Buffet picks the top of Apple and abandon’s ship with half of his investment ..
For years, Warren Buffett, the world’s most successful and widely-watched investor, mostly stayed away from tech companies. The notoriously methodical investor explained that he only invests in businesses he understands, and tech wasn’t really his thing.
🚨NOT ALL BONDS ARE MEANT TO LAST #BUFFETT DUMPS #APPLE, SELLS 49% OF HIS STAKE CONFIRMED.
WarrenBuffett’s #BerkshireHathaway unexpectedly sold nearly half its Apple shares, causing market confusion.
In Q2, we saw a $75B equity dump, and this sell-off just boosted Berkshire’s… pic.twitter.com/Wf411ES51n
— Abhyudoy Das (@DasAbhyudoy) August 3, 2024
Then, in 2016, Buffett’s company, Berkshire Hathaway, started investing in Apple with a $1 billion stake. By 2017, that amount grew to over $28 billion. All told, Berkshire has spent $40 billion on its stake in Apple. Since then, the company’s stock price has increased by roughly 800 percent.
On Saturday, in a filing with the SEC, Buffett revealed that he had dumped almost half of his Apple stock, netting $76 billion. Earlier this year, the company sold a smaller number of shares, bringing the total sold this year to more than 500 million shares, representing 56 percent of Berkshire’s total stake in Apple.
On the surface, it’s remarkable that—despite waiting so long to buy into the tech company—Buffett’s timing has paid off so well. Apple has made him a lot of money. Right now, Apple is again the most valuable company in the world. It’s also the most valuable it has ever been, with a total market cap of $3.3 trillion, making it the largest holding for Berkshire Hathaway, even after the sale.
Buffett didn’t specifically say why he’s unloading Apple’s stock, but he has indicated in the past that he plans to hold onto the company’s shares “unless something really extraordinary happens.” It would seem reasonable to ask why Buffett decided to make such a large sale now. Well, is there a better time to sell a stock than when it’s at its all-time high?
Even if you think the stock might go higher, sometimes it just makes sense to let go. To understand why, it’s worth considering something Buffett mentioned at Berkshire Hathaway’s most recent annual meeting about the company’s growing cash pile. “We’d love to spend it,” Buffett said. “But we won’t spend it unless we think we’re doing something that has very little risk and can make us a lot of money.”
Those last six words, “make us a lot of money,” turn out to be pretty important because, as much as Buffett likes Apple as a company and an investment, his ultimate job is to figure out how to make his shareholders as much money as possible. It seems reasonable to ask, with Apple at all-time highs, where the $76 billion he just pulled out of the stock will be most likely to get a return.
To be clear, I don’t think Buffett is worried about Apple. In fact, in the past, he has said that he would own the entire company if he could. Buffett has explained that the reason he thinks Apple is so great is that it’s an incredibly well-run company and has praised Tim Cook’s leadership.
Buffett has previously indicated that he has sold “a little bit” of Apple’s shares to potentially avoid higher tax rates in the future. Put another way, Buffett is taking a certain profit now, with known variables like a lower tax rate, instead of gambling on uncertainty. It seems likely that Buffett is selling Apple as a hedge against uncertainty—not necessarily in the company but in the broader world.
🚨 BUFFETT DUMPS APPLE: SELLS NEARLY HALF HIS STAKE
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway offloaded 49% of its Apple shares, surprising the market with this unexpected decision.
This major sell-off is part of a $75B equity dump in Q2, boosting Berkshire’s cash reserves to a… pic.twitter.com/k3I0KL6Ppk
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) August 3, 2024
Honestly, I’m less interested in Buffett selling shares of Apple as an investment lesson. I don’t even own shares of individual companies so while I respect Buffett’s investment prowess, I’m far more interested in this move as a leadership principle.
There’s a simple but important lesson here: You should always be willing to let go of something if it’s the right thing for your business. Even if you think that thing is really great, there will no doubt come a time when you have to decide whether to keep moving in the same direction or consider something new.
Neither of those options should be considered lightly, but the point is that sometimes the best thing you can do for your company is to let go. Sometimes, your job means letting go of something you think highly of so that you “can make a lot of money.”
Key Points:
i. Initial Investment: Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway began investing in Apple in 2016, eventually spending $40 billion on its stake.
ii. Significant Sale: Buffett recently sold almost half of his Apple stock, netting $76 billion, totaling more than 500 million shares sold this year.
iii. Strategic Timing: The sale comes as Apple’s market cap reaches an all-time high of $3.3 trillion, making it a strategic time to sell.
iv. Cash Deployment: Buffett aims to reinvest the $76 billion in opportunities with low risk and high potential returns.
v. Leadership Insight: The move underscores the importance of being willing to let go of even highly valued assets if it benefits the business.
RM Tomi – Reprinted with permission of Whatfinger News