Bailing-Bob
Dryer sheet wannabe
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2006
- Messages
- 19
If BRK.A was a mutual fund what category would if fall into. Large Growth, Value...etc?
Would it be a sector fund?
Would it be a sector fund?
Well, its $165B market cap is the equivalent of the industry's 10th-largest mutual fund. That'd be one hellacious sector, but you'd have to read the individual breakdowns on the annual report to decide what sector.Bailing-Bob said:If BRK.A was a mutual fund what category would if fall into. Large Growth, Value...etc?
Would it be a sector fund?
I've seen more opinions for large growth. Yeah, Buffett doesn't overpay, but he also doesn't buy into cigar-butt or turnaround situations anymore. It's more of a fair price for unrecognized growth or brand-franchise potential.Spanky said:Large value?
Nords said:Well, its $165B market cap is the equivalent of the industry's 10th-largest mutual fund. That'd be one hellacious sector, but you'd have to read the individual breakdowns on the annual report to decide what sector.
Spouse and I have been talking a lot about life after Buffett.Bailing-Bob said:You have about 30% of your portfolio invested in BRK.A. If those funds were not invested there, what index mutual fund(s) would you deploy into?
That's because they've all spent the last seven years growing in a different and highly undesirable direction...clifp said:Of course, I think value and growth stocks have practically flip flopped, Intel, Microsoft, and Walmart are all held by many value funds, and six or seven years ago these would all be growth stocks.