
Warren Buffett reveals to WSJ why he's stepping down from Berkshire Hathaway
But he had a simple answer for why he decided to hand over the position to Greg Abel at the end of the year.
'There was no magic moment,' Buffett said to The Wall Street Journal in an interview published Wednesday. 'How do you know the day that you become old?'
Abel, the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Energy and the vice chairman of non-insurance operations of Berkshire, is slated to succeed Buffett at the start of 2026. Buffett said in the annoucement he will remain as chairman until his death.
'I didn't really start getting old, for some strange reason, until I was about 90,' he continued to WSJ. 'But when you start getting old, it does become—it's irreversible.'
Some of those symptoms, he said: losing his balance, having difficulty recalling names, a harder time reading the newspaper.
Abel, 62, an Edmonton, Alberta-born businessman, was designated as Buffett's successor in 2021.
Buffett, who has been with Berkshire Hathaway since 1965, made the announcement at the company's annual shareholder meeting, an event often called 'Woodstock for Capitalists.'
But Buffett told the Journal he still plans to keep working, and his investing acumen is very much intact.
'My health is fine, in the sense that I feel good every day,' he said. 'I'm here at the office and I get to work with people I love, that they like me pretty well, and we have a good time.'
As for his retirement plans from Omaha: 'I'm not going to sit at home and watch soap operas… My interests are still the same.'
CNN's Auzinea Bacon contributed to this report.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Buys Over 5 Million Shares in UnitedHealth Group (UNH)
UnitedHealth Group Incorporated (NYSE:UNH) is one of the most buzzing stocks to invest in right now. CNBC reported on August 14 that Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway bought more than 5 million shares in UnitedHealth Group Incorporated (NYSE:UNH) last quarter, coming up to a stake worth around $1.6 billion. A senior healthcare professional giving advice to a patient in a clinic. UnitedHealth Group Incorporated's (NYSE:UNH) shares soared after Buffett's latest quarterly filing was revealed, marking a 'surprising buy' due to the healthcare company's present reputation. According to VerityData, the stake purchase positions it as the 18th-biggest position in the Berkshire portfolio, standing behind Amazon and Constellation Brands. UnitedHealth Group Incorporated (NYSE:UNH) provides healthcare coverage, data consultancy, and software services. It operates through the OptumRx, OptumInsight, OptumHealth, and UnitedHealthCare segments. While we acknowledge the potential of UNH as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 30 Stocks That Should Double in 3 Years and 11 Hidden AI Stocks to Buy Right Now. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Failed Deal for Kanye West's $35 Million Gutted Malibu Beach House Descends Into a Bitter Battle Between Developers
The highly publicized deal made between two developers for the purchase of a Malibu beach house that was famously gutted by rapper Kanye West has turned into a nasty spat after the sale of the home broke down mere months after it was announced. In March, Steven "Bo" Belmont, the CEO of "real estate crowdfunding firm" Belwood Investments, announced that he was putting the Tadao Ando-designed beach house back on the market with an asking price of $39 million, months after buying it from West for $21 million. Days later, he revealed that he had struck a deal with Montana-based developer Andrew Mazzella, telling The Wall Street Journal that he'd agreed to sell the home for somewhere between $30 million and $34 million. At the time, both Mazzella and Belmont confirmed that they expected the deal to close by early May. Yet the home's listing status remained pending for weeks—before the property was suddenly put back on the market earlier this month, with a reduced asking price of $34.9 million, as first reported by Now, Belmont and Mazzella have shed some light on the breakdown of their deal, with each alleging that they were led astray by the other party on various aspects of the sale. Speaking to the Journal, Belmont claimed that Mazzella was "massively underqualified" to take part in a real estate deal of this magnitude, telling the outlet that the prospective buyer was unable to secure the necessary funding to buy the property for the agreed-upon price. Describing Mazzella as a "Montana cowboy" who was simply "trying to do something in Malibu," Belmont said that he was pushed to cancel their contract after the buyer failed to come up with the money. According to Belmont, Mazzella made a new offer of $19.5 million after struggling to secure financing—noting that he quickly rejected it. "I was born at night, but not last night," he scoffed, conceding that he wished he had done more research about Mazzella before agreeing to a deal: "Shame on me for not doing due diligence." Meanwhile, Mazzella said that he also offered to pay Belmont $27.5 million in cash, which was also turned down—despite insisting that he was not given the full details about the work needed to restore the property to a livable condition when he agreed to buy it in the first place. Mazzella claims that he believed Belmont was going to continue his restoration of the property while their deal was finalized, only to discover that work ceased back in April. According to the Montana-based developer, the project was going to require "hundreds of thousands, maybe millions" more than he had first thought—costs that only came to light after what he said was a "slow trickle of information" from the seller in the months after the deal was made. He further alleged that Belmont's company, Belwood, has failed to share the full details about the 500 or so parties involved in the original investment in the beach house—which has turned lenders off to giving him money to finance his purchase. Yet Mazzella insists that he is still actively working to close the deal, stating that wants to reach an agreement that will satisfy both parties, despite Belmont putting the dwelling back on the market. "If Andrew can come up with financing and close the