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What's Warren Buffett's Secret to Surviving a Nasdaq Bear Market? Collecting Nearly $3.3 Billion in Dividend Income From 4 Remarkable Businesses.

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Few (if any) Wall Street money managers trust in the U.S. economy and the stock market more than Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A)(NYSE: BRK.B) CEO Warren Buffett. The affably dubbed "Oracle of Omaha" has delivered a stunning cumulative return of 6,325,426% for Berkshire's Class A shares (BRK.A) since becoming CEO six decades ago.

While Warren Buffett's company has handily outperformed Wall Street's leading stock indexes over the long run, what's equally impressive is its returns on a year-to-date basis. Whereas the benchmark S&P 500 has slumped by 10.2% since 2025 began, as of the closing bell on April 17, Berkshire's stock is up 15%!

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A jovial Warren Buffett surrounded by people at Berkshire Hathaway's annual shareholder meeting.
Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett. Image source: The Motley Fool.

Berkshire's returns are even more eye-popping when set side-by-side with the growth-fueled Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC). The Nasdaq has shed 15.7% of its value on a year-to-date basis, and firmly dipped into a bear market on April 8, relative to its all-time closing high.

How has Warren Buffett been so successful navigating bouts of historic volatility on Wall Street? His not-so-subtle secret is his affinity for dividend stocks.

Berkshire's chief has a penchant for seeking out businesses with strong management teams and well-defined competitive advantages. Coincidentally, these companies tend to be profitable on a recurring basis and possesses long-standing capital-return programs.

In The Power of Dividends: Past, Present, and Future, researchers at Hartford Funds, in collaboration with Ned Davis Research, compared the performance of dividend stocks to non-payers over 51 years (1973-2024). They found that dividend payers more than doubled the annualized return of non-payers during this stretch: 9.2% for dividend stocks vs. 4.31% for non-payers.

The long-term stability of dividend stocks, coupled with Buffett's preference to concentrate Berkshire's portfolio into his best investment ideas, has set his company up to collect nearly $3.3 billion in dividend income over the next 12 months from four remarkable businesses.

Occidental Petroleum: $933,463,774 in dividend income (includes preferred stock income)

Whereas financial stocks have historically been the dividend income breadwinners in Berkshire's portfolio, the company expected to dole out the largest cumulative payments to Buffett's company over the next year is integrated oil and gas titan Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY). Berkshire is on pace to collect more than $254 million in income from the close to 265 million common shares of Occidental stock it owns. Meanwhile, it'll net an 8% yield (about $679.1 million) on the $8.489 billion in Occidental preferred stock currently held.