Buffett Hands Successor a Giant Cash Pile and Many Questions

Warren Buffett picked the final minute of his 60th shareholder meeting to drop a long-awaited announcement that was still completely surprising for his fans, most of his board and even his successor.

Buffett, the 94-year-old architect and face of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., announced that the gathering would be his last as head of the company he built from humble beginnings into one of the world’s most valuable enterprises. A few feet away, Greg Abel, the energy executive long seen as Omaha’s crown prince, wasn’t even aware his time had come.

Buffett will hand Abel the keys to a $1.2 trillion behemoth, commanding a portfolio of stocks such as Apple Inc. and American Express Co. on top of a collection of insurance, energy, railroad and consumer businesses that regularly churn out $10 billion a quarter in operating profit. The 62-year-old will also inherit a plethora of questions, starting with what he’ll do with Berkshire’s almost $350 billion cash pile after Buffett largely sat out a volatile last few years in the markets.

Shareholders will want to know how Abel will change the company’s idiosyncratic and lean C-suite, whether he’ll bring a different risk tolerance or industry preferences, and if the firm will remain the first call for companies in need of a big check and a vote of confidence. They’ll even wonder about the future of the annual meeting itself, the so-called Woodstock for Capitalists that drew acolytes from across the globe based on the wisdom and wit of Buffett and his late business partner, Charlie Munger.

“People love Warren because he has a certain magic,” said Alice Schroeder, who wrote The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life, the billionaire’s biography that’s considered a must-read for his admirers and helped propel his fame. “Recreating it is almost impossible.”

While few expect Abel to match Buffett’s Main Street celebrity and love of the limelight, the departure of the longest-serving CEO in the S&P 500 also opens deeper questions about what kind of pressures might someday come to bear in his absence.

Berkshire doesn’t pay a dividend and only recently started buying back stock, with Buffett relying on his track record to show that he could compound shareholders’ money at a better rate than broader markets would offer.