The billionaire CEO says he’s made poor investments in buying companies and hiring managers, but that leaders should be more open about these errors.
Welcome to Seeking Alpha's Catalyst Watch - a breakdown of some of next week's actionable events that stand out. Read more about the events that may impact stock prices next week.
Warren Buffett is one of the best investors of all time. In fact, he's currently betting billions of dollars on a particular artificial intelligence stock that looks like a screaming buy for investors bullish on artificial intelligence (AI).
One advisor suggests thinking of the Warren Buffett rule: "Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful." Gold should only be a small sliver, perhaps 1% or 2% or less of a well-diversified portfolio,
Warren Buffett's investment firm, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B), has offloaded a 2% stake in dialysis service provider, DaVita Inc. (NYSE: DVA). The transaction, executed between February 14 and 19,
In voluntary dismissals filed on Thursday, the CFPB dropped lawsuits it had brought against Capital One, Rocket Homes, Vanderbilt Mortgage and Finance, owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, and more.
The hedge fund manager is waging his own money this time in a bid to build another financial behemoth that can rival the life's work of Warren Buffett.
Elon Musk says his AI startup xAI's new Grok-3 chatbot could help a lucky user pick a perfect March Madness bracket, despite no perfect brackets ever having been submitted.
The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau dismissed its lawsuit accusing Vanderbilt Mortgage and Finance, a unit of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway , of driving borrowers into loans they could not afford to buy homes from Berkshire's Clayton Homes unit.
Warren Buffett revealed the "secret" to making a marriage last in a 2015 interview with Fortune.
Warren Buffett might be the world’s greatest investor, outperforming the S&P 500 by a 2-to-1 margin over 60 years of investing, but sometimes even the Oracle of Omaha gets it wrong. Or gets in too early.
Some business owners are opting for an investment tool Warren Buffett once called 'financial instruments of mass destruction.' But lawmakers want to make it easier for entrepreneurs to access this market.
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