Value investors, Buffett fans, and those who have traveled to the CHI Health Center for years to hear the Oracle talk about moats, patience, and the benefits of remaining motionless while everyone else moves are the types of people who consistently attend the annual gathering in Omaha. Berkshire Hathaway became one of the most valuable corporations in the world as a result of this attitude, which was repeated and improved over the course of sixty years.
This was mostly accomplished by doing things that most institutional investors found dull, such as waiting, focusing, and avoiding what everyone else was enthused about. A $10 billion private placement into Alphabet’s AI infrastructure capital raising is arguably the best example of how that idea is being modified in ways that would have been uncommon even five years ago.
As part of Alphabet’s larger $80 billion equity raise intended to expand global AI data center and compute infrastructure, Berkshire Hathaway Alphabet is investing $5 billion in Class A shares at $351.81 each and another $5 billion in Class C shares at $348.20. This isn’t an open market share buy. In contrast to how Berkshire has traditionally constructed the majority of its technology positions, it is a negotiated transaction in which Berkshire is giving the company direct capital in exchange for stock at predetermined prices.
This indicates a relationship between the two companies that goes beyond standard portfolio management. Berkshire had already increased its public Alphabet holdings in Q1 2026 prior to this transaction, increasing the current ownership to roughly 58 million shares. On top of that is the private placement. In a relatively short amount of time, Alphabet has grown from a small Berkshire investment to one of its five largest stock stakes.
Here, Greg Abel’s fingerprints can be seen, signifying a real change in the way the portfolio is being handled. The first Alphabet stake was created during Warren Buffett’s tenure, a move toward technology that Buffett himself reluctantly accepted after spending years defending his avoidance of businesses he didn’t completely comprehend. That specific hesitancy seems to have less of an impact on Abel.
The aggressive $10 billion private placement that followed the aggressive Q1 2026 tripling of Alphabet’s holdings sounds more like an investor who has made a choice and is pushing it than a cautious value investor testing a novel idea. Abel seems to be taking advantage of Buffett’s position of trust and wealth to enter companies that the former Berkshire would have respectfully observed but declined to purchase.
The destination of the funds is what makes the Alphabet investment particularly intriguing rather than merely substantial. This is not a wager on broad technology. In order to increase the physical computational infrastructure—data centers, bespoke silicon, and network capacity—necessary for AI model training and inference, Alphabet is raising $80 billion. That infrastructure is being built with $10 billion from Berkshire.
The corporation that established itself around GEICO, Burlington Northern Santa Fe, and Dairy Queen is now involved in the construction of the pipelines that AI passes through. Even though the press release wording that usually goes along with these things would make it appear ordinary, that is a significant conceptual shift.

It’s still unclear if this acceleration under Abel signifies a long-term philosophical shift in Berkshire’s capital allocation strategy or if the concentration in AI-adjacent positions will be reduced as the cycle develops and values change. Observing the portfolio’s quarterly evolution makes it evident that the Omaha meeting’s emphasis on patience and waiting for the right pitch hasn’t vanished.
According to Abel’s reading, the right pitch occasionally manifests as a $10 billion private placement in the company that operates the most popular search engine in the world and is investing eighty billion dollars to ensure it can continue doing so for the next ten years.
