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Wall Street is making its expectations for Greg Abel clear as he gets ready to take over Berkshire Hathaway from Warren Buffett in less than two weeks from now.
The leadership change has already moved the stock, with Berkshireâs B shares dropping 15% after Warren announced at the May annual meeting that he would leave the CEO role at year-end, before trimming that slide to 8.4% by Fridayâs close.
Yahoo Finance reported that Bill Stone, the CIO at Glenview Trust, said the most important thing Greg can do is âdonât try to be Warren Buffett.â
Bill called Warren and Charlie Munger the âgreatest duo everâ in investing and added that âtrying to beat them at their gameâŠis probably not the right thing.â
Bill also said Greg should focus on boosting operating earnings, cutting outstanding shares, and being ready to act when opportunities appear.
Meanwhile, Jonathan Boyar, president of Boyar Research, said on Thursday that the best way for Greg to win Wall Streetâs trust is to âbuy an extremely large amount of Berkshire stock personally and really put his money where his mouth is.â
Jonathan pointed to Berkshireâs 2025Â proxy, which shows Greg already holds a stake valued at around $171 million, but he also said that âall of that was bought when, obviously, Buffett ran the company.
Jonathan also said Greg is expected to bring more oversight than Warren, who kept a hands-off structure across Berkshireâs subsidiaries. He said decentralization left room for changes, adding that âthereâs probably a lot of fat to cut,â that some divisions could be consolidated, and that profitability could improve in ways Warren âjust hasnât wanted to do.
Jonathan said, âBuffett is the greatest capital allocatorâŠand the greatest investor of all timeâŠHeâs not known as the best managerâŠGreg Abel might be able to do things that he couldnât or wouldnât do.â
David Jagielski, Motley Foolâs top analyst, said Warrenâs long run gave Berkshire âplenty of time to prepare for a successorâ and that Greg is âwell preparedâ to take over.
In a clientâs note this week, David wrote that Gregâs approach âwonât differ a lotâ from Warrenâs but noted that portfolio changes may still appear. He pointed to Berkshireâs new stake in Alphabet in the third quarter, saying it may have offered a âglimpseâ of the companyâs direction under Greg.
David added he is a little optimistic that Berkshire may put more focus on growth stocks and move away from slower holdings like Kraft Heinz. He expects Berkshire to be an âexcellent buyâ for next year and beyond and said any dip after Warren leaves would make the company âeven more attractive.â
Mel Casey at FBB Capital Partners told Yahoo Finance that Berkshireâs range of businesses gives it an âall-weather quality,â making it feel like a lower-risk option compared to the rest of the market.
Mel said Berkshire looks âpretty reasonably valuedâ in a year with high valuations for U.S. large-cap stocks. Mel also warned about losing the âBuffett premium,â saying âthereâs definitely a caution out there that some of the core investors are investors in Buffett rather than in the actual fundamentals of the company itself.â
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