Berkshire Hathaway, the conglomerate led by legendary investor Warren Buffett, is gearing up for its annual shareholder meeting scheduled for Saturday, May 3, 2025, in Omaha, Nebraska. Known as the “Woodstock for Capitalists,” this event draws tens of thousands of investors from around the globe to hear directly from Buffett and his team, while also reflecting on the company’s storied past and future direction. With recent news of board changes and a record-breaking cash pile, this year’s gathering promises to be a pivotal moment in the company’s history.
The 2025 meeting comes on the heels of Berkshire Hathaway’s latest annual report, released on February 22, 2025, which showcased a record operating profit of $14.5 billion for the fourth quarter of 2024 and a staggering cash reserve of $334.2 billion. Buffett, now 94, used his annual shareholder letter to hint at a transition, noting that Vice Chairman Greg Abel, 62, will soon take the reins as CEO and pen future letters. Abel, who oversees non-insurance operations like BNSF railroad and Berkshire Hathaway Energy, will join Buffett and Vice Chairman Ajit Jain, 73, on stage to field questions, though Buffett has signaled he’ll spend less time answering due to his age.
Historically, the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting has evolved from a modest gathering into a global phenomenon. When Buffett took control of the struggling textile company in 1965, few could have predicted its transformation into a $1 trillion conglomerate spanning insurance, energy, manufacturing, and retail. The first meetings were small, held in unassuming venues like a cafeteria, with only a handful of shareholders in attendance. By the 1980s, as Buffett’s investment prowess turned Berkshire into a powerhouse, the event began to grow, moving to larger spaces like Omaha’s Civic Auditorium.
The modern era of the meeting took shape in the 1990s, when it became a weekend-long celebration of capitalism. Today, it’s held at the CHI Health Center, accommodating around 40,000 attendees. Shareholders enjoy discounted shopping at Berkshire-owned businesses like See’s Candies and Nebraska Furniture Mart, alongside events like a 5K run and a newspaper-tossing contest—a nod to Buffett’s childhood paper route. The meeting itself blends formal business—electing directors and voting on proposals—with hours of Q&A, where Buffett and his late partner Charlie Munger, who passed in 2023, historically shared wisdom on investing, business, and life.
This year’s agenda includes notable shifts. On March 14, 2025, Berkshire announced that longtime director Ronald Olson will step down due to a new policy mandating directors (except Buffett) retire at 80, a change outlined in the proxy statement for the May meeting. The board also unanimously recommended rejecting seven shareholder proposals, including three focused on diversity and anti-discrimination efforts at subsidiaries—reflecting Berkshire’s decentralized ethos, where operating units largely set their own policies.
The 2025 meeting will mark the second without Munger, whose sharp wit and contrarian takes were a hallmark of past events. Buffett has acknowledged the void, but Abel’s growing role signals continuity. Investors will likely press for clarity on how Berkshire plans to deploy its massive cash hoard, especially after nine consecutive quarters of net stock sales totaling over $134 billion in 2024. Buffett has admitted to struggling to find compelling investments in a pricey market, a theme he’s expected to revisit in Omaha.