Is Absurdly Cheap Right Now
Berkshire Hathaway has been quietly accumulating shares of Macy's despite being a net seller of stocks overall. The retailer trades at a low 10 P/E ratio and appears undervalued when considering its substantial real estate holdings worth an estimated $9 billion against a market cap of $6.7 billion. Macy's has shown signs of recovery with its strongest Q1 in four years and positive sales growth guidance, while maintaining a sustainable 3% dividend yield.
06/19/2026, 4:15 AM • The Motley Fool
With Just 3 Words, Warren Buffett Gives a Clear Endorsement of This Vanguard ETF
Warren Buffett's estate plan specifies that his wife's inheritance should be allocated 10% to Treasury bills and 90% to a low-cost S&P 500 fund, with explicit endorsement of Vanguard's S&P 500 ETF (VOO). The article discusses how this recommendation reflects Buffett's long-standing belief that diversified index investing is the best approach for average investors, though it notes current concerns about high valuations and heavy concentration in the top 10 holdings.
06/18/2026, 10:30 AM • The Motley Fool
Which Banking ETF Is Better, Fidelity's Broader FNCL or iShares IAT's Regional Bank Focus?
The article compares two banking ETFs: Fidelity's FNCL offers broader financial sector exposure with lower costs (0.08% expense ratio) and greater stability, while iShares' IAT focuses on regional banks with higher dividend yields (2.82%) but greater volatility. FNCL is recommended for conservative investors seeking diversification, while IAT suits income-focused investors willing to accept higher risk.
06/17/2026, 6:19 AM • The Motley Fool
No Matter What Happens to the Market, These 3 Dividend Stocks Belong in Your Portfolio
The article recommends three Dividend King stocks (companies with 50+ consecutive years of dividend increases) as recession-resistant portfolio holdings: Altria Group for its pricing power despite declining smoking rates, Walmart for its dominant retail position and e-commerce growth, and Coca-Cola for its global beverage dominance and consistent earnings growth.
06/17/2026, 5:02 AM • The Motley Fool
Are There Opportunities in Europe’s “Digital Sovereignty”?
Europe is pursuing digital sovereignty by building its own tech infrastructure in AI, semiconductors, and payment systems, creating regulatory challenges for U.S. tech giants like Apple while potentially opening opportunities for infrastructure and equipment suppliers. The discussion also covers elevated market valuations (CAPE ratio at 38) and cash management strategies for investors.
06/15/2026, 5:19 PM • The Motley Fool
Market Correction Ahead: Warren Buffett's Historical Warning for Investors
The Buffett indicator, which measures U.S. market capitalization relative to GDP, has reached an all-time high of 229.7% as of May 2026—far exceeding the 200% threshold that Buffett himself described as 'playing with fire.' Historically, when this ratio exceeded 200% during the tech bubble (162.6%), the S&P 500 subsequently fell 50%. With the indicator now 30 points above Buffett's danger zone, investors should exercise caution despite continued AI-driven market optimism, as a significant market correction poses elevated risk.
06/15/2026, 11:15 AM • The Motley Fool
Warren Buffett Successor Greg Abel Pours $10 Billion More Into His Largest Bet Yet
Berkshire Hathaway CEO Greg Abel has invested $21 billion total in Alphabet shares, with $11 billion in Q1 and an additional $10 billion recently negotiated at a discount. This investment marks a significant shift from Warren Buffett's tech-averse strategy, positioning Alphabet as Berkshire's fourth-largest holding. The capital will fund AI infrastructure and employee compensation, supporting Google Cloud's accelerating growth and AI-driven improvements in the core advertising business.
06/15/2026, 8:15 AM • The Motley Fool
Teamshares, a company that acquires small and medium-sized businesses from retiring Baby Boomers, is preparing for its stock market debut later this month via a SPAC merger with Live Oak Acquisition Corp. V. The company has acquired over 90 businesses since 2019 with approximately $500 million in consolidated revenue and plans to reach $100 million in EBITDA by 2027, with a long-term goal of owning 1,000 businesses.
06/15/2026, 8:01 AM • Benzinga
Greg Abel, Warren Buffett's successor as Berkshire Hathaway CEO, is significantly increasing the company's investment in Alphabet, making it Berkshire's 4th-largest holding. Berkshire committed $10 billion to Alphabet's $84.75 billion stock offering to fund AI infrastructure expansion. Abel is shifting Berkshire's strategy toward tech stocks, recognizing Alphabet's dominant position in search advertising and its emerging role as a leading AI applications deployer.
