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Although other billionaire money managers might outpace Buffett's annual return from time to time, the greater than 5,500,000% cumulative return the Oracle of Omaha has overseen in his company's Class A shares (BRK.A) Thanks to Form 13F filings with the Securities and ExchangeCommission (SEC), this can be done with relative ease.
Thanks to a couple of required filings with the Securities and ExchangeCommission (SEC), including Form 13Fs , Form 4s, and Berkshire Hathaway's quarterly operating results, it's fairly easy for everyday investors to ride Buffett's coattails. Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett. Image source: The Motley Fool.
Following in Warren Buffett's footsteps is made possible thanks to an array of required public filings that clue investors into which stocks he and his top investment aides, Ted Weschler and Todd Combs, are buying and selling. According to Berkshire's September-quarter cash flow statement, just over $36 billion in equity securities were sold.
Supermicro stock lost ground last week, in conjunction with news that the company may miss the filing deadline for submitting its 10-Q report to the Securities and ExchangeCommission ( SEC ). The company is now expected to submit a filing plan to the Nasdaq exchange that will allow it to avoid immediate delisting.
But on three separate occasions since this decade began, Buffett has requested (and been granted) confidential treatment when filing quarterly 13Fs with the SEC. which is what often happens when Berkshire discloses a new stake in a company. A 13F is what allows investors to effectively mirror Buffett's trades and ride his coattails.
She is the president of the New York Stock Exchange, the world’s largest, with over 2,400 listed companies for a combined market cap of about $36 trillion. She is also chair of the fixed income and data services at ICE, Intercontinental Exchange. MARTIN: So a company will decide they want to go public.
I would now like to hand the call to Rana Schirmer, director of SEC reporting. Schirmer -- Director of Securities and ExchangeCommission Reporting Thank you, operator. And the numbers speak for themselves: Amazon: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2010, you’d have $21,706 !* Rana, please go ahead.
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