Major Changes To Berkshire Hathaway’s Portfolio During Q2

In its SEC Form 13-F filing after the market closed today, Berkshire Hathaway reported several large changes to its portfolio during the quarter ending June 30, 2017 that had not previously been disclosed.

Warren Buffett

By USA White House [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Its largest additions were:

1) $500 million initial investment in Synchrony Financial (credit card company that was spun off from General Electric in 2015) (NYSE:SYF).(2) $500 million additional investment in Bank of New York Mellon (NYSE:BK).

(3) $500 million additional investment in Liberty Media SiriusXM (Nasdaq:LSXMA) (Nasdaq:LSXMK).

(4) $350 million additional investment in General Motors (NYSE:GM).

The largest reduction was:

(1) $300 million sale of its entire position in General Electric (NYSE:GE).

I am quoted in a Bloomberg article on these portfolio changes:

“The outlook for GE has certainly soured,” said David Kass, a professor at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business, citing the recent departure of Jeff Immelt as chief executive officer. “The CEO essentially was forced to resign.”

Kass said Berkshire’s decision to sell GE and buy Synchrony in the same period was probably a coincidence. Buffett oversaw the GE holding, and one of his deputies — Todd Combs or Ted Weschler — was likely responsible for the new investment, given its smaller size in the Berkshire portfolio, Kass said. The filing doesn’t say which money manager is responsible for each pick.

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