Berkshire's Greg Abel May Dump Bank of America Stock
💡 Puntos Clave
Berkshire Hathaway's new leadership appears poised to fully exit its massive Bank of America position, signaling a major shift in the portfolio's core holdings.
The Changing of the Guard at Berkshire
Warren Buffett officially retired as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway at the end of 2024, passing the reins to his longtime deputy, Greg Abel. While Buffett remains Chairman, Abel now has full control over the company's day-to-day operations and its massive investment portfolio.
Despite sharing Buffett's value-investing philosophy, Abel is expected to put his own stamp on Berkshire's holdings. The most significant potential change is the complete sale of Bank of America, which was once Berkshire's second-largest stock position.
Signs of this exit have been building. In his 2023 shareholder letter, Buffett listed eight 'indefinite' holdings he planned to keep forever. Bank of America was notably absent from that list. Later, in his first letter as CEO, Greg Abel added Apple and Moody's to a list of stocks he believes will 'compound over decades'—again, Bank of America was not included.
The most concrete evidence comes from Berkshire's quarterly regulatory filings. For six straight quarters leading up to Buffett's retirement, Berkshire sold Bank of America shares, reducing its stake by roughly 50%, from over 1.03 billion shares to about 515 million.
Why a Full Exit from BofA Is Likely
For value-focused investors like Buffett and Abel, price is paramount. Bank of America's current valuation no longer fits their strict criteria. When Buffett first invested in 2011, the stock traded at a 62% discount to its book value. Today, it trades at a 43% premium to book value, making it far less attractive in their eyes.
The steady, methodical selling over 18 months is a classic Buffett/Abel strategy for exiting a large position without disrupting the market. Halving a stake of that size strongly suggests the goal is a complete exit, not just a trim.
Bank of America's business model also presents a risk in the current environment. As a money-center bank, it is highly sensitive to interest rates. Potential Federal Reserve rate cuts could squeeze its interest income, adding another layer of uncertainty that a conservative investor might want to avoid.
This move signals that under Abel, Berkshire will not hesitate to sell even large, long-held positions if they no longer meet its value standards. It reinforces that the new era will be disciplined, even if it means parting with a legacy Buffett bet.
Fuente: The Motley Fool
Análisis generado por el modelo cuantitativo de Bobby AI, revisado y editado por nuestro equipo de investigación. Esto no constituye asesoramiento financiero. Investigue por su cuenta antes de tomar decisiones de inversión.
Bobby Insight

Bank of America stock faces significant headwinds from a likely complete sell-off by its largest shareholder.
The methodical selling, exclusion from 'forever' lists, and rich valuation create a perfect storm for continued pressure. While BofA is a strong bank, the overhang of Berkshire's remaining 515 million shares is a major near-term risk that outweighs other fundamentals.
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