From Dairy Queen to Brooks Running, Berkshire Hathaway’s businesses seeing an impact from inflation

From Dairy Queen to Brooks Running, Berkshire Hathaway’s businesses seeing an impact from inflation


Inflation has been one of the hot topics for markets this year, and rising prices are impacting portfolio companies for Berkshire Hathaway in different ways.

In March, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge rose 5.2%, and the central bank is starting to raise interest rates, trying to thread the needle between slowing the rise in prices and avoiding a recession.

Ahead of the Berkshire annual shareholders meeting, executives from several of the conglomerate’s companies told CNBC how inflation is hitting their businesses.

Irv Blumkin, the CEO and chairman of Nebraska Furniture Mart, said that the higher prices were starting to chip away at the fundamentals of his business but things are in good shape overall. Home furnishings was a boom industry during the pandemic, as Americans stuck at home redesigned their living spaces and adjusted to remote work.

“Inflation impacting our business a little bit, and we can see a little slowdown in written business, but it’s coming off such huge numbers from the pandemic. … It’s still at a high level, but you can definitely see a slowdown,” Blumkin said.

Jim Weber, CEO of Brooks Running, said it was tough to raise prices but that he thinks some of the cost pressures would cool soon.

“We don’t have unlimited pricing power, but have taken selective price increases where we think we can. But our whole industry is so competitive. It’s a big market place. … I do believe in the supply chain that costs are going to mediate a bit,” Weber said.

Related to inflation, Dairy Queen CEO Troy Bader highlighted the tight labor market in particular as a challenge for the restaurant industry.

“It’s the biggest challenge that our franchisees face, and I would say it impacts us in three different fronts: one is our franchisees,” he said. “The other really are our vendors and our distributors.”

Roughly 20% of Dairy Queen’s franchise locations still have closed dining rooms because of staffing issues, Bader said.

“It’s not about wages today. People are paying whatever they need to pay. There just aren’t enough people to really come and work in the industry,” Bader said.

Check out all of the CNBC Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting coverage here.



Source

Bitcoin bleeds for second straight day, nearly grazes ,000
Finance

Bitcoin bleeds for second straight day, nearly grazes $72,000

Bitcoin signage in Times Square in New York, US, on Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images Bitcoin nearly touched the $72,000 mark on Wednesday, marking the second straight day of its massive retreat this week. The world’s oldest cryptocurrency sank as low as $72,096.20, plunging more than 5% on the day. […]

Read More
Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: AMD, Uber, Eli Lilly, Super Micro, Chipotle, Enphase and more
Finance

Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: AMD, Uber, Eli Lilly, Super Micro, Chipotle, Enphase and more

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell. Super Micro Computer — Shares jumped 10% as strong demand for Super Micro’s AI-optimized servers helped fiscal second-quarter results top expectations and prompted the company to raise its annual revenue forecast. Super Micro earned 69 cents per share on an adjusted basis, soundly outpacing the second-quarter […]

Read More
Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Chipotle, Advanced Micro Devices, Amgen and more
Finance

Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Chipotle, Advanced Micro Devices, Amgen and more

Check out the companies making headlines in after-hours trading. Chipotle — Shares of Chipotle tumbled 6% after the fast-casual burrito chain reported that traffic to its restaurants declined for the fourth straight quarter . The company also projected flat same-store sales growth for 2026. To be sure, adjusted earnings and revenue for Chipotle’s fourth quarter […]

Read More