Buffett loves Apple Inc – nowhere to 2nd in Berkshire’s $122bn portfolio.

For decades, Warren Buffett stayed away from owning shares in technology companies. He is now making up for lost time. After taking his first step into the sector through IBM, Buffett has made a huge bet on tech flag bearer Apple Inc, the world’s most valuable listed company. He has been buying heavily in the last two months, more than doubling a holding of 61.2m Apple Inc shares owned by Berkshire at the end of December – a stake disclosed in the annual report released over the weekend. A year before that, Apple did not feature as one of Berkshire’s 15 biggest shares. Yesterday Buffett told CNBC his portfolio’s shareholding has now risen to 133m Apple shares, making it the second biggest holding in the company’s $122bn portfolio behind Wells Fargo and comfortably above Coca Cola, IBM and American Express. As long-term fans of Apple (one of the top three holdings in the Biznews Global Share portfolio) we’re delighted to see the world’s greatest investor has joined the club. And relieved, too, that our patience has been rewarded as the stock price has surged 51% since bottoming at just $90 last May. – Alec Hogg

Buffett's Big Five stocks

Shares - mCompanyMarket Cap - $mShare price - $BRK stake- $mBRK share of equity - %
500.0Wells Fargo289 97058.0629 03010.0%
133.0Apple Inc716 990136.9318 2112.5%
400.0Coca Cola180 20041.6716 6689.2%
81.2IBM172 440179.4014 5738.5%
151.6Amex71 89080.1712 15416.9%
Apple Inc has come from nowhere to be the second biggest holding in Berkshire Hathaway's $122bn share portfolio. The portfolio is heavily concentrated with three quarters of it invested in a handful of stocks - Buffett's version of the Big Five.

By Katherine Chiglinsky

(Bloomberg) – Berkshire Hathaway Inc. increased its stake in iPhone maker Apple Inc. to about 133 million shares, Chairman Warren Buffett told CNBC.

That’s more than twice as much as Berkshire held as of Dec. 31, the billionaire told the cable network in an interview Monday. The stake is valued at more than $18 billion, based on Friday’s closing price of $136.66.

Berkshire has been accelerating stock purchases in recent months, adding to stakes in the largest U.S. airlines and Apple. Buffett said the 2017 Apple purchases were made before the company posted quarterly earnings on Jan. 31, a report that pushed shares higher than he wanted to pay.

“Apple strikes me as having quite a sticky product and an enormously useful product to people that use it, not that I do,” Buffett said, praising Tim Cook, the technology company’s chief executive officer. “He’s been very intelligent about capital deployment.”

Apple climbed 0.3 percent to $137.10 in early trading at 7:32 a.m. in New York. That compares with $105.26 at the end of 2015. Berkshire disclosed a stake in the first half of 2016 and increased the holding later that year.

Buffett said he accumulated about 123 million of the Apple shares, and that one of his deputies acquired the rest, without identifying the investment manager. Berkshire hired Todd Combs in 2010 and Ted Weschler in 2011 to help pick stocks and eventually assume his role managing the company’s investment portfolio.

Buffett also discussed the airline bets, saying that one of his deputies oversees a stake in American Airlines Group Inc., “and I have the other three.” Berkshire also holds stock in Delta Air Lines Inc., Southwest Airlines Co. and United Continental Holdings Inc., with stakes of more than 7 percent in each company.

“We don’t want to go over 10 percent, virtually on any stock. It complicates life for us,” Buffett said. “We do it occasionally, but it’s a big decision to make, whether to go over 10 percent.”

Weschler invested in the airline industry before joining Berkshire and took a fresh look at the business after American CEO Doug Parker gave an investor presentation in March, people familiar with the matter said earlier this year.

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