By Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) — Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa) said on Tuesday it has shed its holdings in General Motors (NYSE:GM) and Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG), and trimmed its stake in Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN), as the conglomerate controlled by billionaire Warren Buffett boosted its cash pile to a record $157.2 billion.
In a regulatory filing detailing its U.S.-listed stock holdings as of Sept. 30, Berkshire reported no holdings in GM and P&G, after reporting stakes of $848 million and $48 million in June, and said it reduced its stake in Amazon by 5%.
Berkshire also appeared to have shed what had been a $621 million stake in Celanese (NYSE:CE), a specialty materials company.
One new position was an $8 million stake in Atlanta Braves Holdings, which indirectly controls the Major League Baseball team and The Battery Atlanta, a mixed-use development next to the Braves' Truist Park.
The Braves had been split off from Liberty Media, another Berkshire investment, in July.
Tuesday's filing detailed investments that comprised most of Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire's equity portfolio, which totaled $318.6 billion as of Sept. 30.
Berkshire sold $7 billion of stocks, including some of its big investment in Chevron (NYSE:CVX), and bought just $1.7 billion in the third quarter, a down period for its stock holdings led by Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), whose share price fell 12%.
For all of 2023, Berkshire has sold $23.6 billion more stocks than it has bought.
The net sales contributed to Berkshire's record cash stake, which is about the same size as its $156.8 billion stake in iPhone maker Apple.
Berkshire's filing does not say which investments are Buffett's, which are from his portfolio managers Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, and why the
Read more on investing.com