The capital-allocation framework — organized by the lenses we use to test where the float could go next.
An editorial, educational exercise: sit in the allocator's chair and run a disciplined filter over the universe. This page is the framework — the lenses and the test. The specific candidates and the worked deals live in the companion case studies.
Berkshire's sixty-year record is the closest thing to a public-market apprenticeship the world has. The fastest way to absorb it is not to read about the deals after the fact — it is to sit in the chair and ask the live question: given the platforms we already own and the capital we already have, where would we deploy next, and why?
We organize that question into four acquisition lenses for whole-business deals — plus a fifth for the listed portfolio, the public-equity sleeve. Every idea that enters a lens is graded against the same filter — the criteria Berkshire itself has used for decades. The discipline is the product; the names are downstream of it.
Each lens is a different reason to acquire. A candidate is only interesting once we can say which lens it sits in and how it scores on the five questions above.
Acquire a key supplier or distributor in a value chain Berkshire already touches — owning the input, the rail, or the shelf rather than renting it.
The test: does owning the link improve the economics or the durability of a business we already hold, rather than just adding unrelated revenue?
Candidates for this lens are developed in the companion case studies.
Acquire a direct competitor or consolidate a fragmented category — the bolt-on that adds scale, density, and pricing power to a platform we already operate.
The test: is the category one where scale compounds advantage (density, data, purchasing) — and is the public pure-play available at a sensible price?
Candidates for this lens are developed in the companion case studies.
Deliberately, carefully extend the circle of competence into a category Berkshire does not yet own — entered through a business simple enough to underwrite and durable enough to hold.
The test: can we draw the circle wide enough to include it honestly — understanding the economics as well as we understand the ones we own today?
Candidates for this lens are developed in the companion case studies.
Assemble a flywheel from separately-traded parts the market misprices in isolation — building a multi-business platform that compounds, the way the best operators built theirs over decades.
The test: do the parts reinforce each other into something worth more assembled than apart — and is the market offering the pieces on sale (as a downturn periodically does)?
Candidates for this lens are developed in the companion case studies.
The first four lenses buy whole businesses. The fifth deploys the float into minority stakes in listed companies — the long-held public positions (the Apple, Coca-Cola, and American Express style of ownership) that have done as much for Berkshire's compounding as the outright acquisitions have.
The question shifts from “what would we buy outright?” to “what would we own a piece of, in size, at today's price — and be content to hold for a decade?”
Candidates for this sleeve are developed in the companion “stocks to study” notes.
The framework describes something Berkshire is doing in the open. The recurring move: take a platform Berkshire already understands and bolt a public pure-play onto it to extend it. The public record:
| Public move | What it demonstrates |
|---|---|
| Taylor Morrison (TMHC) acquisition — announced 2026, ~$8.5B enterprise value | Greg Abel, early as CEO, bolts a national public homebuilder onto Berkshire's long-standing housing platform (Clayton Homes and the building-products family). The template, in the open. |
| Van Tuyl Group → Berkshire Hathaway Automotive (2015, $4.1B) | Berkshire already owns the rails in auto retail — so extending that platform is a continuation of an owned circle, not a leap. |
| Clayton Homes · Benjamin Moore · Shaw · Acme Brick · MiTek | The housing ecosystem Berkshire spent years assembling — the platform that the homebuilder bolt-on extends. |
Adding a public pure-play to a platform you already own is the same sentence as bolting a homebuilder onto Clayton Homes. The chair has already shown it writes that sentence.
A name doesn't earn a page just for fitting a lens. Each candidate that survives the five-question filter becomes a worked case at the same depth as the rest of the Berkshire Read series:
• the thesis in one line • the lens it sits in • a scorecard against the five questions • a rough, public-sourced valuation read • and the honest case against — because the discipline is knowing which ideas fail the filter, not just which ones flatter it.
The lenses on this page are the standing structure. The candidates and the worked deals are published as the analysis is ready.