Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Bets Billions on Verizon and Chevron -- Update
February 16 2021 - 7:18PM
Dow Jones News
By Jenna Telesca
The billionaire Warren Buffett added two more big, American
brands to Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s investment portfolio.
Mr. Buffett's conglomerate has purchased $8.6 billion in stock
in Verizon Communications Inc., the largest U.S. mobile carrier,
and $4.1 billion in gas-and-oil company Chevron Corp. according to
a snapshot of investments held in the quarter ended Dec. 31.
It isn't clear in a filing if Mr. Buffett made the decision to
invest in the two firms or if the decision was made by Berkshire
money managers Todd Combs and Ted Weschler. The two are expected to
take over all of Berkshire's investments once Mr. Buffett is no
longer in the top job.
In the early months of the pandemic, the 90-year old Mr. Buffett
said he was optimistic that the American economy would recover over
time from Covid-19 turmoil.
"You can bet on America, but you are going to have to be careful
on how you bet," Mr. Buffett said in May. "Simply because markets
can do anything."
The bets on Verizon and Chevron show Berkshire's confidence in
the long-term value of these traditional U.S. corporations as well
as the telecommunications and fossil fuel industries. In 2020,
Chevron had its worst year since 2016, and Verizon's fourth-quarter
profit fell after it booked higher costs and gained fewer new
customers than usual.
Berkshire adjusted some of its drugmaker investments bets. The
conglomerate sold off its $136 million investment in the Covid-19
vaccine maker Pfizer Inc., while increasing stakes in the
pharmaceutical brands AbbVie Inc., Merck & Co. and Bristol
Myers Squibb Co.
The conglomerate continued to cut back from financial firms,
selling off its remaining $93 million investment in JPMorgan Chase
& Co., and whittling away at its stake in Wells Fargo & Co.
by $1.4 billion.
Last year Berkshire Hathaway sold stakes in airlines, including
United Airlines Holdings Inc., American Airlines Group Inc., Delta
Air Lines Inc. and Southwest Airlines Co. Mr. Buffett said that he
thought consumer behavior regarding travel had changed for the long
term.
Industry observers have been waiting for Mr. Buffett to use a
large chunk of Berkshire's more than $150 billion stockpile.
Instead, Berkshire has been spending billions on its own stock,
investing $15.7 billion on buybacks alone in the first three
quarters of 2020.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 16, 2021 19:03 ET (00:03 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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