2017 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting
We bring Berkshire to you with our on-the-spot meeting coverage and analysis.
We bring Berkshire to you with our on-the-spot meeting coverage and analysis.
Around 40,000 people are expected to make the pilgrimage to Omaha this year for the Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) (BRK.B) annual meeting to hear Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger answer questions about their investments, succession planning, and more.
But if you can't make it to this year's "Woodstock for capitalists," Morningstar.com has the next best thing: on-the-ground coverage from Omaha.
We have a live blog of the entire meeting featuring insights from Morningstar's Andy Bischof, Josh Aguilar, and Jeremy Glaser. Our Berkshire analyst, Gregg Warren, will once again be on the panel asking questions to Warren and Charlie, and we will get his take on the event immediately afterward.
Meeting Coverage
2017 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting Live Blog
Morningstar's Andy Bischof, Josh Aguilar and Jeremy Glaser blog from the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting in Omaha.
What We Learned, and Didn’t, at the Berkshire Meeting
Hints that Buffett could retire one day and a lack of clarity around the future of BNSF were highlights of the 2017 meeting, says Morningstar’s Gregg Warren.
Tax Changes Unlikely to Have Big Impact on Berkshire
In his first-half wrap up, Morningstar’s Andy Bischof explores Buffett and Munger’s take on tax reform, airlines and Wells Fargo.
Is a Berkshire Dividend Coming?
With his cash hoard growing, Warren Buffett opened the door to a cash payment to shareholders at this year’s annual meeting.
Meeting Preview
Expect an Eventful Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting
Morningstar analyst Gregg Warren expects 3G Capital, Wells Fargo, Apple, and airlines to be among the major topics this weekend.
Funds That Buy Like Buffett, 2017
These funds follow the Oracle of Omaha in buying and holding quality businesses.
How We Craft Questions for Buffett
Morningstar's Gregg Warren has honed his process of asking the right questions over the years he's been on the Berkshire annual meeting analyst panel.
Ahead of Meeting, Berkshire Looks Fairly Valued
Now may not be a great time to buy shares of Berkshire Hathaway, as it's trading at around 98% of our fair value estimate.
A Weaker First Quarter for Berkshire
Company reports solid top-line, but weaker bottom-line, results ahead of annual meeting.
Morningstar.com does not own (actual or beneficial) shares in any of the securities mentioned above. Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.
Transparency is how we protect the integrity of our work and keep empowering investors to achieve their goals and dreams. And we have unwavering standards for how we keep that integrity intact, from our research and data to our policies on content and your personal data.
We’d like to share more about how we work and what drives our day-to-day business.
We sell different types of products and services to both investment professionals and individual investors. These products and services are usually sold through license agreements or subscriptions. Our investment management business generates asset-based fees, which are calculated as a percentage of assets under management. We also sell both admissions and sponsorship packages for our investment conferences and advertising on our websites and newsletters.
How we use your information depends on the product and service that you use and your relationship with us. We may use it to:
To learn more about how we handle and protect your data, visit our privacy center.
Maintaining independence and editorial freedom is essential to our mission of empowering investor success. We provide a platform for our authors to report on investments fairly, accurately, and from the investor’s point of view. We also respect individual opinions––they represent the unvarnished thinking of our people and exacting analysis of our research processes. Our authors can publish views that we may or may not agree with, but they show their work, distinguish facts from opinions, and make sure their analysis is clear and in no way misleading or deceptive.
To further protect the integrity of our editorial content, we keep a strict separation between our sales teams and authors to remove any pressure or influence on our analyses and research.
Read our editorial policy to learn more about our process.