Berkshire Hathaway Inc

NYSE: BRK-A
$606,920.00
-$4.00 (-0.8%)
Closing price April 26, 2024
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. is an American multinational conglomerate holding company headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska, United States. The company wholly owns GEICO, Duracell, Dairy Queen, BNSF, Lubrizol, Fruit of the Loom, Helzberg Diamonds, Long & Foster, FlightSafety International, Pampered Chef, Forest River, and NetJets, and also owns 38.6% of Pilot Flying J; and significant minority holdings in public companies Kraft Heinz Company (26.7%), American Express (18.8%), The Coca-Cola Company (9.32%), Bank of America (11.9%), and Apple (6.3%).
The trust in each of these 10 brands is very high. The companies will still be around in 100 years, although they may have to change their business models somewhat.
Many investors feel like the key stocks in the market have simply gotten away from them, but those fears are perhaps misguided, according to some key analysts.
24/7 Wall St. looks at some potential winners among Warren Buffett’s holdings. See why they could rally headed toward 2021 and beyond.
While investors were not happy about Dominion Energy's sale of natural gas assets and other major changes to the company's business, analysts were more upbeat.
Residential solar installer Sunrun is acquiring Vivint a few days after Berkshire Hathaway acquired the natural gas pipeline business of Dominion Energy.
Boeing rallies amid signals of confidence from a big hedge fund and a big aircraft leaser.
Billionaires, including Mark Zuckerberg, are doing well while the coronavirus sickens the economy. Facebook investors like its user numbers even though advertising has been hurting.
Warren Buffett is known for trying to bring calm to the markets and signaling that America's greatest days are ahead of it. What does it signal when he chose not to acquire stocks after the recent...
Boeing rolled out a jet-powered drone that will employ artificial intelligence in Australia’s air defense. The delivery comes as Boeing says its defense business will exceed its commercial business...
Occidental Petroleum has become the poster child for pursuing a bad and expensive merger in oil and gas. And so, its future looks less than certain.
Boeing was in trouble long before the COVID-19 pandemic forever changed air travel. Things did not get better this weekend, given Warren Buffett’s bad news for airline stocks.
A generally accepted rule is that for older investors, most investments should be conservative and less risky. Does the same rule apply to Warren Buffett? Should it?
Some mergers end up being great. Some mergers end up being atrocious. If there has been one awful acquisition that hindsight will likely prove should be the poster child of atrocious mergers it would...
Investors have not shaved a tremendous amount of value from mega-cap public corporations. Two American companies still have market caps above $1 trillion.
24/7 Wall St. has looked through the top Buffett stocks to see where the real damage has been seen.