Warren Buffett Is Selling Apple and Bank of America, but Here Are 3 Stocks He Plans to Hold Forever

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Warren Buffett hasn’t seen a lot to like in the stock market recently. The chairman of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) has sold more stock than he bought in his company’s equity portfolio for eight consecutive quarters. That includes selling shares in some of its most profitable positions.

He started taking shares of Berkshire’s huge Apple position off the table at the end of last year, selling more than two-thirds of its stake during the past four quarters. Last quarter, he turned his attention to Bank of America as well. Since the end of June, he has sold 26% of what was Berkshire’s second-largest position.

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While Buffett has been slashing his stakes in some of Berkshire’s largest equity holdings and selling smaller positions entirely, there are three top stocks he plans to hold indefinitely. Buffett describes these as “truly wonderful” businesses, and they may deserve a spot in your portfolio as well.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Buffett started building a position in American Express (NYSE: AXP) in the early 1990s and hasn’t touched it in more than two decades.

American Express separates itself from most other credit card issuers by operating its own payment network. Banks typically partner with a third-party payment network like Visa or Mastercard to process payments whenever someone uses, or swipes, their credit card. Those two businesses generate billions in revenue just by making sure money moves from one account to another.

As its own network operator, American Express gets to keep all of those swipe fees. They amounted to $8.8 billion last quarter, up 4% year over year, accounting for more than half of total revenue. That growth was a bit disappointing because Amex’s corporate customers (about 30% of its total) lagged its consumer and international cardholders.

But while network volume growth is slowing, the company is seeing more and more customers opt for premium cards with high annual fees. Card fees increased 18% year over year, reaching $2.2 billion. Net interest income is also a growing revenue stream, rising 16% and topping $4 billion last quarter.

The shift toward higher-end cards is a great competitive advantage for American Express. It indicates that it has a more affluent customer base that is less susceptible to cutting spending during economic slowdowns. This shift also attracts more merchants to partner with Amex to draw in those big spenders, increasing the value of holding an Amex card.

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