Read More
Nine days of rain ahead as temperatures dip, Observatory says
09-06-2026 17:35 HKT




As the coronavirus pandemic roiled markets during 2020, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway bought back a record amount of company stock. And the buying spree has continued into 2021, according to the conglomerate’s annual letter that was released Saturday morning, CNBC reports.
During the fourth quarter the company bought back around US$9 billion of Berkshire shares, bringing the total 2020 repurchase to a record US$24.7 billion.
“Berkshire has repurchased more shares since year-end and is likely to further reduce its share count in the future,” his annual letter stated.
During the third quarter the conglomerate bought back US$9 billion of its own stock, up from US$5.1 billion during the second quarter. The figures compare to the US$5 billion total the company spent on buybacks in 2019.
Buffett emphasized that the company only engages in share repurchase programs when it believes shares are trading below their intrinsic value.
“In no way do we think that Berkshire shares should be repurchased at simply any price,” Buffett said in the annual letter. “I emphasize that point because American CEOs have an embarrassing record of devoting more company funds to repurchases when prices have risen than when they have tanked. Our approach is exactly the reverse.”
Berkshire’s operating income, which Buffett urges shareholders to concentrate on, came in at $5.02 billion during the fourth quarter, up from $4.42 billion during the same period a year earlier. For the full year, operating earnings dipped 9% to $21.922 billion as the pandemic hit Berkshire’s conglomerate of businesses.
The company’s net earnings — which account for Berkshire’s big investments in the public market — jumped 23 percent on a year-over-year basis to US$35.835 billion. For the full year, however, net earnings slid by 48 percent to US$42.521 billion.
Berkshire Hathaway’s class A shares hit a new all-time high on Thursday, after bouncing 52 percent from the March 23 low. For the year the stock is up about 5 percent, outperforming the S&P 500′s 2 percent gain.
Even after Berkshire’s record 2020 buyback, the firm still has a sizable cash pile at US$138 billion. The figure is down from US$145.7 billion at the end of the third quarter.
