Warren Buffett officially steps down, closing a six-decade chapter at Berkshire Hathaway
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It is the end of an era on both Wall Street and Main Street. Because today is the legendary Warren Buffettâs last day as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway. After over six decades of control, the Oracle of Omaha is handing his legacy over to his longtime backup, Greg Abel, who takes over.
The author of this article would like to take this opportunity to say a proper thank you to the greatest investor who ever lived.
Now, as you know, Warrenâs career started long before most of the current tech CEOs were even born, and he has become akin to a god on Wall Street.
No one will ever be able to achieve what he has, not only because he is that special, but also because investing has become so easy now that you wonât even get the chance to be Warren.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is his legacy. The fact that he managed to pull off what he has during the hardest era of finance/economics and before the internet is exactly why Google continues to name him the best investor to ever grace NYSEâs trading floor.
Warren bought Burlington Northern, kept Apple stock locked down like national treasure, and somehow remain lifelong besties with one man his entire life while ignoring every flash-in-the-pan trend that came along; crypto included.
Greg Abel officially takes over Berkshire as valuation alarm hits record highs
Greg officially becomes CEO on Wednesday. Warren named him as successor long ago, and heâs been in the background ever since. Now he takes the wheel. Howard Buffett, Warrenâs son, described the companyâs code last year:
âYou do what you say youâre going to do, and you do it when you say youâre going to do it. Youâre honest about it. You make mistakes, and you accept responsibility for those mistakes.â
No oneâs rewriting Berkshireâs playbook, so Greg is inheriting it as-is, with the same style: buy strong, donât panic, and shut up unless youâve got numbers.
And speaking of numbers, the Buffett Indicator, made famous by Warren after a Fortune article he did in 2001 with Carol Loomis, is at 221.4% right now, a 22% surge since April 30 and the biggest since the data started in 1970, and the culprit is [of course] 2025âs AI mania.
The Buffett Indicator works by dividing the Wilshire 5000 Index by the US GDP, and if its high, stocks are getting wild.
Warren didnât sit it out this year though. His portfolio is still loaded with Apple, Amazon, and Alphabet. He didnât suddenly turn into a crypto degen, but he didnât fight the AI wave either. He rode it in silence, letting the profits speak.
Cryptopolitan says goodbye to Berkshire with Bitcoin public letter still unanswered
Now that heâs out, the questionâs simple: whoâs going to watch the markets the way Warren did? Almost every single person in finance treats him like gospel.
People compare him to Einstein, Edison, and even Mozart. Someone once joked that calling yourself âthe next Warren Buffettâ is like calling yourself Mozart while looking like Salieri in Amadeus, the guy who listened in awe, knowing heâd never match it.
A $1 million investment in the S&P 500 from 1957 to 2007 would have landed you $166 million. That same amount with Warren gets you $81 billion. How insane is that?
Add another 18 years, and your portfolio would now be worth $428 billion. The author of this article wrote Warren a public letter exactly a year ago, asking him to invest in Bitcoin before retiring, to finish his legacy with crypto. He ghosted us. Classic. Iâve held BRK.B since 2020, but with Warren leaving, I canât say what happens next.
The certainty is gone. I donât know what to feel.
Goodbye, Warren.
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