Greg Abel just made his first big deal as Berkshire CEO. Why Warren Buffett is happy

Greg Abel just made his first big deal as Berkshire CEO. Why Warren Buffett is happy

Greg Abel, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, meets with shareholders at the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Meeting in Omaha, NE on May 1, 2026.

David A. Grogan | CNBC

Greg Abel’s first major acquisition as Berkshire Hathaway CEO looks a lot like the kind of deal Warren Buffett would have made himself.

Berkshire’s $6.8 billion purchase of homebuilder Taylor Morrison Home gives the conglomerate a larger foothold in housing, expands an existing business line and appears to have been struck at a bargain valuation. Just as notable was how little involvement Buffett had in the process.

“Greg did that faster than I could have done it, smoother than I could have done it, and I never talked to the CEO,” Buffett said. “He has launched.”

Berkshire agreed to pay $72.50 a share in cash for Taylor Morrison, valuing the homebuilder at roughly $6.8 billion in equity value and $8.5 billion including debt. Analysts at Citizens said the valuation appears modest compared with recent deals in the industry.

“Based on recent completed transaction multiples, the 0.9x price-to-tangible book value multiple we estimate Berkshire is paying appears low relative to recent public builder transactions,” Citizens analysts wrote.

They noted that the acquisition of Tri Pointe Homes earlier this year implied a multiple of roughly 1.2 times forward tangible book value, while MDC Holdings was purchased at about 1.3 times tangible book value last year.

Berkshire ecosystem

The transaction also fits another hallmark of Berkshire’s acquisition strategy: buying businesses that become more valuable inside the conglomerate than they would be on their own.

Housing has long been one of Berkshire’s core businesses. The conglomerate owns Clayton Homes, the nation’s largest producer of manufactured and modular housing, along with a wide range of businesses tied to residential construction, including flooring, insulation, roofing, paint and brick manufacturers. It also controls the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices real estate brokerage network.

Abel said in a statement Monday that he expects to unify Berkshire’s site-built homebuilding operations into a combined platform over time.

Analysts at UBS said combining Taylor Morrison with Clayton’s site-built homebuilding business could create one of the five largest homebuilders in the U.S. by volume. Clayton closed more than 10,000 homes in 2024, while Taylor Morrison delivered nearly 13,000, according to UBS.

“Given Clayton Homes is already the largest producer of manufactured & modular housing in the US, we believe Berkshire could leverage this transaction to infuse additional off-site construction methods at TMHC,” UBS said in a note. “We expect continued consolidation of the US homebuilders, which could provide a meaningful catalyst for industry improvement, efficiency gains and stock price appreciation.”

The deal also represents a relatively small wager for a company sitting on nearly $400 billion of cash. Berkshire ended the first quarter with a record $397.4 billion cash pile, meaning the acquisition consumes less than 2% of its available liquidity.

Still, the transaction ranks among Berkshire’s largest acquisitions in recent years. The conglomerate’s last major deal was the $9.7 billion purchase of OxyChem, Occidental Petroleum‘s chemical business, completed in January.

— CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed reporting.

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