In Wednesday trading, Berkshire’s Class A shares rose as much as 1.2% to just below $700,000. The more plentiful Class B shares trade for about 1/1,500th as much.
Buffett, who turns 94 on Friday, has run Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire since 1965.
He transformed it from a failing textile company into a colossus with dozens of old-economy businesses such as Geico car insurance, the BNSF railroad, Berkshire Hathaway Energy, Brooks running shoes, Dairy Queen ice cream, Ginsu knives and the World Book encyclopedia.
The operating businesses generated $22.8 billion of profit in the year’s first half, up 26% from 2023.
The sales are a major reason Berkshire’s cash hoard, mainly in U.S. Treasury bills, soared to $276.9 billion as of June 30.
“Buffett built Berkshire in a systematic, relatively low risk manner,” said Steve Check, president of Check Capital Management in Costa Mesa, California, which invests one-third of its $2 billion of assets in Berkshire stock and options. “As a huge conglomerate it will always have parts doing well.”
The $1 trillion valuation is based on Berkshire’s 553,234 Class A and 1,325,192,508 Class B shares outstanding as of July 23. Berkshire has slowed its stock repurchases this year.
When the market value hit $1 trillion, Berkshire shares had gained more than 5,600,000% since the year Buffett took over.
Through Tuesday, Berkshire was up 27% this year, while the S&P 500 excluding dividends was up 18%.
Buffett still owns more than 14% of Berkshire despite having donated more than half his shares to charity since 2006.
As of Tuesday his fortune was about $144.9 billion, making him the world’s sixth-richest person, Forbes magazine said.
Check said he became a grandfather on Aug. 16, and bought 100 Berkshire Class B shares for his grandson Zealand that day.
“Investors should certainly not jump in because the market cap hit $1 trillion, and the stock is perhaps as fully priced as it has been since before the 2008 financial crisis,” he said. “It is a good investment for someone with a 10-year horizon.”
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Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York, Editing by Franklin Paul and Nick Zieminski
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