NYSE · FINANCIAL SERVICESMKT CAP $1.06T52-WK $455.18 – $516.85AS OF JUNE 19, 2026
The fortress has never been richer. The market has never been more impatient.
Operating earnings grew 18% year-over-year to a record $11.35B in Q1, and the cash pile swelled to nearly $400B. Yet Berkshire Hathaway trades near a 1.45x book value ceiling because the market is pricing one question: how does Greg Abel deploy the largest capital hoard in corporate history? Four analyst lenses, three scenarios, four time horizons.
The verdict · TL;DR
With $397B in cash and Greg Abel at the helm, the debate is whether Berkshire's hoard represents unmatched optionality in an AI-heavy market (evidenced by the new $16B Alphabet stake), or an insurmountable drag on returns caused by the "law of large numbers." Buybacks have resumed, operating businesses are compounding, and the balance sheet is impenetrable. The downside floor is hard; the upside depends entirely on capital allocation.
5-yr · prob-weighted
$640
+31% vs $489.27
52-week playback · where the tape sits❚❚ Consolidating near the midline
$489.27 · June 19, 2026consensus $521.50 · +6.6%
$455.18 · 52-wk low$516.85 · 52-wk high · Nov ’25
Price history + cone of outcomes · 2024 → 2031
HISTORICALBULLBASEBEARPROB-WTD
Gray line = Berkshire's actual price into today; colored paths = synthesized scenario midpoints forward, probability-weighted (base 50% · bull 25% · bear 25%). Log-linear, mid-year marks. Wall Street 12-month consensus ≈ $521.50 (range $481–$570).
Re-weight the scenarios
Those probabilities are a judgment call — so make them yours. Drag to set how likely the bear and bull cases are (base takes the remainder); the blended target below, the dotted line on the chart, and the prob-weighted row of the scenario cards all update live.
25% bear50% base25% bull
Blended 5-yr expected$640+31% vs $489.27
+18%
Q1’26 Op. Earnings ($11.35B)
+24%
Cash & Equivalents ($397.4B)
1.45x
Price to Book Value
+4%
Insurance Underwriting ($4.4B)
+13%
BNSF Railroad Profit ($1.38B)
$234M
Q1 Share Repurchases
$16.6B
New Alphabet (GOOGL) Stake
$6.8B
Taylor Morrison Acquisition
02 · The panel — four ways to read the same ledger
Four analyst lenses, four answers
The exact same $1 Trillion balance sheet generates differing conclusions depending on which structural mechanism you value most. Each lens below is a synthesized expert perspective.
Value / Quality Analyst
The Cash Counter
A $397B cash hoard earning ~5% in T-bills is putting an unbreakable floor under earnings. With the resumption of the buyback program after a 21-month pause, the math is mechanically accretive: every share retired below intrinsic value concentrates the remaining ownership of compounding assets. The downside is structurally protected.
12-MO TARGET $520 · 1.45x Book Value + yield
Growth / Transition PM
The Transition Bull
Greg Abel is successfully modernizing the portfolio. Taking profits on a mature Apple to triple the stake in Alphabet ($16.6B) and acquire Taylor Morrison ($6.8B) proves Berkshire won't miss the AI infrastructure cycle while retaining its housing exposure. Operating earnings are compounding at 18%; they're acting like a tech-enabled industrial holding company.
12-MO TARGET $550 · 24x Fwd Op. EPS
Disruption Skeptic
The Elephant Problem
The law of large numbers is finally biting. A $1 Trillion market cap needs $50B+ acquisitions just to move the needle, which are impossible to clear past antitrust regulators today. If T-bill yields drop, that $397B cash pile transforms from a high-yield asset into an enormous drag on ROE. The stock will slowly de-rate back toward historical book-value multiples.
12-MO TARGET $460 · 1.2x mean-reverted BV
Moat / Strategy Analyst
The Float Compounder
The insurance float ($170B+) remains the greatest cost-free leverage engine in financial history. Even if the equity portfolio merely matches the S&P 500, the underlying compounding of Geico, BNSF, and BHE operating earnings, amplified by that float, guarantees structural outperformance over a five-year horizon. Focus on the moat, not the cash drag.
12-MO TARGET $510 · steady compounding
03 · Wall Street's read
Wall Street 12-month price targets
What the sell-side expects over the next year. Bars are sorted low to high; the dashed line is today's $489.27.
