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Warren Buffett delivered more than a 5,000,000% return to investors. This guy is going to replace him

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Greg Abel, center, greets attendees during a shareholders shopping day ahead of the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholders meeting in Omaha. - David Williams/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Greg Abel, center, greets attendees during a shareholders shopping day ahead of the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholders meeting in Omaha. - David Williams/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Those who have followed Berkshire Hathaway have long-anticipated that the day would come when legendary investor and CEO Warren Buffett called it quits.

But the news came unexpectedly at Berkshire’s annual shareholder meeting on Saturday, as the 94-year-old Oracle of Omaha waited until the end of the event to announce he would step down at year’s end and would officially recommend Greg Abel to take his place.

The board approved the plan, naming Abel as Berkshire’s next CEO when Buffett steps down at the end of this year, CNBC reported Monday. Buffett will remain the company’s executive chairman.

Naming Abel, a 25-year veteran of Berkshire, as his successor was not exactly surprising news. Buffett said in May 2021 that Abel would be next in line to lead the $1.1 trillion conglomerate.

“The directors are in agreement that if something were to happen to me tonight it would be Greg who’d take over tomorrow morning,” Buffett told CNBC at the time.

Abel, 62, currently serves as the chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Energy and vice-chairman of non-insurance operations.

The Edmonton, Alberta-born businessman will take over as Berkshire Hathaway’s CEO in 2026. No pressure: The guy Abel is replacing is the world’s most famed investor, who delivered a 5,500,000% return to investors during his tenure.

Finding his way to Berkshire

Unlike Buffett, who started investing at the age of 11, Abel didn’t get an early start to a career in business while growing up in Edmonton.

Buffett has called Abel “a proud Albertan” and that his Edmonton roots come out when he speaks to the board of directors at management meetings. “They know he came from Canada. They know he likes hockey and they know his Uncle Sid (Abel of the Detroit Red Wings) was a hell of a hockey player,” Buffett said in a video from the University of Alberta, which honored Abel in 2013 as a distinguished alumnus after he graduated in 1984 with a bachelor’s degree in accounting.

Abel’s professional career began at consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers in Edmonton, before moving to the company’s San Francisco office. In 1992, he joined CalEnergy, a utilities company run at the time by David Sokol, who himself was once considered the top candidate to succeed Buffett.

In 1998, CalEnergy acquired Des Moines, Iowa-based MidAmerican Energy Holdings (which was renamed Berkshire Hathaway Energy in 2014) for $4 billion, and at the request of Sokol, Abel became president of the combined companies under MidAmerican’s name.

In 2000, an investor group that included Berkshire Hathaway, Sokol, Abel and Walter Scott — a former Berkshire Hathaway director and major shareholder in MidAmerican — acquired the electric and natural gas utility company and took it private.