Berkshire Hathaway's operating earnings more than doubled as workers in its insurance, railroad and energy businesses generated surging profits, while the conglomerate's cash reserves swelled to nearly $400 billion—a near-record stockpile that raises questions about investment in job-creating enterprises and productive economic activity.
CEO Greg Abel presided over the 2026 Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting, marking a new era for the investment giant as operating earnings jumped significantly year over year. The gathering in Omaha kicked off with an homage to Warren Buffett, whose "jersey" was raised to the rafters to honor his retirement from day-to-day leadership.
New Leadership, Record Cash Reserves
Buffett praised the CEO choice as "100% successful," offering a public endorsement of Abel's stewardship. The leadership transition comes as Berkshire sits on an unprecedented cash hoard approaching $400 billion, capital that could potentially fund infrastructure projects, clean energy investments, or wage increases for the conglomerate's workforce.
The company's latest earnings report showed profits more than doubled, driven by gains across its insurance, railroad and energy operations—sectors that employ tens of thousands of workers and provide essential services to communities nationwide. These businesses form the backbone of Berkshire's operating performance, with frontline employees in claims processing, rail operations, and utility services contributing directly to the bottom line.
Questions About Deployment
Ariel Investments' John Rogers attended the annual meeting and said, "I'd like to find out whether Abel is optimistic about the market," reflecting investor interest in how the new CEO will deploy the massive cash reserves. The question carries weight for workers and communities: whether capital will flow toward acquisitions that preserve jobs, infrastructure investments that create employment, or simply accumulate as the conglomerate waits for market opportunities.
Actor Bill Murray, a longtime Berkshire shareholder, attended the meeting and said Greg Abel is "very friendly," though the CEO's approach to capital allocation and stakeholder priorities will define his tenure more than personal demeanor.
Insurance, Rail, and Energy Drive Growth
The surge in operating earnings came from Berkshire's core businesses. Insurance operations, which employ adjusters, underwriters, and customer service representatives across the country, posted strong gains. The railroad business, which provides union jobs with benefits to thousands of workers, contributed to the profit jump. Energy operations, including regulated utilities serving residential customers, also drove earnings higher.
These businesses operate in sectors where regulatory oversight, worker safety, and service reliability intersect with profitability. The earnings growth reflects not just market conditions but the labor of employees who process claims, maintain rail infrastructure, and keep power flowing to homes and businesses.
Why This Matters:
Berkshire Hathaway's nearly $400 billion cash position represents capital that could address pressing economic needs—from clean energy infrastructure to affordable housing development to wage increases for frontline workers. The conglomerate's profits derive substantially from regulated industries and essential services, sectors where public interest and corporate performance intersect. How Greg Abel deploys these resources will affect not just shareholder returns but employment levels, infrastructure quality, and the communities where Berkshire's businesses operate. The leadership transition occurs as questions intensify about corporate cash hoarding, productive investment, and whether concentrated capital serves broader economic prosperity or primarily benefits existing shareholders. Abel's decisions on capital allocation will test whether stakeholder considerations—workers, customers, communities—factor meaningfully into investment choices.