Warren Buffett…. He is the Chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, and he is considered by many to be hands down the greatest investor of all time. It should come as no surprise that he runs one of the most closely followed investment portfolios in the entire world. His investment decisions have the power to move markets with thousands of smaller investors following his every move. His portfolio is currently valued at over $300 billion and consists of some of the best stocks in the world (Apple, Amazon, Coca-Cola, and Bank of America) just to name a few. Buffett has been quietly buying 10s of billions of this stock with surprisingly very little attention. Anyone who follows Buffett knows that he only buys a stock when he can buy that stock for less than what that stock is truly worth. Buffett is no different than the rest of us. He loves getting a good deal. Make sure to stick around to the end of this video to learn about how you can apply the lessons of this Warren Buffett purchase to your own investment portfolio.
As a long time Berkshire Hathaway shareholder myself, I love this investment Warren Buffett decided to make. However, with that being said, this big investment doesn’t even show up in his stock portfolio. He spent $31.3 billion on this stock but it is only known to people who closely follow his company, Berkshire Hathaway. That is because his biggest investment of the past 12 months hasn’t been a traditional equity investment in an outside company or the purchase of an entire company. The over $30 billion in purchases have been Berkshire Hathaway’s own stock. That’s right. Warren Buffett’s favorite stock over the past year has been his own. You know we are in a crazy market when the greatest investor of all time can’t find an investment he likes better than repurchasing his own company’s shares.
Here is what Buffett had to say in his most recent annual letter about why he decided to repurchase shares of Berkshire Hathaway:
“Last year we demonstrated our enthusiasm for Berkshire’s spread of properties by repurchasing the equivalent of 80,998 “A” shares, spending $24.7 billion in the process. That action increased ownership in all Berkshire’s businesses by 5.2% without requiring you to so much as touch your wallet.Following criteria Charlie and I have long recommended, we made those purchases because we believed they would both enhance the intrinsic value per share for continuing shareholders and would leave Berkshire with more than ample funds for any opportunities or problems it might encounter. In no way do we think that Berkshire shares should be repurchased at simply any price. I emphasize that point because American CEOs have an embarrassing record of devoting more company funds to repurchases when prices have risen than when they have tanked. Our approach is exactly the reverse.”
There are two main reasons Warren Buffett is repurchasing shares: the first being that in Buffett’s opinion Berkshire Hathaway stock was trading at a significant discount to its intrinsic value at the time of repurchases. Put in a more simple way: Berkshire stock was worth more than what Buffett paid for it, meaning that the remaining shareholders of Berkshire Hathaway were better off as a result of the repurchase. The second reason is not as clearly apparent and wasn’t even mentioned in Buffett’s comments. Buffett has said in the past that his favorite use of cash for Berkshire Hathaway is buying stocks and entire businesses. However, with Berkshire Hathaway having a market cap of nearly $650 billion, Buffett hasn’t been able to find a large acquisition that really “moves the needle,” as he likes to put it. The company is just so big that only really large acquisitions can have a substantial impact. This fact, coupled with high valuations for potential acquisitions that Buffett doesn’t want to pay, has meant that there hasn’t been many acquisitions. So, as a result, a lot of cash has been sitting on the company’s balance sheet, way more than what is necessary to run the company. While Berkshire’s stock may not have been overwhelmingly cheap, repurchasing shares was better than just leaving that cash on the balance sheet in Buffett’s opinion.
Before we go any farther, it is important to understand what exactly share repurchases are and why a company would do them. The best way to do this is to use one of Warren Buffett’s most famous investments, Coca-Cola, as an example. In 2020, Coca-Cola’s profit was nearly
$8 billion. That’s definitely a lot of money. Coca-Cola management had a few different choices with what they could do with that money. The first thing would be to reinvest those profits in the business. That could come in the form of new products, additional advertising, or building a new headquarters. Another option for that money would be something commonly referred to as “inorganic growth.” That is where a company goes out and buys another company in order to grow their own business.
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23 Comments
What does the stock buy back mean for the class b shares?
Buffett just bought another $6 billion of Berkshire in the latest quarter of 2021.
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he should’ve bought some bitcoin
Financial investment can be emotionally exhausting/frustrating in a case where inconsistency in trade wins is much. Positive results are guaranteed more if one works with a reliable professional. My most sincere take though!!
I may not have Buffet money yet but I hope to get there. I am buying what I can and I am growing at a good rate
Hate videos that wait for punchline. Give it first wont another of your vids
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Companies buy back their own stock because it is cheap. Simple as that. …… and they are in a better position than any outsider to estimate that value.
Oh cool, I just did a similar video last week of his top stocks using different data. Good stuff!
There’s a bigger case for Apple buying back it’s shares than Berkshire. Huge cash reserves and Berkshire buys Apple stock whenever it dips lower than intrinsic value.
One thing I learned after trying to follow Warren Buffet is that the best strategy is simply to buy Berkshire stocks. If you just try to follow him you’ll always be late and never buy at the same price as he is.
Too bad it's no longer in the range at that point.
After studying the stock trajectory if great assets like real estate, dividend paying stock of blue chip companies, gold etc my conclusion is that most great asset neva come down to the price you want them to so you can buy. Just buy the one you can afford today.
Although it probably is not quite a $31B purchase by Berkshire, I thought you were going to say Bank of America which nobody would get excited about either. Some irony Buffett sold out of Wells Fargo after it tumbled (and his selling likely exacerbated it), while WFC's performance since appears better than BAC's. Munger merely remarked they don't always see eye to eye on investment decisions for Buffett's decision to sell. At least near-term, fluctuations can be noise.. although for now, likely lot of noise in quality of earnings too (release of loan loss reserves in the case of banks for a purported steep jump in quarterly profit)
Nice content 💰💚💰💚👍
BERKSHIRE IS SET UP TO TRIPLE IN JUST 8 YEARS TIME. DON'T GO SP500 FOR THE NEXT DECADE, GO BRKB
If you liked this video 😊… you may also like this video:
An effective Warren Buffett style step by step value investing stock selection procedure: https://youtu.be/aN9X2kY8FsU 😊☺️☺️
God damn man. I love your videos. Do you have any stock recommendations? If not any recommendations for purchase do you have any stocks to put on a watch list?
I think this may be my favorite video yet!
Who said he bought it for 31 Billion? I guess more he bought it cheap and it reached that Value over many years.
Mr Buffett is a living legend
🔌