Buffett says Berkshire will continue to increase investment in Japan trading houses

Buffett says Berkshire will continue to increase investment in Japan trading houses


Warren Buffett, chairman and chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway, photographed during a 2011 trip to Japan.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Berkshire Hathaway is committed to its Japanese investments for the long term and has reached an agreement with the companies to own beyond the initial 10% ceiling, Warren Buffett said in his annual letter to shareholders released Saturday.

“From the start, we also agreed to keep Berkshire’s holdings below 10% of each company’s shares. But, as we approached this limit, the five companies agreed to moderately relax the ceiling,” Buffett said. “Over time, you will likely see Berkshire’s ownership of all five increase somewhat.”

The Japanese names in Berkshire’s portfolio are Itochu, Marubeni, Mitsubishi, Mitsui and Sumitomo. All five are the biggest “sogo shosha,” or trading houses in Japan that invest across diverse sectors domestically and abroad — “in a manner somewhat similar to Berkshire itself,” Buffet said. Berkshire first bought into the companies in July 2019. 

At the end of 2024, the market value of Berkshire’s Japanese holdings came in at $23.5 billion, with the aggregate cost at $13.8 billion. The investor highlighted the companies’ managements, relationships with their investors, as well as their capital deployment strategies. 

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

Japanese trading houses over the past year

Buffett has sold Japanese debt to fund Berkshire’s shares in the Japanese companies. Issuing yen-denominated bonds also allows Buffett to reduce foreign exchange-related risks. Berkshire reported $2.3 billion in after-tax gains in its Japanese bonds, of which $850 million were from 2024 alone owing to the strength of the dollar, which appreciated around 11% against the yen in 2024.

“We like the current math of our yen-balanced strategy,” Buffett stated. He added that designated successor “Greg [Abel] and I have no view on future foreign exchange rates and therefore seek a position approximating currency-neutrality.”

The Oracle of Omaha forecasts the annual dividend income from its stake in the five Japanese trading houses will come in at around $812 million. 

“I expect that Greg and his eventual successors will be holding this Japanese position for many decades and that Berkshire will find other ways to work productively with the five companies in the future,” said Buffett. 

To be sure, the five Japanese trading houses have struggled in the past year. Itochu and Marubeni are down more than 8% each in that time, while Mitsubishi has dropped 26%. Mitsui and Sumitomo have lost 16% and 10%, respectively, over that period. 



Source

Bank of Korea expectedly keeps rates steady at an almost three-year low
World

Bank of Korea expectedly keeps rates steady at an almost three-year low

This photo taken on Nov. 24, 2022 shows the building of Bank of Korea BOK in Seoul, South Korea. South Korea’s central bank on Thursday raised its policy rate to curb inflation, delivering six back-to-back rate hikes for the first time. (Photo by Wang Yiliang/Xinhua via Getty Images) Wang Yiliang | Xinhua News Agency | […]

Read More
Asia-Pacific markets mixed after Trump slaps 50% tariff on Brazilian imports
World

Asia-Pacific markets mixed after Trump slaps 50% tariff on Brazilian imports

Opening calls from sunny Singapore Good morning from Singapore! Asia-Pacific markets are set to open mixed. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 was set to open higher, with the futures contract in Chicago at 39,925 while its counterpart in Osaka last traded at 39,910 against the index’s Tuesday close of 39,821.28. Futures for Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index stood at 23,863 […]

Read More
‘Hard to ignore’: 3 stocks to play the undervalued UK market, according to an asset manager
World

‘Hard to ignore’: 3 stocks to play the undervalued UK market, according to an asset manager

The opportunities on offer in the U.K. stock market — long stereotyped as unloved, unexciting and full of “old economy” firms like mining and oil majors — are “becoming hard to ignore,” portfolio managers at Ninety One say. London firms have broadly been undervalued for more than a decade, worsened by the vote to leave […]

Read More