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Warren Buffett once said he didn’t invest in tech stocks because he didn’t understand them — he might have been right – Financial Post


Warren Buffett has a questionable track record investing in technology companies. It’s only getting worse with Apple Inc., which had already lost more than US$350 billion in market value since October, diving Wednesday.

After famously avoiding tech stocks for decades, saying he didn’t understand them well enough, the billionaire’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. stashed more than US$10 billion into International Business Machines Corp. starting in 2011. He completely exited the stake about a year ago, admitting his analysis had been flawed — a rare black mark in a career spent building one of world’s biggest piles of wealth.

Now, Buffett’s bet on Apple — which amounted to about 252 million shares at the end of September, or more than 5 per cent of the total — looks shakier. The stock fell late Wednesday after Apple slashed its revenue forecast, blaming an economic slowdown in China and saying fewer people upgraded their iPhones than anticipated.

Apple dropped to as low as US$144.51 in extended trading, trimming the value of Berkshire’s stake by about US$3 billion. To be sure, Buffett bought most of the shares at lower prices, so he may still be ahead on the overall investment.

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When describing companies he was looking to acquire, Buffett once wrote that he prefers “simple businesses,” adding, “If there’s lots of technology, we won’t understand it.”

Buffett’s assistant didn’t immediately return a message seeking comment.

Bloomberg.com



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