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Warren Buffett Has Sold Over 950 Million Shares of Apple and Bank of America. But the Billionaire Has Made a Killing on 1 Stock He Hasn't Touched in 27 Years

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2024 turned out to be a bit of an odd year for Warren Buffett and his company Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B). Berkshire's stock performed well, with class B shares generating a 27% return and beating the broader market's 23% return.

However, Buffett made many moves indicating that he views the market, or at least broad swaths of the market, as overvalued. Berkshire hoarded cash, was a net seller of stocks, and sold big parts of two of its largest positions -- Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) and Bank of America (NYSE: BAC). Yet Berkshire didn't touch shares of one of its largest longtime holdings, which it's made a killing on.

Selling Apple and Bank of America

Buffett has never preached diversification, believing it's a poor excuse for ignorance. When he sees something he likes he doesn't mess around; such was the case with the consumer tech giant Apple. Berkshire first bought the stock in 2016 and built the position to around 40% of its massive (roughly $296 billion) portfolio. Buffett did the bulk of his buying when Apple traded below $50 per share. Today, the stock trades at $240 per share.

Berkshire invested in Bank of America following the Great Recession in 2011. The Oracle of Omaha injected $5 billion of capital into the bank in exchange for preferred stock with a 6% annual dividend. Berkshire also got warrants giving it the right to buy 700 million shares of common stock with a strike price of $7.14 per share. Today, Bank of America stock trades at about $44 per share.

So Buffett has made great returns on both Apple and Bank of America. It's hard to know whether Berkshire plans to fully exit these positions, which collectively made up 39% of its portfolio at the end of 2024. We know it can take Berkshire a while to divest large positions, so the conglomerate could very well continue to sell these down.

We don't know exactly what it's concerned about in regards to Apple and Bank of America. But given Berkshire's moves in 2024, it may see a correction or economic downturn on the horizon, and could be looking to sell to cash in its profits.

Buffett swiped his card in 2012 and hasn't looked back since

Buffett and Berkshire have a long and storied history with the credit card and payments company American Express (NYSE: AXP). Berkshire first accumulated the stock in 1991 when it provided American Express with $300 million of capital when the company was struggling. In return, Berkshire received a special kind of derivative convertible into preferred stock and paying an 8.5% yield. In 1994, the preferred shares were exchanged for 14 million common shares and then Berkshire purchased 27.7 million more shares later that year, according to the New York Times.