Warren Buffett’s reign as Berkshire Hathaway CEO is over. New boss Greg Abel faces 3 big challenges in his wake.
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Warren Buffett has retired as Berkshire Hathaway’s CEO, making way for his top deputy, Greg Abel.
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Abel’s key challenges include deploying Berkshire’s huge cash pile and expanding his remit.
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He also has to navigate making changes without harming Berkshire’s culture, close watchers say.
Warren Buffett has officially retired as Berkshire Hathaway’s CEO after six decades in charge. Close watchers say Greg Abel, who took the reins on New Year’s Day, faces three key challenges.
Abel’s biggest hurdle will be “finding a way to intelligently allocate” Berkshire’s vast and growing cash pile, Alex Morris, the author of “Buffett and Munger Unscripted” and the founder of investment research service TSOH, told Business Insider.
Berkshire’s trove of cash, Treasury bills, and other liquid assets recently breached $350 billion — a figure that exceeds the market values of Home Depot, Procter & Gamble, and General Electric.
Read more about the leadership transition underway at Berkshire Hathaway:
Abel could use Berkshire’s war chest to fund stock buybacks, acquire other businesses, or pay dividends to shareholders, Morris said.
Yet Buffett hasn’t found any of those to be fruitful avenues in recent years. Berkshire hasn’t repurchased shares in its past five reported quarters, only paid a dividend on one occasion under Buffett, in 1967, and has made few material acquisitions in the past 15 years.
As a business icon and legendary investor, Buffett was given “more of a pass” by Wall Street and Berkshire shareholders for hoarding cash than Abel is likely to receive, Morris said.
“Finding a solution here is challenging,” he continued, before suggesting Abel might consider a one-off special dividend.
Prior to becoming CEO, Abel headed up Berkshire’s non-insurance businesses, including Berkshire Hathaway Energy and the BNSF Railway.
Abel is recognized as a world-class operator, but that’s “fundamentally different from identifying accretive acquisitions in the public and private markets,” Luke Rahbari, the CEO of Equity Armor Investments, told Business Insider.
Buffett and his late business partner, Charlie Munger, designed Berkshire as a web of decentralized, autonomous subsidiaries, freeing them to spend much of their days reading corporate filings and searching for compelling investments.

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