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Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-B-N) on ​Friday disclosed a ‌new US$2.65 billion investment in Delta Air Lines (DAL-N) and a small ⁠stake ​in Macy’s (M-N), and said it sold many of its smaller stock holdings ​including in ‌Amazon.com (AMZN-Q) and UnitedHealth Group. (UNH-N).

The changes are part of a portfolio reshuffling that followed the recent ‌departure ​of ‌an investment manager who helped ​Berkshire Chairman Warren Buffett ⁠invest the conglomerate’s cash.

Berkshire said in a regulatory filing that it also more than tripled ​its share stake in Google parent Alphabet (GOOGL-Q), which at US$16.6 billion ‌has become one of its largest common stock investments. Berkshire also more than doubled its stake in the New York Times (NYT-N) and said it owned 9.4% of that company’s stock.

The filing contained Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire’s U.S.-listed stock holdings as of March 31, which comprised most of its US$288 billion equity portfolio.

Berkshire bought US$15.94 billion and ‌sold $24.09 billion ​of stocks in the January-to-March period.

Most stock sales were likely directed by Abel, who based on prior disclosures inherited most ​of Berkshire’s equity portfolio including the portion belonging to Todd ⁠Combs, a Buffett protege who left in December to join JPMorgan Chase. Abel said in ⁠February he oversaw 94% of Berkshire’s stock holdings, while investment manager Ted Weschler handled 6%.

The 6.1% stake in ​Delta, comprising 39.8 million shares, follows a post-pandemic rebound in air travel, though carriers are now struggling with rising fuel costs amid Middle East conflicts.

Berkshire once held an 11% stake in the Atlanta-based carrier, but sold that stake and similar percentage stakes in American Airlines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines in April 2020, early in the pandemic.

Buffett, ⁠who remains Berkshire’s chairman, said at the time “the world had changed” for the aviation industry. Delta is now regarded as among the best-run large U.S. airlines. Its shares rose 3.3% in after-hours trading, likely reflecting what investors view as Berkshire’s stamp of approval. The carrier did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Macy’s shares, meanwhile, rose6.3% after-hours following Berkshire’s disclosure of a 3-million-share ⁠stake worth $55 million. The New York Times also rose after-hours.

The largest stock positions that Berkshire exited, based on year-end holdings, included Visa, ⁠Mastercard, UnitedHealth, Domino’s Pizza, insurance brokerage Aon and swimming pool supplies distributor Pool.

Berkshire also sold 35% of its Chevron shares, though the oil ‌company remained Berkshire’s fifth largest stock holding. Its share price rose 36% in the quarter as oil ​prices surged.

Friday’s filing does not say which investments are overseen by Abel or Weschler.

Larger investments - led by Apple, American Express , Coca-Cola, Bank of America and Chevron--are generally Abel’s.

Berkshire also owns dozens of businesses including the BNSF railroad, Geico car insurance, energy and manufacturing companies, and ​retail brands such as Brooks, Dairy Queen, Fruit of the Loom and See’s.

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Tickers mentioned in this story

Study and track financial data on any traded entity: click to open the full quote page. Data updated as of 15/05/26 4:00pm EDT.

SymbolName% changeLast
BRK-B-N
Berkshire Hathaway Cl B
-0.28%482.7
M-N
Macy's Inc
+0.55%18.41
DAL-N
Delta Air Lines Inc
-1.84%70.23
AMZN-Q
Amazon.com Inc
-1.15%264.14
UNH-N
Unitedhealth Group
-1.31%393.85
GOOGL-Q
Alphabet Cl A
-1.07%396.78
NYT-N
New York Times Company
-1.35%74.48

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