Good morning. The Warren Buffett era is soon coming to an end.
When the legendary investor announced in May 2025 that he would step down as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway (No. 6 on the Fortune 500) effective Jan. 1, 2026, it marked a shift in decades of leadership. Buffett will be succeeded by Greg Abel as CEO, who has been vice chairman of Berkshire’s non-insurance operations. Buffett will remain with the company as chairman of the board after the transition.
For six decades, Berkshire shareholders have never needed to study Buffett’s investing aptitude. They could just buy Berkshire stock and let him do the work, with amazing results. In his new Fortune feature article, my colleague Geoff Colvin examines what life will be like for shareholders and the company after Buffett steps down.
Colvin raises the following questions: Is Berkshire Hathaway so immersed in Buffett’s way of investing that his successors will carry it on institutionally? Or is Buffett unique in so many ways that Berkshire can never hope to continue his staggering performance?
He suggests that Buffett’s 1977 letter to shareholders may offer an answer.
Colvin writes: “He described the criteria of a truly great, enduring business, as understood by him and his longtime business partner, Charlie Munger. The criterion of ‘enduring,’ he wrote, ‘eliminates the business whose success depends on having a great manager…Of course, a terrific CEO is a huge asset for any enterprise…But if a business requires a superstar to produce great results, the business itself cannot be deemed great.’”
“Buffett is obviously a superstar, and it’s hard to see any inherent factors, other than Buffett, that have made Berkshire Hathaway so hugely successful. He seems to have chosen excellently with Abel and Berkshire’s other top executives. But the world won’t know how good they really are until they’re on their own.”
“Has Buffett picked a successor as superbly as he picks stocks? After 60 years, it’s the hardest call Berkshire’s shareholders have ever had to make.” Colvin offers a deep dive into five investing lessons everyone can learn from Buffett. You can read the complete article here.
I recall asking Jonté Harrell, CFO at ZenLedger, a tech company that provides tax and compliance software for digital assets, about his thoughts on Buffett after he attended Berkshire Hathaway’s annual shareholder meeting in Nebraska for the first time last year. Harrell told me that Buffett’s insights have been helpful to him throughout his career.
Harrell added that along with investing advice, Buffett offers a lot of life advice: how to live (ethically, and below your means), how to do business (with emotional discipline), and how to give back (through The Giving Pledge), he said.
Only time will tell whether Berkshire Hathaway’s next chapter can live up to the legacy Buffett leaves behind, but his enduring principles ensure that the company, and its shareholders, are ready for what comes next.
Sheryl Estrada
sheryl.estrada@fortune.com
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com