The changes were disclosed in a regulatory filing detailing
Berkshire's U.S.-listed stock portfolio as of March 31.
Berkshire also boosted its share stake in U.S. Bancorp, another
large holding, while other portfolio managers adjusted their stakes
in several companies.
No new stocks were added to the portfolio, which shrank to $107.1
billion from $109.4 billion in December. Berkshire bought $1.62
billion and sold $1.11 billion of equities overall.
Buffett has long praised his "Big Four" stock holdings Wells Fargo,
IBM, Coca-Cola Co and American Express Co, which comprise roughly 58
percent of Berkshire's equity investments.
Buffett has stuck with them despite recent adversity including IBM's
stagnant stock price, concern over Coca-Cola's sugary products and
executive pay structure, and a February court ruling that American
Express violated antitrust law.
"Too many fund managers are more interested in seeing stocks to
which they have committed perform well" in the short term, said Andy
Kern, a University of Missouri professor who teaches a class on
Buffett's investment strategies. "Berkshire has such a long time
horizon that it can afford to watch the stock price go down so it
can buy more."
Friday's regulatory filing does not disclose who makes which
investment at Berkshire. Smaller investments are often made by
portfolio managers Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, who may succeed
Buffett as chief investment officers after he departs.
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In the first quarter, Berkshire raised its stake in Wells Fargo by
about 2 percent to 470.3 million shares, and in IBM by roughly 3
percent to 79.6 million shares. The U.S. Bancorp stake grew about 5
percent to 83.8 million shares.
Other holdings that grew include Deere & Co, Liberty Global Plc,
Phillips 66, Precision Castparts Corp and Twenty-First Century Fox
Inc.
Holdings declined in Bank of New York Mellon Corp, Charter
Communications Inc, National Oilwell Varco Inc, Viacom Inc and Wabco
Holdings Inc.
Berkshire also owns more than 80 businesses, including the
Burlington Northern railroad, Dairy Queen ice cream and Geico car
insurance.
Buffett, 84, this month celebrated his 50th anniversary running his
Omaha, Nebraska-based company, whose market value is fifth-highest
among publicly-traded U.S. companies.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Meredith
Mazzilli and Andrew Hay)
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