Berkshire Hathaway trims Apple and HP, loads up on Sirius XM and Chevron

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Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway trimmed its holdings of Apple in the fourth quarter, while also selling out of a previous stake in home builder D.R. Horton, according to regulatory filings.

There’s also at least one mystery investment that the company received Securities and Exchange Commission not to disclose, for a second straight quarter.

Berkshire loaded up on shares of Sirius XM Holding and Chevron in the fourth quarter, while selling out of a previous stake in home builder D.R. Horton, according to regulatory filings.

Omaha-based Berkshire
BRK.A,
+1.20%

BRK.B,
+0.98%

cut its stake in the iPhone maker
AAPL,
-0.48%

by around 10 million shares, or 1%, but still holds around 905 million, according to Whale Wisdom. The company also slashed its HP
HPQ,
+1.56%

exposure by 79 million shares, leaving it with roughly 22.8 million shares.

Apple, which has been a Berkshire investment since 2016, has had a rough start to 2024, with the stock down 4% as the company missed expectations for China revenue in its latest quarter.

Berkshire increased its stake in satellite-radio company Sirius XM
SIRI,
+0.84%

to about $220 million in the fourth quarter, from roughly $43.8 in the third quarter, according to a 13-F quarterly filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Berkshire also increased its multibillion-dollar stake in oil giant Chevron
CVX,
+0.28%

to more than $18 billion, while selling off its roughly $640 million equity holdings in U.S. home builder D.R. Horton
DHI,
+2.20%
,
among other moves detailed in the filing.

Despite crude-oil prices that have been in a slump for months, Chevron said it returned a record $36.3 billion in cash to its shareholders in 2023, split between dividends and share buybacks. U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude
CL00,
-0.27%

settled Wednesday at $76.64 a barrel, down from roughly $95 a barrel in September, according to FactSet data.

See: Chevron’s stock rises as it returns record sum to shareholders, offsetting a big revenue miss

Home builders have been a bright spot in U.S. home-sales market that has been largely frozen since the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates in 2022, resulting in many homeowners being locked in place after having bought or refinanced at low 30-year mortgage rates during the pandemic.

Shares of the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF
ITB
 are up 1.9% in the year so far, according to FactSet. Home builders often have financing arms that offer buyers lower introductory mortgage rates, which later reset higher, in a bid to sell more newly constructed homes.

For more 13-F reports:

George Soros’ fund bets on U.S. leisure travel, with fresh stakes in JetBlue, Spirit, Sun Country

David Einhorn’s Greenlight Capital adds Kenvue, ETFs and exits Southwestern Energy

Druckenmiller dumps Alphabet, Amazon and Broadcom but Nvidia remains largest holding

Appaloosa takes new stakes in Oracle and GM, raises stakes in Alibaba and Microsoft

Nvidia discloses positions in SoundHound AI, Arm — and these other stocks

— Barbara Kollmeyer contributed to this story.

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