



Berkshire’s Domino’s holding is another loser among its smaller stock investments
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories.Berkshire Hathaway may be de-emphasizing its smaller stock picks under CEO Greg Abel and the selloff Monday in Domino’s Pizza would support such a pullback.Berkshire owned just under 10% of Domino’s—some 3.35 million shares—at year-end. The stock fell nearly 9% Monday to $335.51 and hit a new 52-week low earlier in the session after the company reported results for the March that missed the consensus estimate on both revenue and earnings.Berkshire bought most of its stake in late 2024 at what Barron’s estimates is a price of between $400 and $450 and added to the holding in the fourth quarter of 2025.
Berkshire likely is losing money on the stake, which is now worth about $1.1 billion.Berkshire’s equity portfolio totals about $300 billion and it includes large holdings like Apple (nearly $60 billion), American Express ($50 billion), Coca-Cola ($30 billion) and Moody’s ($11 billion) that were assembled by Chairman Warren Buffett. These are what Barron’s calls the “untouchables”—stocks that are likely to be held for a long time.There also are many smaller holdings, most of which likely were accumulated by Berkshire managers Ted Weschler and Todd Combs, who together ran about 10% of the portfolio with Buffett handling the rest before Buffett stepped down as CEO at year-end 2025.
These aren’t forever stocks.Combs left Berkshire for an investment role at JPMorgan Chase in December ahead of the CEO transition when Greg Abel succeeded Buffett, who remains chairman.There are more than a dozen smaller holdings under $3 billion at Berkshire.Domino’s isn’t the only loser among Berkshire’s smaller investments under $3 billion. Others include Constellation Brands, Pool and Sirius XM Holdings,
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