Consensus ≈ $521.50 (+6.6%) · selected names, range $481–$570
BUYHOLDSELL
A representative selection of sell-side desks covering Berkshire Class B. The consensus sits just north of $521, roughly a +6.6% climb. Because of Berkshire's immense scale and historically tight trading range around book value, sell-side targets rarely model explosive multi-bagger upside; instead, they measure steady compounding and cash yield. Firms, ratings, and targets illustrative.
04 · Price scenarios — 1 / 2 / 3 / 5 years
Where the ledger leads
Synthesized scenario midpoints (mid-year). Returns shown vs. today's $489.27. Outcomes hinge on Greg Abel's capacity to deploy capital effectively at a historically unprecedented scale.
1 Year
Mid-2027
Bull$550+12%
Base$520+6%
Bear$460−6%
Prob-wtd$512+5%
2 Years
Mid-2028
Bull$610+25%
Base$550+12%
Bear$440−10%
Prob-wtd$537+10%
3 Years
Mid-2029
Bull$690+41%
Base$585+20%
Bear$430−12%
Prob-wtd$572+17%
5 Years
Mid-2031
Bull$820+68%
Base$660+35%
Bear$420−14%
Prob-wtd$640+31%
▸ Bull case — show the assumptions & math
The post-Buffett pivot accelerates: Abel aggressively deploys the $397B cash hoard into tech infrastructure (Alphabet, data centers) and accretive bolt-on deals. Interest rates remain structurally higher, generating massive yield, and buybacks accelerate aggressively below 1.4x book value.
Book Value compounds at ~11-12%/yr + a multiple re-rating to 1.5x BV → ~$820 · 5-yr price CAGR ≈ +11%/yr
▸ Base case — show the assumptions & math
Operating businesses (BNSF, Energy, Insurance) compound steadily at 7-9%. Cash deployment is measured; mega-deals remain elusive due to antitrust, so capital return leans heavily on slow buybacks. The equity portfolio performs in-line with the S&P 500.
Book Value compounds at ~7-8%/yr, holding a steady ~1.4x exit multiple → ~$660 · 5-yr price CAGR ≈ +6.5%/yr
▸ Bear case — show the assumptions & math
The macroeconomic environment sours, hitting BNSF volumes and manufacturing units. T-bill yields compress heavily, turning the $397B cash pile into dead weight. The market concludes the "law of large numbers" has permanently capped growth, and the premium historically assigned to Buffett vanishes.
BV growth slows to low single digits; multiple de-rates to 1.2x → ~$420 · 5-yr price CAGR ≈ −3%/yr
05 · The Balance Sheet
Operating earnings, Float, Equities & Cash ($B)
Berkshire's fortress visualized. The record $397B cash pile now dwarfs the operating earnings that generated it, creating both unmatched defensive strength and a monumental allocation challenge.
Berkshire is an unparalleled compounder shifting its weight. Operating earnings (sky) are robust but small compared to the massive capital blocks. Look at the dramatic pivot in 2024-2025: as Apple and Bank of America holdings were aggressively sold down, the equity portfolio (olive) shrank, and the cash pile (slate) erupted to record highs. That cash—backed by steady cost-free float (clay)—is waiting for Greg Abel to fire the elephant gun. Figures illustrative; cash includes short-term Treasuries.
06 · Operating Earnings Power
Operating EPS path underpinning the targets ($)
Valuing Berkshire means stripping out the chaotic GAAP swings caused by the equity portfolio's paper marks and focusing solely on the operating businesses: Geico, BNSF, Energy, and manufacturing.
Operating EPS · reported vs. estimated, 2024 → 2031E
REPORTEDESTIMATE
Operating EPS represents the true earning power of the fully-owned businesses, independent of stock market swings. Gray = reported, olive = estimates assuming steady high-single-digit compounding of the core businesses. Base-case multiples run around 20-22x Operating EPS, generating the ~$660 5-year target.
07 · Growth scorecard
The machine continues to compound
Q1 2026, year-over-year — illustrating how the core businesses grow reliably while Abel begins executing high-impact, concentrated tech pivots.
Year-over-year growth by metric · Q1 2026
COREFRONTIER
The core engine is healthy: BNSF is rebounding, underwriting profit jumped almost 30%, and total operating earnings grew 18%. But the standout is the frontier (clay): new CEO Greg Abel nearly tripled the portfolio's position in Alphabet (GOOGL), confirming a structural shift toward AI-infrastructure to deploy the towering cash balance.