06/15/2026, 5:06 AM • The Motley Fool
S&P 500 Earnings: Can Banks Reignite Momentum as Reporting Season Begins?
Q2 2026 earnings season begins July 13th with the financial sector leading. Major banks have underperformed the S&P 500 YTD, with JPMorgan up only 0.47%, Bank of America up 2.87%, and Wells Fargo down 9.20%, while Citigroup stands out with a +20.86% gain. The sector faces uncertainty over potential fed rate hikes in H2 2026. Key upcoming earnings include Kroger and Accenture on June 18th, and Micron Technology on June 24th, with semiconductors now representing 10% of global market cap.
06/15/2026, 2:39 AM • Investing
Berkshire Hathaway, under Greg Abel's leadership, has significantly increased its investment in Alphabet, tripling its stake in Q1 and committing an additional $10 billion to Alphabet's $80 billion equity raise. This makes Alphabet Berkshire's fourth-largest public equity holding. The move signals confidence that Alphabet will win the generative AI race, leveraging its cost advantages from owning data centers and designing its own chips (TPUs) compared to competitors like OpenAI and Anthropic.
06/14/2026, 5:30 AM • The Motley Fool
VTI vs. VTV: Which of These Ultra-Popular Vanguard ETFs Is the Better Investment Right Now?
The article compares two popular Vanguard ETFs: VTI (Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF) and VTV (Vanguard Value ETF). Both offer ultra-low 0.03% expense ratios. VTI provides broad diversification across 3,484 stocks with heavy tech exposure (~34%), while VTV focuses on 309 large-cap value stocks with higher dividend yields (1.88% vs 1.01%). VTI is better for maximum diversification, while VTV suits income-seeking investors preferring stable, established companies.
06/13/2026, 9:16 PM • The Motley Fool
How Insurance Companies Turn Their Premiums Into Billions in Profit
Insurance companies generate billions in profits by investing customer premiums (known as 'float') before paying out claims. While aggressive investors like Berkshire Hathaway use this strategy to invest in stocks and companies, most insurers take conservative approaches. Progressive generated nearly $1 billion in investment income in Q1 2026 alone. However, this strategy carries risks during bear markets when investment values decline, making insurance stocks volatile during market downturns.
06/13/2026, 7:15 PM • The Motley Fool
Peers
Statistics
MoreInformation as of 06/18/2026
Company Profile
Berkshire Hathaway Inc., together with its subsidiaries, engages in the insurance, freight rail transportation, and utility businesses. The company provides property, casualty, life, accident, and health insurance and reinsurance; operates railroad systems in North America; generates, transmits, stores, and distributes electricity from natural gas, coal, wind, solar, hydroelectric, nuclear, and geothermal sources; operates natural gas distribution and storage facilities, interstate pipelines, liquefied natural gas facilities, and compressor and meter stations; and holds interest in coal mining assets. It manufactures boxed chocolates and other confectionery products; specialty chemicals, metal cutting tools, and components for aerospace and power generation applications; prefabricated and site-built residential homes, flooring products; insulation, roofing, and engineered products; building and engineered components; paints and coatings; and bricks and masonry products, as well as offers manufactured and site-built home construction, and related lending and financial services. In addition, the company provides recreational vehicles, apparel, footwear, toys, jewelry, custom picture framing products, alkaline batteries, logistics services, and professional aviation training and shared aircraft ownership programs; castings, forgings, fasteners/fastener systems, aerostructures, and precision components; and cobalt, nickel, and titanium alloys. Further, it distributes televisions and information, and grocery and non-food consumer products; franchises and services quick service restaurants; and distributes electronic components. Additionally, it retails automobiles; furniture, bedding, and accessories; household appliances, electronics, and floor coverings; watches, home decor and repair services; sells kitchenware; and motorcycle clothing and equipment. The company was incorporated in 1998 and is headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska.
Key Executives
- Ajit Jain
- Gregory Edward Abel
- Marc David Hamburg
- Peter James Eastwood
- Michael J. O'Sullivan
Current Ownership Distribution
- Insiders101.0M (78.40%)
- Institutions27.6M (21.39%)
- Mutual Funds277,837 (0.22%)
- Other0 (0.00%)