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Warren Buffett deixa o cargo, Greg Abel assume a Berkshire Hathaway há 100 dias: a forma de gerir o império de investimentos está a ser reescrita
Berkshire Hathaway’s new CEO Greg Abel, after 100 days in office, has demonstrated a management style more assertive than Buffett’s. He rebooted the buyback program, redefined Apple and three other companies as core holdings.
According to The Wall Street Journal, within just 100 days of taking office, Berkshire Hathaway, the investment empire built by Warren Buffett over decades, has already begun to show significant changes. For the market, Greg Abel is not only Buffett’s designated successor but also the person who will determine Berkshire’s capital allocation, subsidiary governance, and investment style over the next ten years.
The 63-year-old Buffett successor, Berkshire Hathaway CEO Greg Abel
Greg Abel is 63 years old and officially took over as Berkshire Hathaway CEO in January this year. Although he repeatedly emphasizes that Berkshire’s core culture, values, insurance business foundation, integrated corporate structure, and the CEO-led stock investment model will remain unchanged, The Wall Street Journal straightforwardly states that the reality is: change has already begun, and it is happening with direction and rhythm.
Abel has promoted deputies who work closely with him, who earn higher salaries than during Buffett’s era but pledge to use most of their compensation to buy Berkshire shares, rebooted the nearly stagnant buyback plan since 2024, and further expanded Berkshire’s presence in Japan, even acquiring shares of a local insurance company.
Insiders: Abel is more involved in management than Buffett
The most noteworthy aspect of this report is how it depicts the fundamental difference between Greg Abel and Buffett—not in investment philosophy, but in management style. Buffett has long been perceived externally as highly delegative, minimally intervening, and even willing to tolerate underperforming managers to avoid unpleasant personnel issues. Greg Abel, on the other hand, is not like that.
The report quotes insiders familiar with Berkshire’s internal operations, saying Abel is more “hands-on” than Buffett—meaning he is more involved in the business, more active in details, and has higher expectations for subsidiaries, holdings, and senior executives. If someone cannot meet his standards, he is less tolerant than Buffett and may even dismiss them if necessary.
This also makes Greg Abel a more typical modern corporate manager, rather than just an extension of the legendary investor. His background suggests this style is not surprising. Born in the Canadian prairie region, he has a pragmatic, straightforward North American Midwestern personality. He has long managed Berkshire’s non-insurance businesses, especially with Berkshire Hathaway Energy, and has been honed through large industrial and utility systems.
He is not someone who only understands capital markets but knows how to manage railroads, energy, utilities, industry, and large dispersed corporate groups. Therefore, when he took over Berkshire, the outside world saw not a philosophical continuation but someone familiar with operations, performance management, and organizational accountability, beginning to truly get his hands into this giant enterprise.
Abel has already shown a more assertive stance than Buffett
The report mentions that during the transition period before officially taking over, Abel had already signaled a change in atmosphere internally. In December last year, at an employee lunch, someone directly asked whether he would move Berkshire’s headquarters out of Omaha. Such a question would have been almost unthinkable in Buffett’s era, but it reflects that everyone knows a “new era is coming.” Abel responded on the spot that he would not move the headquarters, but the question itself was enough to indicate internal expectations for changes after succession.
In terms of working style, Greg Abel also demonstrates a high level of involvement. Although Berkshire’s headquarters is in Omaha, he currently lives in Des Moines, Iowa, and has no immediate plans to move to Omaha—at least until his son graduates high school. This means he often makes multiple trips back and forth, with a one-way drive of about two hours.
More importantly, he spends a lot of time flying on Berkshire’s NetJets-managed aircraft, visiting subsidiaries across the country. This highly mobile, frequent inspection style is typical of a strong operational manager.
Greg Abel redefines Berkshire’s core holdings
From an investment perspective, Abel’s first significant signal is that he is beginning to redefine Berkshire’s “core” and “non-core” investment portfolio. In his first shareholder letter on February 28, he explicitly named Apple, American Express, Coca-Cola, and Moody’s as core holdings.
This statement is crucial because it not only reaffirms Berkshire’s concentrated investment strategy but also signals to the market: under Abel’s era, Berkshire’s stock investments will still be concentrated, but not all large holdings will be regarded equally. The report even points out that Bank of America and Chevron are not considered to be at the same level as the aforementioned four core positions.
