pwshub.com

'Warren Crushed Apple' Says Jim Cramer As Buffett Cuts Stake In Tech Giant By Nearly Half: Here's How Much Dividend Income Berkshire Forgoes

'Warren Crushed Apple' Says Jim Cramer As Buffett Cuts Stake In Tech Giant By Nearly Half: Here's How Much Dividend Income Berkshire Forgoes

'Warren Crushed Apple' Says Jim Cramer As Buffett Cuts Stake In Tech Giant By Nearly Half: Here's How Much Dividend Income Berkshire Forgoes

Berkshire Hathaway‘s (NYSE:BRK) (NYSE:BRK) 10-Q report for the second quarter showed the Warren Buffett-led firm significantly reducing its stake in tech giant Apple, Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL).

What Happened: Berkshire said the fair value of its Apple holding at the end of the second quarter was $84.2 billion, down about 38% from $135.4 billion at the end of the first quarter. Looking at the reduction from the perspective of number of shares, the math works as follows:

  • Berkshire had 789.37 million shares of Apple at the end of the March quarter (according to 13F filing)

  • Apple’s average stock price for the June quarter was $186.14 and the stock ended the quarter at $210.62.

  • The $84.2 billion worth of stake Berkshire disclosed in the 10-Q for the second quarter suggests Berkshire may have been left with 399.77 million shares (taking the closing price for the quarter).

See Also: Amid the ongoing EV revolution, previously overlooked low-income communities now harbor a huge investment opportunity at just $500.

The math suggests a 49.36% reduction in Apple stake by Berkshire in terms of the number of shares.

Apple, which reported quarterly results Thursday, said its board declared a quarterly cash dividend of 25 cents per share, payable on Aug. 15 to shareholders of record as of Aug. 12. The 390-million shares Berkshire is estimated to have sold would have fetched the Buffett-led firm a dividend income of $97.5 million.

If Berkshire held onto the 789.37 million shares it owned at the end of the March quarter, it could have reaped a dividend windfall of a little over $197 million.

Don’t Miss:

Cramer Explores Motive: Commenting on Berkshire’s action, CNBC Mad Money host Jim Cramer said Buffett’s decision may have been prompted by Apple’s China weakness. “Warren crushed Apple and the story is being viewed as ‘China risk,” he said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

“Cramer apparently doesn’t subscribe to the idea. “Did anyone bother to read or see how well Apple did in China this q? Probably their relative best. Again, not defending this market or the stories, just offering a non-panicked perspective,” he said.

Apple reported a 6.54% year-over-year drop in Greater China revenues in the June quarter, and sequentially, the drop was a steeper 10%. CEO Tim Cook clarified on the call the weakness was due to macro conditions and domestic competition.

Incidentally, when Berkshire trimmed its Apple position by 13% in the March quarter, Buffett said the move was to raise cash during times of economic uncertainty and to foot its federal tax bill.

Read Next:

"ACTIVE INVESTORS' SECRET WEAPON" Supercharge Your Stock Market Game with the #1 "news & everything else" trading tool: Benzinga Pro - Click here to start Your 14-Day Trial Now!

Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga?

This article 'Warren Crushed Apple' Says Jim Cramer As Buffett Cuts Stake In Tech Giant By Nearly Half: Here's How Much Dividend Income Berkshire Forgoes originally appeared on Benzinga.com

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Related stories
1 month ago - A big clue from Berkshire Hathaway's latest operating results strongly suggest he's paring down one of his top holdings, and may have completely exited his stake in another key value stock.
1 month ago - Warren Buffett's investment conglomerate, Berkshire Hathaway, could be the first non-technology company in America to join the $1 trillion club.
2 weeks ago - Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) is one of the greatest investments of all time.If you had put $1,000 into the company nearly 60 years...
1 month ago - Losses accelerated on Monday after Japan's stock market experienced its worst decline since the Black Monday crash in 1987, falling 12%.
1 month ago - Traders on Monday reacted to the weak July jobs report and a surprise rate hike from the Bank of Japan, unwinding the so-called carry trade in markets.
Other stories
6 minutes ago - Ransomware has quickly grown into a multi-billion-dollar industry, forcing a shift in how cybersecurity is approached, including the development of solutions such as Mandiant Threat Intelligence. In the last five years, as profits for...
6 minutes ago - There is disruption underway in the cloud industry itself as businesses begin to look outside of the major providers to support private artificial intelligence and AI cloud services. The growth of AI has led to a need for infrastructure...
6 minutes ago - The reach of enterprise technologies such as artificial intelligence has permeated every business operations area. Given the resulting explosion in organizational data generation and reliance, the surface for cyberattacks has expanded....
6 minutes ago - Deepgram Inc., the developer of a speech recognition engine that provides its service via application programming interfaces, today announced a powerful addition to its platform that enables natural-sounding conversations between humans...
35 minutes ago - Trump maintains a roughly 60% stake in Trump Media & Technology Group, which trades on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol "DJT."