Every new CEO wants a signature first move. Greg Abel’s just happens to involve clearing out a Buffett-era pantry staple. Berkshire Hathaway is preparing to exit its 28% stake in Kraft Heinz, following a $3.8 billion writedown last year on the value of the position. Kraft Heinz shares fell 5.72% on the news. The original bet dates back to 2015, when Berkshire joined forces with Brazilian private equity firm 3G Capital to combine Kraft Foods and H.J. Heinz. The company continued to struggle, however, falling about 70% since the merger as higher costs, evolving consumer preferences, and weak brand momentum took a toll. Management is responding by splitting the company, separating sauces and shelf-stable brands from North American staples like Oscar Mayer and Lunchables, a move Warren Buffett has previously criticized. Abel takes the wheel Berkshire Hathaway’s decision is on trend: The company has been a net seller of stocks for 12 straight quarters and has paused share buybacks for the past five, two signals that valuations look too rich for attractive long-term returns. Since Buffett stepped down, Berkshire’s Class B shares have fallen about 7%, as some investors price out the “Buffett premium.” Abel can change both the stock’s trajectory and the company’s history of selling instead of buying by deploying the company’s $358 billion in cash. The only question is, when and where he’ll use that massive hoard. Given Buffett’s (and Abel’s) preference for investing in value, many investors don’t expect big moves until markets cool from red-hot levels. The S&P 500 rose about 16% in 2025, and the index trades at a price-to-book ratio of 5.5, well above its average of 3.16. Until Abel spots a deal worth making, don’t expect him to rush into an acquisition ASAP. What does Buffett think comes next? While investors are left wondering what Abel will do next, one has full confidence in the new Berkshire Hathaway CEO: the guy who just quit the job. “Greg can do anything I can do, and he can do it way, way better,” Buffett told CNBC. Buffett has made it clear that Abel not only has the investing chops to succeed, he also has the business acumen to find the sort of undervalued companies that built Berkshire into the empire it has become. “It doesn’t take a genius—and it sure doesn’t take any Greek symbols or anything like that—to figure out what a business is worth. I happen to have a guy who can run businesses—and if you can run businesses, you can value businesses,” Buffett said. “Unless you’re nuts and listen to the wrong people.”—SY |