In Abel’s era, Berkshire’s investment decisions may become more “focused”
At the same time, Abel has begun reorganizing the investment structure left over from the transition period. The report states that the stock holdings managed by Todd Combs have been liquidated. Combs, one of Buffett’s two investment managers, recently moved to JPMorgan Chase. More intriguingly, the report suggests Abel is unlikely to hire new investment managers to assist in managing the entire portfolio.
What does this imply? It suggests that future stock investment authority at Berkshire may be even more centralized in the CEO’s hands than during Buffett’s later years. For the market, this means decision-making efficiency will improve, and Abel’s personal judgment will more directly influence Berkshire’s holdings.
But what will truly define Abel’s historical position is probably not whether he adjusts holdings but how he uses Berkshire’s record-breaking cash reserves. The report states Berkshire currently holds $373.1 billion in cash. For any successor, this is both an opportunity and a pressure.
Long-term shareholders may not care whether Abel continues Buffett’s style; they are more concerned about whether, during the next deep recession, he will be willing to act more aggressively than Buffett in deploying capital. Long-term Berkshire investors like Chris Bloomstran have openly said that their real expectation for Greg Abel is that he will have the courage to invest $300 billion and be more active than Buffett in the later years.
This is also the key point for Abel. Because Berkshire is not an ordinary company; it is one of the few global capital allocation machines that simultaneously holds insurance float, massive cash, complete industrial assets, and high market trust. Buffett’s core ability was not just stock picking but making large decisions to generate high returns at low cost during market panics. Whether Abel can inherit this ability will determine if he is merely “a manager after Buffett” or “a capital allocator after Buffett.”
Additionally, Abel has spent a lot of time over the past year focusing on one of Berkshire’s most important foundations: the insurance business. The report notes he is prioritizing learning about Berkshire’s extensive insurance system and has been closely interacting with Ajit Jain, who has long led the insurance operations. Jain is expected to continue leading the insurance division, but Berkshire has also planned a succession for him. This indicates Abel is not only focused on his familiar energy and industrial sectors but is consciously filling gaps in his understanding of Berkshire’s core engine—the insurance business.
Abel’s test: the next recession is just the beginning
From a personal image perspective, Abel somewhat continues Buffett’s Midwestern approachability. The report mentions he loves ice hockey, still coaches his son’s team, and during the Olympics, he supported both the Canadian men’s team and the U.S. women’s team to avoid taking sides. These details make him seem pragmatic, approachable, and life-oriented, aligning well with Berkshire’s long-standing humble culture.
But don’t be fooled by this gentle surface. The real focus of The Wall Street Journal is on a successor who does not shy away from conflict. The report quotes several insiders who say Abel believes in autonomy and decentralization but also respects Berkshire’s traditional de-centralized model. However, this does not mean he will tolerate underperformers dragging down the organization.
Simply put, Abel does not intend to replicate Buffett and Munger’s past tolerance for underperforming subsidiaries. If some businesses underperform long-term, are singled out, restructured, or even sold, it will no longer be impossible.
This is especially noteworthy because Berkshire has rarely sold entire subsidiaries in its history. The most notable cases were the 2020 sale of its newspaper business and the earlier closure of its textile operations in 1985. In Buffett’s era, most acquired companies were held permanently. But in Abel’s era, this unwritten rule may no longer fully apply.
If performance fails to meet the new leader’s standards, Berkshire’s future disposition of subsidiaries may be more flexible and disciplined than the market is used to. Abel is not aiming to overthrow Buffett but to transform Berkshire from an “exceptional company led by a genius founder” into a modern holding company that maintains its cultural heritage while strengthening execution and accountability.
He retains Berkshire’s most important genes: culture, insurance, concentrated investing, long-term holding, and capital discipline; but he is also adding his own mark: deeper operations, greater emphasis on performance, willingness to address underperformers, and a higher likelihood of bold capital deployment at critical moments.
For investors, Abel’s true test has yet to come. It may only arrive during the next recession, liquidity crisis, or major acquisition opportunity, when the market will see whether this new leader can make the kind of transformative decisions Buffett is known for. But at least in these first 100 days, Berkshire’s new era has begun, and this successor does not seem content with merely maintaining the status quo.