Data comes directly from Berkshire’s filings – (here’s one link to the raw data, but it can be accessed quite a few ways [https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/stocks/brk-b/sec-filings](https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/stocks/brk-b/sec-filings)). Visualization was made in VaultUno and I added final touches/headshot in figma
That’s a lot of cash! How do they make money off that cash? Is it interest, insurance underwriting, bonds or something else?
Raise corporate taxes and institute a wealth tax on individuals.
Interesting how he hold BYD and no Tesla. Am I missing something?
bold to invest half their portfolio in BRAT but appears to be paying off
Nice visualization, but it is somewhat misleading because Berkshire also owns hundreds of billions worth of private companies.
So cash is a smaller chunk of Berkshire than people think.
The problem is that these companies don’t have market caps the way public companies do so any attempt to include them would be subjective.
6 comments
Data comes directly from Berkshire’s filings – (here’s one link to the raw data, but it can be accessed quite a few ways [https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/stocks/brk-b/sec-filings](https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/stocks/brk-b/sec-filings)). Visualization was made in VaultUno and I added final touches/headshot in figma
That’s a lot of cash! How do they make money off that cash? Is it interest, insurance underwriting, bonds or something else?
Raise corporate taxes and institute a wealth tax on individuals.
Interesting how he hold BYD and no Tesla. Am I missing something?
bold to invest half their portfolio in BRAT but appears to be paying off
Nice visualization, but it is somewhat misleading because Berkshire also owns hundreds of billions worth of private companies.
So cash is a smaller chunk of Berkshire than people think.
The problem is that these companies don’t have market caps the way public companies do so any attempt to include them would be subjective.