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Berkshire Hathaway Slashes Stake in Troubled Lender Wells Fargo

Berkshire Hathaway Inc., once the biggest holder of Wells Fargo & Co. common stock, slashed its investment by more than 40%.

Berkshire Hathaway Slashes Stake in Troubled Lender Wells Fargo
Warren Buffett, chairman and chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., speaks during the virtual Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholders meeting seen on a laptop computer in Arlington, Virginia, U.S. (Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., once the biggest holder of Wells Fargo & Co. common stock, slashed its investment by more than 40% as the San Francisco-based lender copes with the aftermath of consumer-abuse scandals.

Berkshire sold more than 100 million shares, trimming its stake in Wells Fargo common stock to about 3.3%, according to a regulatory filing Friday. A Wells Fargo spokesperson declined to comment.

Berkshire, a long-time investor in the lender, has been trimming its bet in recent months, down to a stake valued at $3.4 billion based on Friday’s closing price. Wells Fargo is grappling with lingering fallout from its sales scandals plus the effects of the pandemic and related shutdowns across the U.S. That’s led to a share slump this year of more than 50%.

The lender announced in July that it would cut its dividend. The bank posted its first quarterly loss since 2008 in the three months ended June 30 as it set aside a record $9.5 billion for credit losses. Under new Chief Executive Officer Charlie Scharf, Wells Fargo has pledged to cut $10 billion in annual expenses and has embarked on job cuts that could ultimately number in the tens of thousands.

Berkshire has been reallocating investments in financials, cutting bets on JPMorgan Chase & Co. and PNC Financial Services Group Inc. and eliminating a stake in Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in the second quarter, then boosting a holding in Bank of America Corp. Just a few days ago, Berkshire announced a roughly $6 billion wager on five of Japan’s biggest trading companies, which are conglomerates with exposure to commodities and businesses including convenience-store chains and home-shopping networks.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.