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Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BERK34.SA)

São Paulo - São Paulo Delayed price. Currency in BRL
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102.12+0.42 (+0.41%)
As of 02:30PM BRT. Market open.
Full screen
Previous close101.70
Open103.24
Bid102.10 x 0
Ask102.23 x 0
Day's range101.35 - 103.24
52-week range78.84 - 107.22
Volume36,187
Avg. volume28,983
Market cap4.444T
Beta (5Y monthly)0.89
PE ratio (TTM)9.02
EPS (TTM)11.32
Earnings date05 Aug 2024 - 09 Aug 2024
Forward dividend & yieldN/A (N/A)
Ex-dividend dateN/A
1y target estN/A
  • Yahoo Finance Video

    What investors can learn from Warren Buffett's latest remarks

    Berkshire Hathaway Chairman and CEO Warren Buffett (BRK-A, BRK-B) spoke at the company's annual shareholders meeting on Saturday, May 4, in Omaha, Nebraska, The list of topics the "Oracle of Omaha" covered ranged from AI to Paramount Global's (PARA) ongoing acquisition talks with bidders. CFRA Vice President of Equity Research Cathy Seifert joins Wealth! to give insight into Warren Buffett's appearance and the key takeaways from his remarks. "I think investors can take away two key tenants: diversification and time is on your side. [Buffett] is not an active trader, he's definitely a buy-and-hold sort of investor," Seifert points out. "I think people might have been a little surprised at the large slug of Apple (AAPL) stock that Berkshire sold. I think that's an appropriate rebalancing, given how well the stock had done for the company. I mean, it hasn't done that great this year, but historically for Berkshire, it's done well." For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Wealth! This post was written by Nicholas Jacobino

  • Zacks

    Berkshire (BRK.B) Q1 Earnings Rise Y/Y, Segment Results Solid

    Berkshire's (BRK.B) first-quarter results reflect higher earnings in insurance-underwriting and insurance-investment income, other controlled businesses and non-controlled businesses.

  • Reuters

    Warren Buffett's successor Greg Abel seen preserving Berkshire's culture

    When Greg Abel succeeds Warren Buffett at the helm of Berkshire Hathaway, he is expected to preserve the culture at the behemoth even if he does not match the star power of his legendary boss. A 25-year Berkshire veteran, Vice Chairman Abel, 61, is expected by investors and analysts to uphold the $865 billion conglomerate's track record of investing in companies for the long haul and eschewing dividend payments to shareholders. Berkshire, which owns railroads, insurance companies and an ice-cream maker, has been planning for decades for the eventuality when Buffett, 93, who has run the company since 1965, is no longer there.