Current:Home > FinanceWarren Buffett donates again to the Gates Foundation but will cut the charity off after his death -Global Capital Summit
Warren Buffett donates again to the Gates Foundation but will cut the charity off after his death
Rekubit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 21:33:05
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Investor Warren Buffett announced another $5.3 billion in charitable gifts Friday, but in a major shift of his longtime giving plan he said he plans to cut off donations to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation after his death and let his three children decide how to distribute the rest of his $128 billion fortune.
Buffett laid out his new plan for his estate in an interview with the Wall Street Journal. The 93-year-old billionaire who leads Berkshire Hathaway didn’t immediately respond to questions from The Associated Press on Friday about his plan that calls for Howard, Susie and Peter Buffett to unanimously agree where to give his Berkshire Hathaway stock after his death.
Buffett has given about $55 billion worth of Berkshire stock to five foundations since he outlined his giving plan in 2006, with the biggest share by far going to the Gates Foundation. The other four foundations are affiliated with his family, including the ones each of his children run.
“The Gates Foundation has no money coming after my death,” said Buffett, who left the Gates Foundation’s board in 2021 after Bill Gates, one of his best friends, announced he and Melinda French Gates were divorcing. French Gates left the Gates Foundation earlier this year.
In his initial pledge to the Gates Foundation in 2006, Buffett wrote that he planned to include the foundation in his will. “I will soon write a new will that will provide for a continuance of this commitment — by distribution of the remaining earmarked shares or in some other manner — after my death,” he wrote then, referring to the annual gifts of Berkshire Hathaway stock that he was pledging.
But Buffett said in a statement Friday that his original pledges are only good until his death.
Buffett will leave it up to his kids to decide what to do with his Berkshire stock, much like he does now when he lets the foundations decide how to use his gifts. He said they already know the goal of his giving.
“It should be used to help the people that haven’t been as lucky as we have been,” Buffett told the Journal. “There’s eight billion people in the world, and me and my kids, we’ve been in the luckiest 100th of 1% or something. There’s lots of ways to help people.”
Mark Suzman, CEO of the Gates Foundation, said in a statement that he appreciates Buffett’s generosity over the years.
“Warren Buffett has been exceedingly generous to the Gates Foundation through more than 18 years of contributions and advice,” Suzman said. “He has played an invaluable role in championing and shaping the foundation’s work to create a world where every person can live a healthy, productive life. We are deeply grateful for his most recent gift and contributions totaling approximately $43 billion to our work.”
The value of Buffett’s donations have grown with the steady rise in price of Berkshire’s stock, so the stock he has given away to date is already worth more than his entire fortune of $43 billion when he announced his plan. The conglomerate’s most widely traded Class B shares are up about 22% in the just past 12 months.
“Nothing extraordinary has occurred at Berkshire; a very long runway, simple but generally sound capital deployment, the American tailwind and compounding effects produced my current wealth,” Buffett said in a statement. “My will provides that more than 99% of my estate is destined for philanthropic usage.”
Buffett’s own Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation has been a major supporter of abortion rights over the years, but he has let his children and the Gates Foundation make their own decisions about how to distribute his gifts. Howard Buffett has given more than $500 million to help Ukraine since Russia invaded as part of his focus on helping war-torn regions.
Buffett also occasionally makes other gifts to unnamed charities but he hasn’t ever disclosed the details of those gifts.
Buffett will still own 207,963 Class A Berkshire shares and 2,586 Class B shares after giving away a little over 13 million Class B shares Friday. Because of the voting power of the Class A shares, Buffett continues to have the biggest say by far in the operations of the massive conglomerate based in Omaha, Nebraska that he leads as chairman and CEO. He hasn’t bought or sold any Berkshire shares in the past 18 years.
Buffett has said that one of his vice chairman, Greg Abel, who already oversees all of Berkshire’s non-insurance businesses, will take over as CEO after he is gone. Berkshire owns an eclectic assortment of manufacturing, retail and service businesses including BNSF railroad, several large utilities, Dairy Queen and Precision Castparts. Insurance companies, including Geico and General Reinsurance, are also a core part of Berkshire, and the company owns a huge stock portfolio dominated by iconic companies like Apple, Coca-Cola, American Express and Bank of America.
Buffett’s son Howard, who already serves on Berkshire’s board, is slated to become chairman after his father’s death, but Buffett’s children won’t play an active role in the day-to-day operations of the company.
___
Associated Press writer Thalia Beaty contributed to this report from New York.
___
For more AP coverage of Warren Buffett look here: https://apnews.com/hub/warren-buffett. For Berkshire Hathaway news, see here: https://apnews.com/hub/berkshire-hathaway-inc. Follow Josh Funk online at https://apnews.com/author/josh-funk,https://www.twitter.com/funkwrite and https://www.linkedin.com/in/funkwrite.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Give Patrick Mahomes and Brittany Mahomes a Trophy for Their Family Celebration After Super Bowl Win
- If a Sports Bra and a Tank Top Had a Baby It Would Be This Ultra-Stretchy Cami- Get 3 for $29
- Look back at 6 times Beyoncé has 'gone country' ahead of new music album announcement
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Peter Schrager's incredible streak of picking Super Bowl champions lives on with Chiefs win
- Stop, Shop, & Save: Get $490 Worth of Perricone MD Skincare For Just $90
- Axe-wielding man is killed by police after seizing 15 hostages on Swiss train
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Was this Chiefs' worst Super Bowl title team? Where 2023 squad ranks in franchise history
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- How to cook corned beef: A recipe (plus a history lesson) this St. Patrick's Day
- What to know about a shooting at Joel Osteen’s megachurch in Texas during Sunday services
- 'We’ve got a streaker': Two fans arrested after running on field at Super Bowl 58
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s Love Story PDA Continues at Super Bowl 2024 After-Party
- The Chiefs have achieved dynasty status with their third Super Bowl title in five years
- Shop J. Crew’s Jaw-Dropping Sale for up to 95% off With Deals Starting at Under $10
Recommendation
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Storming of Ecuador TV station by armed men has ominous connection: Mexican drug cartels
We recap the 2024 Super Bowl
Chiefs players – and Taylor Swift – take their Super Bowl party to the Las Vegas Strip
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
A female stingray at a NC aquarium becomes pregnant without a male mate. But how?
Trump arrives in federal court in Florida for closed hearing in his classified documents case
Steve Ostrow, who founded famed NYC bathhouse the Continental Baths, dies at 91