Investor Warren Buffett to retire from Berkshire Hathaway
Influential billionaire investor Warren Buffett said Saturday (May 3) he would retire from leading his Berkshire Hathaway business group by the end of the year and that he would recommend his chosen successor, Greg Abel, to take over.
Buffett's success, coupled with his ability to explain his thinking in clear soundbites, has made him highly influential in the business and financial communities, earning him the nickname "The Oracle of Omaha".
"I would still hang around and could conceivably be useful in a few cases, but the final word would be what Greg said in operations, in capital deployment, whatever it might be," he added.
Buffett transformed Berkshire Hathaway from a medium-sized textile company when he bought it in the 1960s into a giant conglomerate, now valued at more than US$1 trillion and with liquid assets of US$300 billion.
The company on Saturday reported first-quarter profits of US$9.6 billion, down 14 per cent. That works out to US$4.47 per share, also down sharply.
Buffett's net worth as of Saturday is US$168.2 billion, according to Forbes magazine's real-time rich list.