Group 1 - Berkshire Hathaway acquired approximately 5.1 million shares of The New York Times Company, valued at about $352 million at the end of December 2025 [1] - The company reduced its stakes in Apple and Bank of America by about 4% and 9% respectively, and sold 77% of its Amazon stake, decreasing its value from $2.2 billion to $525 million [2] - Berkshire added to its holdings in Chubb and Chevron while selling down Aon, and its Alphabet stake increased in value from around $4.3 billion to $5.6 billion due to a surge in Google's parent company shares [3] Group 2 - Warren Buffett, who transformed Berkshire from a failing textile mill into a $1 trillion conglomerate, stepped down as CEO, with Greg Abel taking over [5][6] - Under Buffett's leadership, the company has been net sellers of stocks for 12 consecutive quarters and has not repurchased shares for five quarters, resulting in a cash reserve exceeding $350 billion [7]
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway bought a stake in The New York Times during his final quarter as CEO