Berkshire More Than Tripled Its Alphabet Stake — Greg Abel's First Big AI Bet
While exiting 16 stocks and building a $397.6B cash pile, Greg Abel's Berkshire tripled its Alphabet (GOOGL) stake to ~$16.6B — the conglomerate's first major AI conviction call under new leadership.

- Berkshire's Q1 2026 13F shows Greg Abel exiting 16 positions including UNH, V, and MA while building a $397.6B cash pile — then tripling Alphabet (GOOGL) to ~$16.6B as the one growth exception, betting on its unique combination of defensive cash flow and AI cloud expansion
Berkshire Hathaway's Q1 2026 13F filing is out. Amid a sweeping portfolio purge of 16 stocks and billions in trims, the one name Greg Abel loaded up on was Alphabet (GOOGL).
Berkshire ended the first quarter with a record $397.6 billion cash pile. The portfolio moves look defensive — recession fears, elevated rates, consumer fatigue. But one position broke the pattern entirely: Alphabet got more than tripled.
Spring cleaning — 16 positions eliminated
According to the 13F filing, Berkshire exited 16 positions entirely in Q1: UnitedHealth (UNH), Visa (V), Mastercard (MA), Domino's (DPZ), Diageo (DEO), and the remainder of its Amazon (AMZN) stake, among others.
Partial cuts tell the same story. Constellation Brands (STZ) was slashed 95%. Bank of America (BAC), Chevron (CVX), and Nucor (NUE) were trimmed. Consumer, financial, and energy names — cyclicals — bore the brunt.
- Full exits: UNH, V, MA, DPZ, DEO, AMZN (remainder)
- STZ cut by 95%
- BAC, CVX, NUE reduced
- Cash pile: $397.6B — a Berkshire record
One exception: Alphabet
Berkshire boosted its Alphabet Class A (GOOGL) holdings to 54.2 million shares, worth approximately $15.6 billion. It also purchased 3.6 million Class C shares (GOOG) worth around $1 billion. Combined, the $16.6 billion position became one of Berkshire's five largest holdings in a single quarter.
Alphabet is both defensive and growth-oriented at the same time — a rare combination. Even if the economy slows, Google's core advertising machine continues producing enormous cash flow.
247 Wall St.
Three reasons Abel chose Alphabet
The logic behind loading up on Alphabet while trimming almost everything else isn't complicated.
- Cash generation: $64.4B in free cash flow over the last 12 months, $126.8B in cash and securities
- AI leadership: Gemini competes with Microsoft and OpenAI; Google Cloud revenue +63% YoY; cloud operating income tripled to $6.6B
- Shareholder returns: $7.7B in buybacks over the past year; dividend initiated at ~0.2% yield
The thesis: advertising holds even in downturns, while AI cloud becomes the next growth layer. Alphabet already funds the future with today's profits — the quality combination Berkshire values most.
Valuation: still the most reasonable AI name
Alphabet shares are up 25% year to date and 138% over the past year. Yet on a forward P/E basis, the stock remains arguably the cheapest among major AI plays.
- Alphabet (GOOGL): Forward P/E ~27x | 1-year return +138%
- Microsoft (MSFT): ~22x | -7%
- Nvidia (NVDA): ~20x | +67%
- Amazon (AMZN): ~26x | +29%
In an era when many companies are burning capital on AI with no profits to show, Alphabet is already generating returns while expanding. The buyback and dividend launch signal management's conviction in sustained cash generation.
Berkshire's message
This 13F tells a clear story. Abel is cautious on the economy — hence the record cash pile and the sweeping cuts to cyclical exposure. But if you're going to hold growth through uncertainty, own the companies already funding the future with today's profits. That's what Alphabet is. That's what Abel bought.
Regulatory risk, intensifying AI competition, and ad market sensitivity are all real. But Berkshire tripling its stake is a signal investors shouldn't ignore.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much did Berkshire increase its Alphabet stake?
In Q1 2026, Berkshire boosted its Alphabet Class A (GOOGL) holdings to 54.2 million shares (~$15.6B) and added 3.6 million Class C shares (GOOG) worth ~$1B. The combined ~$16.6B position makes Alphabet one of Berkshire's five largest holdings.
Which stocks did Berkshire completely exit in Q1 2026?
Berkshire eliminated 16 positions entirely, including UnitedHealth (UNH), Visa (V), Mastercard (MA), Domino's (DPZ), Diageo (DEO), and its remaining Amazon (AMZN) stake. Constellation Brands (STZ) was cut by 95%.
Why did Berkshire load up on Alphabet?
Alphabet generated $64.4B in free cash flow over the last 12 months and holds $126.8B in cash. Its Google Cloud unit grew revenue 63% YoY with operating income tripling to $6.6B. Greg Abel appears to view Alphabet as a rare combination of defensive cash generation and AI-driven growth.
Is Alphabet still reasonably valued after its run-up?
Despite a 138% gain over the past year, Alphabet trades at ~27x forward earnings — comparable to Amazon (~26x) and higher than Microsoft (~22x) or Nvidia (~20x), but arguably justified given its AI cloud growth rate and free cash flow profile.
Who is Greg Abel and how does his approach differ from Buffett's?
Greg Abel is Berkshire's CEO and the successor to Warren Buffett's investment decision-making role. This 13F represents one of the first major portfolio reshapes under Abel's leadership, maintaining Buffett's cash-discipline ethos while pivoting decisively toward AI-infrastructure winners.
Smart Money Briefing
Weekly summaries of Wall Street guru moves and crypto whale activity.







