Bulls & Bears Weigh in On Berkshire Hathaway

With market uncertainty abound in today's macroeconomic and geopolitical climate, Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway haven't been immune to the volatility. Still, Berkshire is up over 10% for the year with Morningstar bulls and bears weighing in on what's ahead.

One of the hallmarks of Buffett's investment style is filtering for companies with strong fundamentals indicated in their intrinsic value or book value per share. Using the same metric on his own company, Berkshire's intrinsic value has been increasing since 1965.

"Book value per share, which is a good proxy for measuring changes in Berkshire’s intrinsic value, increased at an estimated 18.3% CAGR during 1965-2023, compared with a 10.2% annualized return for the S&P 500 TR Index," Morningstar noted, adding that the company's stock performance has been steady, " increasing at a 12.1% (11.8%) CAGR during 2019-23 (2014-23), compared with a 15.7% (12.0%) average annual return for the S&P 500 TR Index."

The Bearish Side

As mentioned, Berkshire isn't immune to the potential market fluctuations that could be ahead, affecting the broader market. The holdings company is still beating out the S&P 500 this year, but the long-term viability of its performance could come into question. In the short-term, tariffs and interest rates could also provide some market jolts.

Looking at Berkshire from a micro level, it has its own challenges as well. Can it find home run deals in the current challenging macroeconomic times?

"Given its size, Berkshire’s biggest hurdle continues to be its ability to consistently find deals that not only add value but are large enough to be meaningful," Morningstar added.