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#Morningstar #BerkshireHathaway #StockInvesting Morningstar recently lowered Berkshire’s economic moat rating to narrow from wide. Here’s what to make of it. 00:00 Introduction 00:11 Why Berkshire Hathaway Stock Was Downgraded 01:27 Should You Sell Berkshire Hathaway Stock? Susan Dziubinski: I’m Susan Dziubinski with Morningstar. Morningstar recently downgraded the economic moat rating on Berkshire Hathaway BRK.A BRK.B to narrow moat from wide moat. As a result, is it time to sell the stock? Let’s talk about the downgrade first. As a refresher, Morningstar’s economic moat ratings indicate how long we think a company will be able to fight off competitors and out-earn its cost of capital. Companies with wide economic moat ratings are those that we expect to out-earn their costs of capital for 20 years or more. Those companies that receive narrow economic moat ratings, well we expect those companies to generate excess returns for a decade or more. When it comes to Berkshire Hathaway specifically, our moat rating comes from an evaluation of each of the firm’s individual businesses, combined with our assessment of management’s ability to produce excess returns from the cash flows that these businesses generate. Historically, Berkshire’s underlying businesses have provided a narrow economic moat and management’s investment prowess had pushed the firm’s overall economic moat rating to wide. But today, it’s harder to see Berkshire generating excess returns consistently beyond the next decade. That’s not just because of Berkshire CEO Warren Buffett’s eventual departure. Rather, we’re seeing some slippage in the moats in the railroad business, as well as increased litigation exposure for the utilities/energy business, which put downward pressure on excess returns for Berkshire’s noninsurance operations. Berkshire’s size has also made it difficult to find deals or investments that can add significant value, and there’s increased competition for those deals from private capital. Those factors diminish the potential benefits ahead from management’s ongoing capital allocation. Does that mean it’s time to sell Berkshire Hathaway’s stock? Not necessarily. The stocks of companies that have undergone moat rating changes can still be overvalued or undervalued. In other words, a moat rating change isn’t a buy or a sell signal. What matters is where a given stock is trading relative to Morningstar’s fair value estimate. And these days, Berkshire Hathaway stock is trading right around our fair value estimates for both its A shares and its B shares. So no, the stock isn’t a sell according to Morningstar’s metrics – it’s a hold. For more stock insights, subscribe to Morningstar’s channel and visit Morningstar.com Morningstar strategist Greggory Warren provided the research behind this report. What to watch from Morningstar. Why These 2 Dividend Aristocrats Look Like Buys Today • Why These 2 Dividend Aristocrats Look... 3 Stocks the Best Value Managers Are Buying • 3 Stocks the Best Value Managers Are ... 2 Dirt Cheap Stocks to Buy If You Want to Take a Flier • 2 Dirt Cheap Stocks to Buy If You Wan... 2 Cheap Stocks Top Managers Have Been Buying • 2 Cheap Stocks Top Managers Have Been... Read what our team is writing. Susan Dziubinski https://www.morningstar.com/people/su... Follow us on social. Facebook: / morningstarinc X: https://x.com/MorningstarInc Instagram: / morningstar. . LinkedIn: / 5161