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August 28, 2025Cryptopolitan logoCryptopolitan

Berkshire Hathaway raises stake in Mitsubishi past 10%

Berkshire Hathaway has pushed its stake in Mitsubishi past the 10% threshold, Mitsubishi said Thursday in a formal ￰0￱ holding, made through Berkshire’s insurance subsidiary National Indemnity Company, rose to 10.23%, up from 9.74% in ￰1￱ increase makes the ￰2￱ an even bigger shareholder in Japan’s biggest trading company. A Mitsubishi spokesperson said Berkshire “continues to believe in the firm’s medium to long-term growth.” This comes nearly five years after Warren Buffett first bought into five Japanese trading houses in ￰3￱ investment is part of Warren’s wider Japan strategy, which includes positions in Sumitomo, Itochu, Marubeni, and Mitsui, alongside Mitsubishi, all of which dominate Japan’s global trade pipeline, with investments stretching from energy to metals to food ￰4￱ since the original announcement, Berkshire has gradually added to these holdings, especially during periods of market softness, rarely revealing purchases until they are already ￰5￱ rules out railroad acquisition but cuts new freight deal While increasing Berkshire’s footprint in Japan, Warren also addressed rising chatter about ￰6￱ ￰7￱ August 3, he and CEO-in-waiting Greg Abel met with Joseph Hinrichs, the CEO of CSX, at Warren’s Omaha ￰8￱ meeting was private; no aides, no ￰9￱ later told Becky Quick on CNBC that Berkshire “would not make a bid” to buy CSX.

Instead, he said the three executives discussed ways to cooperate and make ￰10￱ rail more ￰11￱ days later, CSX and BNSF Railway, which Berkshire owns, announced a partnership to offer new coast-to-coast freight service across the ￰12￱ announcement hit markets ￰13￱ the news that Berkshire would not buy CSX, shares of CSX fell 5%, closing at $32.81. Union Pacific dropped around 2%, and Norfolk Southern slid more than 2%. Even Berkshire’s own stock dipped, though by less than 1%. The dip followed a month of speculation after Union Pacific said it would buy Norfolk Southern for $85 billion, sparking rumors that Warren might jump into a railroad buying ￰14￱ didn’t offer much detail after the meeting, but CSX told CNBC it would “continue exploring additional service options that will efficiently improve transcontinental service.” Leadership change and valuation uncertainty drive investor focus While Berkshire keeps building positions abroad and striking new deals at home, investors are still locked in on the company’s leadership handoff and cash ￰15￱ latest quarterly earnings show Berkshire sitting on $344 billion in cash, the most it’s ever ￰16￱ company also continues to sell more stock than it buys, signaling a cautious stance in a market where valuations remain ￰17￱ with that much dry powder, Berkshire hasn’t made a major ￰18￱ that’s bothering some shareholders, especially with declining net income, flat revenue growth, and insurance profits ￰19￱ company’s Q2 results showed just how carefully it’s been navigating.

Still, those figures haven’t changed the core near-term risks: the shift from Warren to Abel, and what they plan to do with that massive cash pile. Warren, who remains Chairman, has gradually handed more responsibility to Greg Abel, who’s expected to become CEO once Warren steps down. Abel’s presence at the CSX meeting shows he’s already operating at the highest ￰20￱ market is watching closely to see how much of Warren’s strategy Abel will carry forward, and how soon the handover will actually ￰21￱ some hesitation around the company’s pace, valuation remains a big talking point. Twenty-nine members of the Simply Wall St Community estimated that Berkshire Hathaway could be undervalued by up to 30%.

They put the company’s fair value between $577,396 and $1.06 million per ￰22￱ $50 free to trade crypto when you sign up to Bybit now

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