deal, great," listing agent Jason Oppenheim told the outlet of the decision to relist. "In the meantime, we're going to pursue other opportunities." The latest twist in the saga surrounding the decimated home comes more than four years after it was first purchased by West, who paid a staggering $57.3 million for the property in 2021, months after he split from his former wife, Kim Kardashian. He then proceeded to gut the architectural gem, with reports at the time suggesting that he wanted to turn the concrete structure into a modernist bomb shelter. He then sparked further fury when he abandoned his plans for the waterfront abode altogether and put it back on the market in January 2024 with an asking price of $53 million, enlisting Oppenheim to help him offload the bare bones of the home. When it was put on the market, the home had no electric, no plumbing, no windows, and no interior finishes, all of which had been stripped out during West's "renovations." So it came as no surprise that West was unable to secure anything close to his original asking price, ultimately accepting an offer of just $21 million from Belmont, who purchased the property in September 2024 and vowed to restore it to its original glory. When he bought the home, Belmont announced in a press release that he planned to spend $5 million bringing Ando's work back to life. The purchase of the property provided "an opportunity to revitalize and preserve an architectural gem ... ensuring it remains a jewel of Malibu," he noted. Yet Belmont then threw his own West-style curveball, choosing to relist the home with an asking price of $39 million, despite noting in the description that the property was far from being in a livable condition. It is currently unclear what state the property is in—or how far the restoration has progressed—because the listing photos used were taken before West gutted it. However, Belmont has previously stated that, despite leaving the project unfinished, he and his team had made some significant headway on restoring the home, installing new plumbing and electric, redoing the roof, and completing all framing. He also ordered glass for the windows from Germany and said it would arrive before the end of the summer, noting that he planned to pass the materials to Mazzella as part of the purchase. Meanwhile, Mazzella vowed that he would continue the reconstruction, admitting that he hoped a restoration of the dwelling would help him to make a name for himself in Los Angeles. "California and L.A., specifically Malibu, is the highest level there is and I've always wanted to get to the highest level," the former fisherman initially told the Journal. "This is me kicking down the door." But he said the purchase of the home was far from just a commercial endeavor, explaining that he had been "fascinated with architecture" since his teenage years, including Ando's work, so much so that he said he wanted to move to Malibu for a large part of the year to oversee work on the home.

Business Insider
an hour ago
- Business Insider
Warren Buffett may be cashing in stocks ahead of a storm, and could buy them back after it hits, top strategist says
Warren Buffett may be cashing in stocks because he sees a storm on the horizon — and could buy them back once prices tumble, a senior market strategist says. The "Oracle of Omaha" has a "history of selling out of the stock market" when economic and financial indicators are "signaling a bear market or a recession is coming," Wedbush's chief investment strategist, Paul Dietrich, told Business Insider. Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has been a net seller of stocks for 11 straight quarters, even though the market has "soared" to new highs in that period, Dietrich added. The investor's conglomerate offloaded $212 billion of shares while only buying $34.5 billion, meaning its net disposals exceeded $177 billion — more than the market value of BlackRock or Boeing. Buffett also halted stock buybacks for the last four quarters as he no longer saw Berkshire stock as cheap, Dietrich said. The pause marks a big change from Berkshire's peak repurchases of over $20 billion in both 2020 and 2021. Berkshire's share sales and lack of buybacks have contributed to its cash pile, which more than tripled to a record $344 billion over the three years to June 30. Warren Buffett built up cash before the 2008 financial crisis and the dot-com crash Buffett has jettisoned stocks and gone to cash ahead of past downturns, Dietrich said. Berkshire grew its cash pile from around $11 billion in 1997 to $35 billion in 1998, and ramped up its net stock sales from $700 million in 1999 to $2.7 billion in 2000, ahead of the dot-com crash. The corporate titan had grown its cash pile to more than $70 billion when the financial crisis struck. It fell to about $52 billion by the end of 2008 as Buffett made a series of lucrative deals during the disaster. Berkshire ramped up its net stock purchases from around $5 billion in 2006 to $11 billion in 2007 as it capitalized on depressed asset prices. Buffett sounded cautious about the market during Berkshire's annual meeting in May, Dietrich said. Before his shock announcement that he intended to step down as CEO at the end of this year, Buffett bemoaned the lack of potential bargains as asset valuations continued to rise. Dietrich said the " Buffett Indicator" may be alarming the Berkshire CEO. The gauge, which compares the US stock market's value to the US economy's size, has surged to historic highs of above 210%, he said. That means the combined market capitalization of all actively traded US stocks is more than double the latest quarterly estimate of US GDP. Buffett once wrote that buying stocks at readings approaching 200% would be "playing with fire." The Wall Street veteran recalled Buffett's famous advice to "be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful," saying the Berkshire chief is preparing to pounce once valuations fall to attractive levels. Dietrich said Buffett would use his cash pile "to eventually buy back Apple and the other shares he has sold — but at a major discount —after the current nose-bleed stock market highs eventually come back down to earth." Berkshire Hathaway didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.