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Does Warren Buffett Know Something That Wall Street Doesn’t? The Billionaire Investor Is Piling Into a High-Yield Stock That Certain Analysts Recommend Selling.

Warren Buffett and his team at Berkshire Hathaway are some of if not the best investors ever. That’s why it shouldn’t surprise investors to learn that Buffett is often a step or two ahead of the broader market. Buffett has always had a knack for largely avoiding recessions or market downturns and making asymmetric investments that seem to work out when given time. He’s not immune to mistakes, but after many decades in the business, Buffett and his team of investing lieutenants know what to look for, what works, and they aren’t afraid to go against consensus, which is what they have been doing as of late.

Does the Oracle of Omaha know something Wall Street doesn’t? Buffett and his team have been piling into a high-yield stock that certain Wall Street analysts recommend selling.

Buffett at his core has always been a value investor; he tries to find stocks trading at less than their intrinsic value and which have a viable path toward closing the gap. In more recent decades, Buffett has taken the advice of his late partner Charlie Munger and also looked for wonderful companies trading at fair prices, which is more or less a value strategy on its own.

One of the few stocks Berkshire has been buying over the last year is the large digital audio company Sirius XM (NASDAQ: SIRI), which has clearly been left for dead by the market. The stock has not participated at all in the two-plus-year bull market and only trades at about 8.5 times forward earnings, which is an incredibly low valuation in this kind of market and for a company that technically is a legal monopoly. Sirius is the only company that holds a satellite-radio license from the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

SIRI data by YCharts

Buffett and his team at Berkshire have clearly seen something in the stock. The large conglomerate has sold many more stocks than it’s purchased over the last year but plowed into Sirius. Berkshire has owned Sirius for a while but significantly increased its position in the company in 2024 and hasn’t stopped since. Berkshire recently added another 2.3 million shares for a total purchase of roughly $54 million, bringing its stake in Sirius to about 35% of outstanding shares. Sirius now makes up about 1% of Berkshire’s over $300 billion equities portfolio and is the 15th-largest position in the portfolio.

Sirius’ main struggles stem from its competitive landscape, which includes large music and podcast companies like Spotify that have started to eat up more paying subscribers. More recently, Sirius has acquired the exclusive advertising and distribution rights of some pretty large podcasting brands, hoping to turn the company’s subscriber trends around.

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