By Warren Buffett’s favorite financial metric, Berkshire’s net worth is $663 billion, leaving Nvidia ($66 billion) and Apple ($57 billion) in the dust

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Look at the list of the ten most valuable companies traded on U.S. stock exchanges, and something immediately jumps out. Nine of the companies comprise the business world’s coolest and most exclusive club, glamorous tech firms led by Apple (No. 1) and Nvidia (No. 2), along with Microsoft, Alphabet, and more. And then—there’s Berkshire Hathaway. As they used to sing on Sesame Street, one of these things is not like the others. It’s like seeing a typewriter company on a list of hot IPOs. Who let Berkshire get past the velvet rope? It owns a company called Acme Brick, for heaven’s sake. Its website appears not to have changed materially since about 1998. Its CEO is 94 years old. But it’s market cap sneaked above $1 trillion a few months ago without anyone noticing, and now it sits just beneath Tesla and above Taiwan Semiconductor.

So what gives? The deeper we delve into the bizarre Berkshire anomaly, the more remarkable it seems and the more valuable the explanations become. The company is literally in a class of its own. It isn’t a tech company, but its market cap beats those of all other non-tech companies by such a vast margin that it doesn’t seem to be one of them, either; its runner-up in that group, Walmart, would have to get 41% more valuable just to match Berkshire’s market cap.

Another way to consider the magnitude of Berkshire’s achievement: So far in this tech-infatuated year, Berkshire’s stock has outperformed the shares of Apple, Microsoft, and Alphabet. It has beaten the tech-heavy Nasdaq as well as the S&P, the Dow, and the Russell 2000. It’s hard to remember that CEO Warren Buffett told his shareholders last February, “All in all, we have no possibility of eye-popping performance.”

View this interactive chart on Fortune.com

But then performance can be measured in many ways, and market capitalization isn’t Buffett’s favorite way of evaluating a company. Market cap gauges the market’s expectations, not measurable financial results, and as Buffett often notes, Mr. Market has mood swings. Buffett focuses instead on net worth as calculated by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). The concept is simple: Add up a company’s assets and then subtract its liabilities. What’s left is net worth. Apple’s net worth is $57 billion. Nvidia’s is $66 billion. Berkshire’s is $663 billion. Some of the other tech giants have a higher net worth than Apple and Nvidia have, but none reach even half of Berkshire’s. As Buffett also told investors in February, “Berkshire now has—by far—the largest GAAP net worth recorded by any American business.”

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