Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s share price on Thursday surpassed and closed above $200,000 for the first time, the latest milestone for a company that Warren Buffett has built over nearly five decades into what some analysts view as a microcosm of the U.S. economy.
Class A shares of Berkshire, which have never been split, closed up $3,500, or 1.8 percent, at $202,850, giving the Omaha, Nebraska-based company a market value of more than $333 billion. The share price had earlier rose as high as $203,025.
Berkshire’s share price has more than doubled since it first crossed the $100,000 barrier on Oct. 5, 2006. The Standard & Poor’s 500 has climbed just 44 percent since that date.
Buffett, who turns 84 on Aug. 30 and is the world’s third-richest person, oversees a conglomerate with more than 80 businesses ranging from Geico car insurance to the BNSF railroad to Dairy Queen ice cream, and more than $119 billion of stocks such as Wells Fargo & Co and Coca-Cola Co.
In the second quarter, Berkshire Hathaway posted a record $6.4 billion profit, helped by a stock swap and growing earnings in many businesses, on revenue of $49.76 billion.
By some measures, Berkshire remains moderately priced, trading at about 1.4 times its book value, a measure of assets minus liabilities, in the most recent quarter. Buffett has said he will consider buybacks only at or below a 1.2 times multiple.
Berkshire also has lower-cost Class B shares, which Buffett launched in 1996 to thwart unit investment trusts purporting to be “clones” of Berkshire but which carried high costs.
Those shares now trade at about 1/1,500th of a Class A share and carry voting rights equal to 1/10,000th of a Class A share. They closed on Thursday up $2.22, or 1.7 percent. at $135.30.
Since 2006, Buffett has been donating Berkshire shares to several charities. He still owns about one-fifth of Berkshire, which was a failing textile company before he took it over in 1965, and controls about one-third of its voting power.
Buffett’s net worth was about $66.3 billion after Thursday’s market close, Forbes magazine said.
(Reporting by Luciana Lopez and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Bernadette Baum, Bernard Orr)
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Catastrophe Bond Investors Told to Brace for Jamaica Payout
Truck Driver in Fatal Crash Repeatedly Failed Driving Tests, Florida AG’s Office Says
Brown & Brown Reports Strong Q3 Revenue Growth of 35.4%
GEICO Sues Medical Firms in Florida, NY Over Alleged No-Fault Auto Fraud 

