Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Warren Buffett cuts Berkshire Hathaway’s Apple stake in Q2

- DECISION LIKELY TO RIPPLE ACROSS TECH STOCKS

Billionair­e Warren Buffett slashed Berkshire Hathaway’s massive Apple stake in a move that could prove unsettling for the broader stock market — both because the investor is so revered and because there had been little positive financial news lately.

Just two years ago Buffett called the stock one of the four giants of his conglomera­te’s business alongside Berkshire insurance, utility and BNSF railroad businesses that it owns outright.

That gave investors the impression that Buffett might hold onto Apple indefinite­ly like he has with the Coca-Cola and American Express shares he bought decades ago.

However, he has trimmed the Apple stake over the past year and has recently also sold off some of his stock in Bank of America and Chinese EV maker BYD while doing very little buying.

As a result, Buffett is now sitting on nearly $277 billion in cash, up from what was already a record $189 billion just three months earlier.

“This could alarm the markets especially given the news from last week” with weak tech earnings, a disappoint­ing jobs report and uncertaint­y about the future of interest rates, Edward Jones analyst Jim Shanahan said.

Buffett has consistent­ly lavished praise on Apple CEO Tim Cook, who attended Berkshire’s annual meeting in Omaha in May, and talked about the wayconsume­rs are feverishly devoted to their iPhones and don’t like to switch. He did trim more than 10% of Berkshire’s Apple stake in the first three months of this year when he sold off more than 116 million shares, but the sale disclosed on Saturday was a much bigger move.

Berkshire didn’t give an exact count of its Apple shares in Saturday’s report, but it estimated the investment was worth $84.2 billion at the end of the second quarter even though shares soared over the summer as high as $237.23.

At the end of the first quarter, Berkshire’s Apple stake was worth $135.4 billion.

Shanahan estimates that Berkshire still holds about 400 million Apple shares.

Still, while CFRA Research analyst Cathy Seifert said she looks at the Apple sale more as responsibl­e portfolio management because the tech giant had become such a large portion of Berkshire’s holdings, it does look like Buffett may be preparing for a downturn.

“This is a company girding itself for a weaker economic climate,” Seifert said.

Berkshire reported a small drop in its bottom-line earnings because a drop in the paper value of its investment­s.

The company said it earned $30.348 billion, or $21,122 per Class A share, during the second quarter.

That’s down from $35.912 billion, or $24,775 per A share, a year ago. Buffett has long cautioned investors that it’s better to look at Berkshire’s operating earnings when judging its performanc­e because those figures exclude investment gains and losses which can vary widely from quarter to quarter.

By that measure, Berkshire’s operating earnings grew more than 15% to $11.598 billion, or $8,072.16 per Class A share, from $10.043 billion, or $6,928.40 per Class A share, a year ago.

 ?? AP ?? Warren Buffett, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway
AP Warren Buffett, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway

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