Billionaire Warren Buffett Just Sold More Than 300 Million Shares of 2 Favorite Stocks and Piled Into This Ultra-Safe Asset

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The large conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A)(NYSE: BRK.B), run by investing legend Warren Buffett, reported its third-quarter earnings results over the weekend. The report is a big deal for shareholders and all market watchers who are curious to see what moves Buffett and his team of investing experts made during the quarter because they indicate their overall view of the market.

Another reason investors watch Buffett is because he runs a $300 billion-plus equities portfolio that invests in some of the most popular stocks in the market. While the 13F report detailing Berkshire’s exact stock holdings at the end of the third quarter won’t be available until around Nov. 14, Berkshire’s earnings report offered some clues about Buffett and Berkshire’s investing decisions in the third quarter.

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Based on these clues, we can determine that Berkshire sold hundreds of millions of shares of his two favorite stocks — Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) and Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) — and piled into an ultra-safe asset yielding close to 5%.

How do people know that Berkshire sold all of these shares if we don’t have its 13F filing? Berkshire’s earnings reports detail the fair value of the company’s five largest holdings in its stock portfolio, given their material impact on the equities portfolio and the company. You then can find the historical stock price on the last day of the quarter and calculate the share amount.

Here is where things stood at the end of the second quarter on June 30. (I’m using stock prices from June 28 because June 30 was a Sunday.) The numbers are in thousands:

Stock

Price

Fair Value

Shares

Apple

$210.62

$84,200,000

399,772

Bank of America

$39.77

$41,100,000

1,033,442

Source: Berkshire’s second-quarter earnings report/Wisesheets. Chart by author.

Here are the shares Berkshire owned in each stock on Sept. 30 using the same calculation:

Stock

Price

Fair Value

Shares

Apple

$233.00

$69,900,000

300,000

Bank of America

$39.68

$31,700,000

798,891

Source: Berkshire’s third-quarter earnings report/Wisesheets. Chart by author.

Based on these figures, Berkshire decreased its stake in Apple by 25% and Bank of America by 23%. We won’t know what prices Berkshire sold shares at until the 13F comes out.

I think it’s difficult, if not impossible, to think anything other than Buffett and Berkshire viewed these stocks — and likely the entire market — as overvalued. Apple now trades for more than 36 times earnings, which isn’t the highest it’s traded for over the last five years but certainly toward the higher end. Bank of America trades for roughly 1.6 times its tangible book value (net worth), which is actually right around its five-year average.

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