Berkshire Investors Praise Greg Abel at Post-Buffett Meeting

Greg Abel didn’t take long to address the elephant in the room.

In his first few minutes addressing Berkshire Hathaway Inc. shareholders on Saturday — the first annual meeting without Warren Buffett leading the festivities — Abel took investors back to one year earlier, when Buffett shocked the room and anointed him as its next chief executive officer.

Abel, known as a shrewd operator who’s always looking for ways to improve profits at the $1 trillion conglomerate’s varied businesses, said he had just one thought at the time: The company had already shelled out the money to book the arena for the annual meeting in 2026. With him as the only draw, would they even need it?

As it turns out, they did. While the crowd was smaller, thousands of investors still flocked to Omaha, Nebraska to hear from the new, 63-year-old CEO.

Overall, long-time attendees of the annual meeting say they are sold after Abel’s first solo performance.

“It was a flawlessly executed hand-off to an accomplished, principled person that should be really successful,” said Robert Robotti, president and chief investment officer of Robotti & Co. Advisors. “And much of what Berkshire has been built on will stay.”

Long known as the Woodstock for Capitalists, the event still bore its usual quirky hallmarks: on Friday, shareholders milled around the exhibit hall floor, snapping up Squishmallows of Buffett’s former business partner Charlie Munger and taking pictures with Geico’s gecko mascot.