Made in the USA: Warren Buffett Sells Out of 1 International Stock and Doubles His Stake in 2 U.S. Companies

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Key Points

  • Berkshire Hathaway has been a net seller of stocks for 10 straight quarters, and it hasn't bought back its own shares in three quarters.

  • It added to seven positions in the first quarter, including more than doubling its stake in Pool Corp. and Constellation Brands.

  • It reduced its positions in six companies and sold out of two.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Constellation Brands ›

Investors eagerly anticipate the Berkshire Hathaway quarterly 13F filings, which detail the company's current equity holdings. It provides investing inspiration for individual investors, but more than that, it's a window into what Chief Executives Officer Warren Buffett might be thinking about current market conditions.

One obvious takeaway from recent filings is that this is not a buyer's market. Buffett has been a net seller of stocks for 10 quarters now, and it's been three quarters since he bought back shares of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A)(NYSE: BRK.B), which is usually his favorite stock to buy.

Warren Buffett.
Image source: The Motley Fool.

The company made the following changes to its equity portfolio in the 2025 first quarter:

  • Reduced its positions in Bank of America, Davita, Capital One Financial, T-Mobile, Charter Communications, and Liberty Media Formula One Series C.

  • Sold all shares of Citibank and Nu Holdings (NYSE: NU).

  • Added to its positions in Pool Corp. (NASDAQ: POOL), Domino's Pizza, Occidental Petroleum, Verisign, Sirius XM, Constellation Brands (NYSE: STZ), and Heico.

There's also a "secret" stock that the company requested not to disclose at this time.

I want to focus on Berkshire's additions to Pool Corp. and Constellation Brands because it more than doubled its stake in these two companies. It also sold out of Nu, which unlike Citibank, is a top growth stock. Let's see what Buffett might be thinking and if his moves make sense for you.

Made in the USA

Buffett loves the U.S. and he has voiced incredible faith in its unfolding story. He loves investing in American companies, especially those that drive economic growth. He mentions this over and over and made several references to it at the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting in early May. "If you live in the United States," he said, "you've already won the game to a great degree, and then just keep making the most of it."

So it's no surprise that he's piling money into companies that could be great American growth drivers. Constellation Brands owns several alcoholic beverage brands like Robert Mondavi wine and Corona beer, and these are leading names that make products that will always draw consumers. The company has been struggling lately, but that's often how Buffett finds the best deals. Everyone else is turning away, but Buffett can see the bigger picture. Sales were up 1% year over year in the fiscal 2025 fourth quarter (ended Feb. 28), but it reported operating and net losses. Constellation Brands stock is down 25% during the past year, and it trades at a forward one-year price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 15. That's not super cheap for a stock that's struggling, unless there's ample reason to envision a comeback.