Berkshire Hathaway continued reducing exposure to the tech and banking sectors in Buffett's final quarter as CEO.
The company made another big investment in a leading energy company in Q4.
Warren Buffett stepped down as Berkshire Hathaway's (NYSE: BRKB)(NYSE: BRKB) CEO at the end of 2025, passing the reins to Greg Abel. While Buffett remains at Berkshire as the chairman of the company's board of directors, his departure from the CEO position marks the end of a legendary and highly lauded era. Read on for a look at three stocks Berkshire heavily sold out of in the fourth quarter -- and one high-yield dividend stock it continued to pile into.
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Berkshire Hathaway was once again a net seller of stocks in the fourth quarter, and its divestitures were heavily concentrated across three companies:
Berkshire's stock moves in Q4 continued the trend of reducing exposure to the tech and banking industries, with another round of big sales of Apple stock and Bank of America stock playing big roles in reducing the holding company's exposure to equities and boosting its cash pile.
In addition to initiating a stake in The New York Times and increasing its position in Chubb, Berkshire notably increased its holdings in one high-yield dividend stock in Buffett's last quarter as CEO. The investment conglomerate purchased more than 8 million additional shares of energy giant Chevron's (NYSE: CVX) stock last quarter, increasing its total holdings by 6.6%.
Chevron currently ranks as Berkshire's fifth-largest holding by weight and accounts for roughly 7.6% of its total public stock holdings.As of this writing, the stock carries a forward yield of 3.9%.
While concerns about an artificial intelligence (AI) valuation bubble and the possibility that AI technologies will drive disruption in the software-as-a-service (SaaS) space have spurred volatility for tech stocks, the energy sector has emerged as a hot defensive play. In addition to its defensive characteristics, the energy sector offers exposure to the AI trend, because data centers have massive power requirements.
Chevron stock has risen 18% over the last year and delivered a dividend-adjusted total return of roughly 22% across the stretch. With Berkshire moving out of Bank of America shares and adding to its holdings of the energy giant, it wouldn't be surprising to see Chevron become the investment conglomerate's fourth-largest holding sometime this year.
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Bank of America is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Keith Noonan has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon, Apple, Berkshire Hathaway, Chevron, and The New York Times Co. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.