Buffett's Cash Fortress Encounters Market Downturn, Executive Changes, and Gates Investigation
- Berkshire Hathaway reported a record $381.67B cash reserve as of September 30, 2025, up from $347.7B in Q1, driven by strong operating earnings and disciplined capital allocation. - The company continued net stock selling for a 12th quarter, generating $10.4B in gains, while Warren Buffett steps down as CEO in December, impacting stock performance with shares down double digits from highs. - Its top five equity holdings (Apple, American Express, etc.) account for 66% of equity value, while the Gates Foun
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK.A) announced that its cash holdings reached an unprecedented $381.67 billion as of September 30, 2025, according to its
The expansion of Berkshire’s cash position is attributed to both solid operational outcomes and prudent capital management. Despite a significant jump in operating income, the company maintained its trend of selling more stocks than it bought, marking the 12th straight quarter of net sales and generating $10.4 billion in taxable profits, as detailed by
Berkshire’s investment assets remain highly concentrated, with its five largest stock holdings—American Express, Apple, Bank of America, Coca-Cola, and Chevron—making up 66% of the total market value of its equity portfolio as of September 30, according to
Berkshire’s succession plan is also in the spotlight as Warren Buffett, now 95, prepares to retire as CEO at the end of the year, with Greg Abel set to take over, the company revealed. This leadership change has already affected the stock, which has dropped by double digits from its record highs since the announcement. In addition, Berkshire’s recent $9.7 billion purchase of Occidental Petroleum’s OxyChem division highlights its ongoing focus on major industrial acquisitions.
The insurance segment continues to be a major contributor, with underwriting profits jumping to $2.37 billion in the third quarter, a 200% year-over-year increase. This surge was aided by a period of unusually low natural disaster losses, according to
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Romania Prohibits Unregulated Prediction Markets, Classifying Them as Gambling
- Romania's ONJN banned unlicensed prediction market Polymarket, classifying its user-driven bets on real-world events as gambling requiring a license. - Regulators warned that treating counterparty betting as "trading" creates legal risks for player protection, AML compliance, and state revenue collection. - The crackdown follows $600M+ in wagers on Romanian elections and joins bans in France, Belgium, and the U.S., where Polymarket faces EU licensing hurdles. - Despite securing a CFTC-licensed exchange a

Monero Faces a $342 Test: The Assurance of Privacy Against Widespread Doubt
- Monero (XMR) trades near $342, with traders monitoring key support/resistance levels amid mixed sentiment. - Analysts highlight $342 as a critical threshold; breakouts could drive bullish momentum, while dips below $325 risk corrections. - Privacy coin faces challenges from regulatory uncertainty and cautious institutional adoption despite growing DeFi use cases. - Broader crypto market shows mixed trends, with NFT sales declining and tech stocks like Nvidia surging.

Ethereum Updates Today: Litecoin Added Alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum in Regulated Markets Following Landmark ETF Authorization
- Litecoin's first U.S. spot ETF approval (LTCC) marks historic institutional adoption, joining Bitcoin and Ethereum in regulated markets. - Analysts predict LTC could surge 300x to $4,000 if it breaks $200, driven by consolidation phase and growing institutional support. - ETFs like LTCC enable direct exposure to Litecoin's price, with physical custody via Coinbase/BitGo and zero-fee staking models emerging in crypto market. - Market trends show tokenization reaching $2T by 2028, but SEC's unclear regulat

Berkshire's $381B Cash Reserve and Discreet Share Repurchases Amid Leadership Change
- Berkshire Hathaway's Q3 operating earnings rose 34% to $13.485B, driven by a record $381.67B cash reserve and 200% surge in insurance profits. - No 2025 share buybacks and CEO transition risks sparked investor concerns, with shares down 11.5% since May amid leadership uncertainty. - Greg Abel's leadership faces scrutiny as Berkshire remains a net seller of equities for 12 consecutive quarters despite $13.5B operating income. - $9.7B OxyChem acquisition marked rare capital deployment, contrasting with Buf
