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François Rochon·BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY INC DEL
BRK/B

Berkshire Hathaway — Financial Results

AI Overview

Operating Earnings Were Solid, But Headline Net Income Fell Sharply Due to Investment Swings

Metric202520242023
Net earnings attributable to Berkshire shareholders$67.0B$89.0B$96.2B
Investment gains (after tax)$30.7B$41.6B$58.9B
Impairment losses on Kraft Heinz & Occidental($8.3B)$0$0

Berkshire's reported net income dropped from $89B to $67B, but most of that swing comes from investment gains — unrealized changes in the stock portfolio — which Berkshire's own management says are "meaningless" for judging the business. Strip those out, and the underlying operating businesses actually performed well. The $8.3B write-down on Kraft Heinz and Occidental (meaning Berkshire formally acknowledged these equity-method investments are worth less than previously carried) is a notable one-time hit.

GEICO's Underwriting Profit Remains Strong but Expenses Are Rising Fast

Metric20252024
Premiums earned$44.5B$42.3B
Loss ratio72.3%71.8%
Expense ratio12.4%9.7%
Pre-tax underwriting profit$6.8B$7.8B

GEICO grew premiums 5.3% by adding more policyholders, and its loss ratio (claims as a share of premiums) stayed low. However, advertising and sales costs jumped sharply — the expense ratio rose 2.7 percentage points — dragging total profit down $1B versus 2024. Bodily injury claim costs were particularly troublesome, rising 12–14% per claim on average.

BNSF Railroad Cut Costs and Boosted Profits Without Growing Revenue

Metric20252024
Operating revenues$23.35B$23.36B
Operating expenses$15.30B$15.89B
Operating ratio (expenses ÷ revenue)65.5%68.0%
Net earnings$5.48B$5.03B

Revenue was essentially flat, but BNSF improved its operating ratio (lower is better — it shows what fraction of revenue goes to costs) by 2.5 percentage points, largely by running the railroad more efficiently and avoiding a repeat of a $290M one-time labor payment made in 2024. Net earnings rose 8.8%.

Berkshire Is Sitting on an Enormous Cash Pile — and Not Buying Back Stock

Berkshire held $369B in cash, equivalents, and U.S. Treasury Bills at year-end, a fortress-level liquidity position. Despite this, the company made zero share repurchases in 2025. The cash mountain grew partly because Berkshire sold more equity securities ($30.7B) than it bought ($16.9B) during the year. Management reaffirmed that financial strength and liquidity come first, always.

BHE's Wildfire Liability Is Shrinking but Energy Tax Credit Future Is Uncertain

Berkshire Hathaway Energy (BHE) earned $3.98B for Berkshire in 2025, up from $3.73B. The improvement was driven mainly by PacifiCorp's wildfire loss accruals dropping from $346M in 2024 to $100M in 2025. However, a new U.S. law (the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act") accelerates the phase-out of clean energy tax credits. BHE currently does not expect a near-term impact, but future renewable energy investments could become less economically attractive.

Pilot Travel Centers Had a Rough Year — and Its Goodwill Is Under Pressure

Pilot's pre-tax earnings collapsed 69% from $614M to $190M, hurt by lower wholesale fuel margins, higher costs, and accounting adjustments on fuel-related accounts. Revenues fell $4.7B (10%). Berkshire's annual goodwill review flagged Pilot as a business where estimated fair value ($20.2B) only modestly exceeds carrying value ($18.7B) — meaning further earnings deterioration could eventually force a write-down of the $6.5B of goodwill (the premium Berkshire paid above book value when it acquired Pilot) recorded on the balance sheet.