In his final interview as chief executive, Warren Buffett expressed profound confidence in Berkshire Hathaway’s future longevity, telling CNBC that the company “In his final interview as chief executive, Warren Buffett expressed profound confidence in Berkshire Hathaway’s future longevity, telling CNBC that the company “

Warren Buffett’s parting words: why he believes Berkshire is built to survive 100 years

In his final interview as chief executive, Warren Buffett expressed profound confidence in Berkshire Hathaway’s future longevity, telling CNBC that the company “has a better chance of being here 100 years from now than any company I can think of.”

The 95-year-old Oracle of Omaha formally stepped down on January 1, 2026, after six decades transforming a failing textile mill into a $1 trillion conglomerate.

Buffett handed Berkshire’s control to Greg Abel while remaining as chairman.

Buffett’s assessment, that Berkshire is uniquely positioned to endure across centuries, reflects confidence in the company’s governance structure, capital strength, and institutional resilience.​

Why Warren Buffett believes Berkshire’s structure ensures longevity

Buffett’s 100-year confidence rests on four concrete pillars.

First, Berkshire’s decentralised operating model, where subsidiary CEOs run their businesses with minimal corporate meddling. It creates durability that hierarchical corporations lack.

Buffett once noted that “managers prefer independence, but they can feel isolated. I grant them autonomy, but Greg provides both independence and a bit more discipline.”

This balance between freedom and accountability attracts entrepreneurial talent and prevents organisational sclerosis.​

Second, the company’s financial fortress is nearly unassailable.

Berkshire holds over $358 billion in cash and short-term Treasury securities alongside $283 billion in publicly traded equities, a war chest that provides extraordinary flexibility during crises and opportunities.

The company generates roughly $900 million in cash from operations weekly, reducing dependence on external capital.

Third, succession planning is transparent and proven.

Abel has already managed Berkshire’s non-insurance operations for seven years, demonstrating competence to skeptical investors.​

Finally, Buffett emphasized continuity. Abel has appointed a new chief financial officer (Charles Chang) and the first-ever general counsel (Michael O’Sullivan), while elevating Adam Johnson as CEO to oversee consumer products and retail divisions.

These moves distribute decision-making authority rather than concentrating it, reducing organizational fragility.​

Investors remain cautious despite Buffett’s confidence

Wall Street has not entirely embraced Buffett’s optimism.

Berkshire’s stock lagged the broader market after his May retirement announcement, reflecting investor anxiety about succession risk and doubts regarding Abel’s ability to match Buffett’s investment acumen.

While the stock rose 10.9% in 2025, it underperformed the S&P 500’s 17.5% gain.​

The immediate pressure facing Abel is daunting: how to deploy $358 billion in capital while maintaining Buffett’s discipline about overpaying for mediocre assets.

Some investors want Berkshire to initiate a dividend, increase buybacks aggressively, or fund a strategic acquisition, moves Buffett resisted for decades. ​

Analyst consensus suggests Abel will maintain Berkshire’s culture while gradually making stylistic adjustments.

His more hands-on management style differs subtly from Buffett’s trust-and-verify approach.

Whether that difference enhances or diminishes long-term returns remains the central question facing shareholders.

Buffett’s 100-year forecast is grounded in observable institutional strengths.

Whether the market agrees will become evident as Abel navigates 2026’s first earnings reports and capital allocation decisions.

The post Warren Buffett’s parting words: why he believes Berkshire is built to survive 100 years appeared first on Invezz

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