[Revealed] The $100 Starlink Pre-IPO Blueprint!

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For Your Education and Enjoyment

Buffett Trims Apple, Bets Big on Alphabet Ahead of Retirement

Written by Leo Miller. Published 11/17/2025.

Warren Buffett, in a dark suit and red tie, appears onstage at a finance event; Berkshire Hathaway, made major Q3 portfolio changes.

Key Points

  • Berkshire Hathaway cut its Apple holdings by 15% in Q3, marking its largest reduction in the stock recently, while still keeping it as its top holding.
  • The firm initiated a $4.3 billion position in Alphabet, making it Berkshire’s tenth largest holding and its third Magnificent Seven bet.
  • Berkshire’s Q3 portfolio value rose to $267.3 billion, indicating sustained investment activity despite Warren Buffett’s upcoming retirement.

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.B) just released its much-anticipated Q3 13F filing, revealing the portfolio moves the Oracle of Omaha's investment firm made during the quarter.

Notably, Buffett is set to retire at the end of 2025 and is leaving Berkshire with a record amount of cash. Despite that war chest, Berkshire hasn't been idle — it's actively reshaping its holdings.

Berkshire Dumps Shares of Apple and VeriSign

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Most notably, Berkshire substantially reduced its largest position: Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL).

Berkshire's Apple stake fell to roughly 238 million shares, a 15% decrease from 280 million in Q2. Berkshire has been trimming Apple for some time: from Q1 2024 to Q3 2024 it cut Apple holdings by 62% (to about 300 million shares), and it trimmed again by nearly 7% between Q1 and Q2 2025. Still, Q3 marks the largest single-quarter reduction in Apple shares in recent memory. With Apple rallying about 24% in Q3, it's not surprising Berkshire realized further gains — and despite the trims, Apple remains by far Berkshire's biggest holding.

VeriSign (NASDAQ: VRSN) was another notable sale: Berkshire sold 4.3 million shares, roughly a 32% cut. VeriSign is the monopoly operator for ".com" and ".net" domain registries — any time someone registers or renews a .com or .net domain, Verisign earns the fee.

That large sale was already public knowledge. VeriSign announced in July that Berkshire would sell 4.3 million shares to keep its ownership below 10% and avoid certain regulatory obligations. That the sales matched the July announcement is a modestly positive signal for VeriSign, though Berkshire's future actions on the position bear watching.

Buffett Makes Third Magnificent Seven Wager on Alphabet

Berkshire opened only one material new position during Q3 — and it was sizable.

The firm established a roughly $4.3 billion stake in Google parent Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL), making it Berkshire's tenth-largest holding and its third Magnificent Seven stock.

At the end of Q3, Berkshire's Alphabet stake was about twice the size of its position in Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN). The purchase was viewed positively by the market: Alphabet shares rose roughly 3% in after-hours trading on Nov. 14 after the filing became known.

The precise rationale for the buy isn't public, but several factors likely influenced the move. Alphabet's artificial intelligence strategy appears to be paying off, with accelerating growth across Search, YouTube ads, subscriptions and Google Cloud. In addition, the resolution of Alphabet's antitrust case — which spared the company from divesting Chrome or Android — removed a major overhang and helped push shares higher in early September. Berkshire may have viewed this combination of catalysts as a compelling entry point.

Smaller Moves Across Financials and Consumer Stocks

It was a relatively quiet quarter in terms of the number of changes: Berkshire made just 12 allocation moves in Q3, down from 18 in Q2 and 15 in Q1.

Notable adjustments included trimming its stake in Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) by about 6%, increasing its position in Domino's Pizza (NASDAQ: DPZ) by roughly 13%, and fully exiting D.R. Horton (NYSE: DHI) — a position Berkshire had only initiated in Q2.

D.R. Horton shares had risen as much as 43% during Q3, suggesting Berkshire likely "took the money and ran." Since that Q3 peak, the stock has fallen about 22%.

Berkshire's Stock Portfolio Moves up to $267 Billion

Overall, Berkshire's public equity portfolio closed Q3 with a value of $267.3 billion, up 3.8% from Q2. That figure doesn't reflect the firm's actual returns — 13F filings don't show the prices at which shares were bought or sold — but it does indicate Berkshire may have increased, or at least maintained, its allocation to stocks. That's a modestly bullish sign for the broader market, especially with Buffett's retirement on the horizon.

The latest 13F suggests Berkshire remains confident in select technology and consumer-facing names while trimming legacy positions in areas like banking and real estate. As Buffett's 2025 exit approaches, investors will be watching how the conglomerate repositions itself for a post-Buffett era.


 
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