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Trading information for Berkshire Hathaway at the New York Stock Exchange in October, 2025.Brendan McDermid/Reuters

Berkshire Hathaway BRK-B-N shares on Monday had their largest decline since Warren Buffett announced he would step down as chief executive, after the conglomerate posted financial results that fell short of some analysts’ expectations and expressed caution about investing its cash.

The Class A shares fell as much as 5.3 per cent by early afternoon, and Class B shares, worth about 1/1,500th as much, fell about the same amount. Shares fell as much as 6.8 per cent last May 5, after Buffett unexpectedly announced that Greg Abel would take charge starting in 2026. Buffett had led Berkshire since 1965, and remains chairman.

Berkshire on Saturday said fourth-quarter operating profit, which excludes gains and losses on common stocks led by Apple , fell 30 per cent to US$10.2-billion, including a 38 per cent overall decline at Geico and other insurance businesses.

In his first annual letter to shareholders, Abel said Geico may face continued pressure to keep customers as rivals lower car insurance rates, while other insurance and reinsurance operations face pricing pressures as more capital enters their markets.

Berkshire CEO Abel assures investors after Buffett’s departure, vows to maintain balance sheet

While saying Berkshire’s US$373-billion cash stake did not signal a “retreat from investing,” Abel gave no indication Berkshire planned to resume stock buybacks after 1-1/2 years with none, or pay a shareholder dividend.

“We will assess value carefully, act patiently, and hold for the long term – preferably forever,” he wrote.

Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst Meyer Shields, who rates Berkshire “underperform,” on Monday said results “broadly” missed forecasts, also reflecting weakness at the BNSF railroad and in energy, manufacturing and retailing operations. He lowered his 2026 earnings forecast by 5 per cent.

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