Berkshire awards CEO Abel $22 million for 2025, confirms it resumed stock buybacks

Berkshire Hathaway logo is displayed on a screen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., May 10, 2023. REUTERS
(Reuters) – Berkshire Hathaway said on Friday it awarded ​Chief Executive Greg Abel $22 million in compensation last year as he prepared to take over ‌from Warren Buffett, and recently spent more than $200 million repurchasing its own stock after going nearly two years without buybacks.
Abel’s pay and the buybacks were disclosed in a proxy statement for Berkshire’s May 2 annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska.
The 63-year-old Abel ​succeeded Buffett as chief executive on January 1 following eight years as a vice chairman. Berkshire’s ​other vice chairman, Ajit Jain, 74, was also awarded $22 million. Abel’s salary is $25 million ⁠in 2026.
Buffett, 95, led Berkshire for six decades and remains chairman.
He received compensation of $389,488 in 2025, comprising ​his usual $100,000 salary plus personal and home security. Buffett spends significant time working at home but still goes ​daily to the office about two miles away, Berkshire has said.

INTRINSIC VALUE IS A FACTOR IN BUYBACKS

Berkshire said the number of shares outstanding fell by the equivalent of 309 Class A shares in the quarter ending March 4.
Abel told CNBC last ​week that buybacks resumed that day, and had been Berkshire’s first since May 2024.
Some analysts and investors believe Berkshire ​has been too cautious investing capital. Its more than $373 billion year-end stake in cash and equivalents comprises more than one-third ‌of ⁠Berkshire’s approximately $1.06 trillion market value.
Berkshire’s portfolio includes dozens of businesses including Geico car insurance, the BNSF railroad, and many industrial, manufacturing and retail operations, as well as nearly $300 billion of stocks at year end.
Abel said Berkshire conducts buybacks when the intrinsic value of its shares exceeds the market price, and that “with the transition of ​leadership” it was important to ​announce that buybacks had ⁠resumed.
Berkshire will likely disclose on May 2 if it repurchased more stock in the first quarter.

BERKSHIRE BACKS SAY-ON-PAY, OPPOSES PROPOSAL ON WORKFORCE OVERSIGHT

In its proxy statement, Berkshire’s ​board of directors also recommended that shareholders approve proposals giving them an advisory “say-on-pay” ​for how ⁠Berkshire compensates top executives, and similar votes every three years.
The board also unanimously urged the rejection of a shareholder proposal that it produce a report on its oversight of workforce and human-capital management across its operating businesses.
Citing Berkshire’s ⁠culture and ​decentralized structure, the board said Berkshire operating units should manage ​their own affairs, making the report unnecessary.
Buffett owns 13.7% of Berkshire’s stock but controls 30.2% of its voting power. Shareholders face an uphill ​fight winning majority support for proposals he opposes.

Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Alistair Bell

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