08 · The debate
Bull vs. Bear
The entire valuation argument compresses into one disagreement: is the record cash balance an unparalleled offensive weapon, or a structural barrier to generating high returns on equity?
▲ THE BULL CASE
The post-Buffett pivot is working. Greg Abel isn't sitting on his hands. Taking massive Apple profits to initiate a $16B stake in Alphabet shows Berkshire is adapting to the AI/tech infrastructure supercycle.
Earnings power is accelerating. Q1'26 operating earnings rose 18% to $11.35B. BNSF railroad volumes are recovering, and Geico's underwriting profit jumped 28%.
Buybacks mechanically drive value. After a 21-month pause, Berkshire resumed buybacks in Q1 ($234M). With the stock consolidating, aggressive repurchases will concentrate per-share ownership of the compounding machine.
The interest rate floor. Even if no mega-deal materializes, earning 4-5% on nearly $400B in cash generates $16B-$20B in absolutely risk-free annual pre-tax income.
The Taylor Morrison deal. Acquiring the homebuilder for $6.8B proves Berkshire still possesses the capacity and appetite for strategic bolt-ons, deepening its massive exposure to U.S. housing.
▼ THE BEAR CASE
The Law of Large Numbers. With a $1.06 Trillion market cap and $397B in cash, Berkshire must execute $50B+ mega-deals to materially change its growth trajectory — deals that are highly vulnerable to antitrust blocks.
Rate cuts will erode the cash yield. If the Fed cuts aggressively, that $397B cash hoard transforms overnight from a massive yield generator into a low-return drag on overall ROE.
Valuation at the ceiling. At ~1.45x book value, the stock is trading at the very top of its historical range. Any misstep risks a rapid multiple de-rating back to 1.2x.
No dividend release valve. Without a dividend to return the excess cash, investors rely entirely on Abel's ability to find massive, mispriced assets in an efficient, high-multiple market.
The Buffett premium fading. Though the transition has been smooth, markets may progressively remove the historical premium assigned to Warren Buffett's unique capital allocation genius.
09 · Risk map
Risk map — likelihood × impact
Where each risk sits, not just how big it is. The hot upper-right corner — likely and high-impact — is the one that matters.
Low impact
Medium impact
High impact
Likely
Insurance inflation
Macro / consumer slowdown
Rate cuts hit cash yield
Possible
Antitrust blocks
Mega-deal integration
Capital misallocation
Tail
Mega-catastrophe
Rate cuts hit cash yield
Likely × High
A falling interest rate environment drastically reduces the risk-free return on Berkshire's unprecedented $397B T-bill hoard.
Capital misallocation
Possible × High
Without Buffett, the risk of overpaying for a massive $50B+ acquisition (to clear out the cash drag) permanently destroys shareholder value.
Macro / consumer slowdown
Likely × Medium
An economic hard landing heavily pressures BNSF freight volumes and the manufacturing/housing (Taylor Morrison) segments.
Mega-catastrophe
Tail × High
A generational natural disaster (e.g., massive earthquake or multi-state hurricane) wipes out underwriting profit and drains float.
Mega-deal integration
Possible × Medium
Cultural clashes or integration failures when acquiring enormous new wholly-owned businesses under new management.
Antitrust blocks
Possible × Low
Regulators block Berkshire from executing the large-scale M&A necessary to deploy its cash, forcing cash drag.
Insurance inflation
Likely × Low
Persistent auto-parts and liability inflation keeps pressure on Geico's margins despite recent recoveries.
10 · Plain-language glossary
The jargon, decoded
Hover the dotted terms in the metrics, or scan the desk's working definitions here.
Operating Earnings
Profit generated purely by the businesses Berkshire owns outright (Geico, BNSF, Energy), ignoring the stock market swings of its equity portfolio.
Insurance Float
Money Berkshire holds from insurance premiums that hasn't been paid out in claims yet. Buffett effectively uses this as a multi-billion dollar interest-free loan to invest.
Price to Book (P/B)
The stock price divided by the company's net assets per share. Berkshire historically trades between 1.2x and 1.5x book value.
Law of Large Numbers
The principle that as a company gets massively large (like $1 Trillion), it becomes mathematically harder to maintain high percentage growth rates.
Cash Drag
When a company holds too much uninvested cash earning low yields, dragging down the overall Return on Equity (ROE) of the business.
Exit multiple
The assumed valuation ratio (like P/E or P/B) applied at the end of the forecast period to calculate a target price.
Prob-weighted
Each scenario's price × its probability, summed into a single expected value across bear, base and bull.