Berkshire Hathaway at a Crossroads: No Buffett, Record Markets, Big Questions

Key Takeaways

  • It’s the first Omaha without the Oracle this Saturday

  • Berkshire Hathaway's annual shareholder meeting comes as its stock lags the S&P 500® by the most since the 2000 dot-com bubble

  • While there may initially be a somber tone, equity owners will look for clues on capital deployment plans and what new leadership means in the years ahead

Shareholder meeting season is in full swing. The headliner is undoubtedly Berkshire Hathaway’s world-famous gathering in Omaha on Saturday, May 2. But “Woodstock for Capitalists” will be different this year.

For years, Warren Buffett shaped the meeting into something closer to a macro forum layered atop a company update. His commentary, alongside the late Charlie Munger’s sharp mind and entertaining voice, kept Berkshire stockholders and the investing world glued to TV screens on the first Saturday in May.

When the Oracle Goes Quiet

It wasn’t just Buffett’s thoughts on valuations, earnings growth, and management teams’ strengths and weaknesses we all looked to, but also his wit and ability to connect with everyday investors, something few CEOs could match. While he’s still the chairman and largest equity owner of Berkshire, the world’s 14th-richest person is not expected to speak this Saturday.

Buffett’s viewpoints would have been quite helpful in today’s economic and market backdrop. The conflict in Iran presses on, now approaching the 60-day mark. Global oil prices have climbed back above $100 per barrel (Brent). Consumer sentiment is at an all-time low. All the while, the S&P 500 (and some of Berkshire’s equity positions) is at record highs. Amid an unsettled and disparate landscape, the onus now falls on the new CEO, Greg Abel, to deliver a state-of-the-market speech of sorts.

Abel’s Turn at the Mic

Buffett’s shoes cannot be filled, of course, and Abel is likely to focus on business-level performance, something value investors will eat up, but the investor community may tune out somewhat quickly. Still, the Canadian businessman, who had been Berkshire’s vice chairman for non-insurance operations and was appointed to Berkshire’s board of directors well before being named Buffett’s successor in 2021 and officially assuming the CEO role on January 1 of this year, brings hands-on expertise.

The Oracle still has the final say on some investment decisions, but Abel’s experience across Berkshire’s operations may add valuable color to the holding company’s capital deployment plans and to how firm-specific trends may impact various industries. Hence, we believe there will be signal to glean from the all-day event.

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