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Berkshire cuts Apple, sheds four stocks, mum on brand-new financial investment

Berkshire Hathaway on Wednesday said it has trimmed its substantial stake in Apple and shed four typical stock holdings, and kept investors thinking on what could be a major new investment by Warren Buffett.

In a regulatory filing describing its U.S.-listed stock holdings at the end of 2023, Berkshire said it offered 10 million Apple shares in the 4th quarter, but still owned more than 905 million shares worth about $174 billion.

Though Buffett has been driving Berkshire's financial investment in Apple, the stock sales in the iPhone maker might have been made by one of his portfolio managers Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, who oversee some Berkshire investments.

Berkshire reported no holdings in homebuilder DR Horton , insurance company World Life, insurance coverage and investment business Markel and Brazilian credit card processor StoneCo, after holding more than $1 billion of those stocks at the end of September.

The Omaha, Nebraska-based corporation likewise boosted its stake in oil business Chevron, among its biggest holdings, and minimized its stakes in computer system and printer maker HP and media business Paramount Global.

For a second straight quarter, Berkshire acquired approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to momentarily keep one or more of its holdings private.

It occasionally demands such treatment when it is making big financial investments, consisting of multibillion-dollar stakes in Chevron, Exxon Mobil, IBM and Verizon Communications.

This is since financiers often try to piggyback on what Berkshire does, showing Buffett's reputation as one of the world's biggest investors. Berkshire prefers not to have financiers pile into its stocks before it's done buying.

In its third-quarter report in November, Berkshire hinted that its confidential investment might include a bank, finance business or insurance provider due to the fact that it had actually recently spent $1.2. billion on stock in that sector. It has yet to reveal where the. cash went.

Berkshire did not immediately respond to a request for. remark. It no longer invests in Exxon, IBM and Verizon.

Buffett, 93, has run Berkshire because 1965.

The conglomerate also owns dozens of organizations. consisting of the Geico automobile insurance provider, BNSF railway, energy and. commercial business, and customer brands such as Benjamin. Moore, Dairy Queen, Duracell, Fruit of the Loom and See's. Candies.

It also owns the Pilot truck stop chain, after purchasing. the 20% it didn't already own from the billionaire Haslam family. in January.

Berkshire will expose more about its investing and. organizations when it releases its yearly report and Buffett's. yearly letter to investors, expected on Feb. 24.

(source: Reuters)