Here’s why Warren Buffett could be losing billions on his Apple stock

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It took Warren Buffett almost nine years after the first iPhone was sold to pull the trigger on buying Apple inc.’s stock. After nearly three years of rapidly building his stake, Thursday’s stock selloff has likely put his investment underwater.

Based on 13F filings with the Securities Exchange Commission, Buffett’s investment vehicle Berkshire Hathaway Inc.














BRK.B, -5.49%












took its first position in Apple—9,811,747 shares—during the first quarter of 2016. That was about a year after Apple joined the Dow Jones Industrial Average and a little over three years after Apple resumed paying a dividend. The first iPhone was launched in June 2007.

Since then, he’s increased his stake to 252,478,779 shares, or about 5.3% of the shares outstanding, as of Sept. 30, 2018. At that time, Buffett’s investment in Apple was valued at about $57 billion, not including dividends.

The stock














AAPL, -9.96%












tumbled 10% in afternoon trade Thursday to the lowest close since April 2017, after the company cut its revenue outlook, citing weaker-than-expected iPhone sales, primarily in China.

The stock has now plunged 38.7% since closing at a record $232.07 on Oct. 3. Over the same time, the Dow














DJIA, -2.83%












has shed 4,142 points, or 15.4%.

At current prices, the value of Buffett’s stake, assuming it has remained the same size since Sept. 30, would be down about $4 billion on the day, and $21.1 billion since Sept. 30.

Don’t miss: Opinion: Apple lives up to Wall Street’s fears with massive revenue shortfall.

See related: Apple’s ‘darkest day’ in iPhone era triggers flood of price target cuts by analysts.

FactSet, MarketWatch


Berkshire’s 13F filings don’t provide details about the timing or at what price the shares were bought during each calendar quarter. To estimate the value of Berkshire’s stake, the number of shares owned can either be multiplied by Apple’s stock price at the end of the quarter or the average of the daily volume weighted average prices, or VWAP, during the quarter.

With that in mind, Buffett could be down roughly $1.8 billion on his Apple investment since he started building it, based on end-of-quarter prices, or down about $970 million, based on an of average of daily VWAPs provided by FactSet.

The following table shows how Buffett built his Apple stake, and why he is likely losing money:

Quarter Apple shares bought during quarter End of quarter price Average daily VWAP during quarter
Q1 2016 9,811,747 $108.99 $99.5901
Q2 2016 5,415,955 $95.60 $99.3761
Q3 2016 0 N/A N/A
Q4 2016 42,131,950 $115.82 $113.3695
Q1 2017 72,447,454 $143.66 $131.6004
Q2 2017 384,854 $144.02 $147.8638
Q3 2017 3,900,822 $154.12 $155.2277
Q4 2017 31,241,180 $169.23 $167.1297
Q1 2018 74,233,671 $167.78 $172.4598
Q2 2018 12,388,244 $185.11 $181.4253
Q3 2018 522,902 $225.74 $208.1340
Total shares owned (as of Sept. 30, 2018) Weighed-average position (end-of-quarter prices) Weighed-average position (average daily VWAP)
252,478,779 $149.26 $146.03
Current price Estimated (loss) based on end-of-quarter prices Estimated (loss) based on average daily VWAP
$142.19 ($1,784,433,024) ($968,453,062)
13F filings with SEC, FactSet



Source : MTV