Conglomerate · CIK 0001067983

Warren Buffett

Berkshire Hathaway
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Warren Buffett runs Berkshire Hathaway, a conglomerate overseeing $274.16B in disclosed equity holdings (SEC CIK 0001067983). The latest portfolio (2025Q4) discloses 42 positions across 10 sectors, with the largest positions in AAPL, AXP and BAC. On a mark-to-market basis the tracked portfolio has returned 13.6% over the past year. OpenStocks tracks 40 consecutive quarterly snapshots for this manager — every position change, new entry, and exit is logged below.

Portfolio
$274.16B
Positions
42
Quarter
2025Q4
Filings tracked
40
1Y+13.6%3Y+80.9%5Y+79.0%Full performance →
dividend stocks

Warren Buffett (Berkshire Hathaway)'s Dividend Stocks in April 2026

Published 2026-04-19·By Openstocks AI

Warren Buffett (Berkshire Hathaway)'s Dividend Stocks in April 2026

Concentrated Dividend Income from Legacy Holdings

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway maintained a selective approach to dividend-paying stocks in April 2026, with just 6 dividend payers among its 42 total equity positions based on the 2025 Q4 13F filing. Despite representing only 14% of holdings by count, these dividend stocks commanded approximately 47% of the portfolio's weight, reflecting Buffett's preference for concentrating capital in his highest-conviction positions.

Dividend Holdings Breakdown

  • AAPL (Apple Inc.) - 22.60% portfolio weight, 0.38% yield
  • BAC (Bank of America Corp.) - 10.38% portfolio weight, 2.04% yield
  • KO (Coca-Cola Co.) - 10.20% portfolio weight, 2.72% yield
  • GOOGL (Alphabet Inc.) - 2.04% portfolio weight, 0.25% yield
  • V (Visa Inc.) - 1.06% portfolio weight, 0.79% yield
  • UNH (UnitedHealth Group Inc.) - 0.61% portfolio weight, 2.72% yield

Growth Over Yield Philosophy

The dividend characteristics of Berkshire's portfolio reveal Buffett's enduring emphasis on capital appreciation over current income. Apple's dominant 22.60% position, despite its modest 0.38% yield, exemplifies this strategy—Buffett has consistently prioritized the company's business quality, competitive moat, and long-term growth prospects over immediate dividend returns.

Traditional Buffett holdings like Coca-Cola and Bank of America provide more meaningful yields at 2.72% and 2.04% respectively, representing the Oracle of Omaha's legacy investments in predictable, cash-generative businesses. However, the inclusion of lower-yielding technology positions like Alphabet (0.25%) demonstrates Berkshire's evolution toward growth-oriented investments. This balanced approach allows Berkshire to generate steady dividend income from established positions while maintaining exposure to companies reinvesting heavily for future expansion.

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