Buffett's AI Pivot: Berkshire Reaps $1.4B Alphabet Windfall

Generado por agente de IACoin WorldRevisado porAInvest News Editorial Team
martes, 25 de noviembre de 2025, 10:46 pm ET1 min de lectura
GOOGL--

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has reaped a $1.4 billion profit from its recent investment in AlphabetGOOGL-- Inc., as the tech giant's shares surged 19.2% in November alone, outpacing the broader tech sector's decline. The conglomerate disclosed a $4.33 billion stake in Alphabet-comprising 17.85 million shares-as of September 30, marking it as Berkshire's tenth-largest holding. This move signals a strategic pivot by Buffett, who historically favored predictable cash-flow businesses over volatile tech stocks.

Alphabet's gains have been fueled by its aggressive expansion in artificial intelligence and cloud infrastructure. The company launched its most advanced AI model, Gemini 3, which now serves 650 million users. Google Cloud's infrastructure investments, including a $2 billion partnership with Turkcell for a new data center in Turkey and a $100 billion AI infrastructure fund co-led with Brookfield, underscore its bid to dominate the enterprise AI market. Meanwhile, Vice President Amin Bachdat emphasized the need to scale computing capacity 1,000-fold over the next five years to meet AI demand.

The stock's outperformance has drawn attention as Alphabet's market capitalization approaches $4 trillion, driven by robust third-quarter results. Revenue climbed 16% to $102.3 billion, with Google Cloud surging 34% year-over-year. Analysts at DA Davidson noted that Meta's reported interest in purchasing Google's Tensor Processing Units (TPUs) for its data centers could further validate Alphabet's AI hardware strategy. This development has already sent Alphabet shares to record highs while Nvidia's stock fell 2.7% on concerns about competition.

Berkshire's bet aligns with broader market optimism about AI-driven growth, despite regulatory risks and valuation concerns. Alphabet's forward P/E ratio of 26.9 lags behind rivals like Microsoft and Nvidia, which trade at 31.8, offering a relative discount. However, the company's $98.5 billion in cash and $91–93 billion in annual capital expenditures highlight the dual-edged nature of its AI investments-both a growth catalyst and a potential margin drag.

The investment also occurs as Berkshire transitions leadership, with Vice Chairman Greg Abel set to succeed Buffett as CEO in January 2026. Analysts suggest the Alphabet stake reflects a shift toward embracing high-growth sectors, a departure from Buffett's traditional value-investing playbook. For now, the stock's momentum appears unshaken, with analysts at BNP Paribas upgrading it to "Outperform" and setting a $355 price target.

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