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Just been digging into the latest 13F filings and honestly, the most interesting move wasn't what everyone's been talking about. Sure, warren buffett sold off three-quarters of his Apple position before stepping down as Berkshire CEO last year, but what really caught my eye was his consistent accumulation of Domino's Pizza shares over six straight quarters.
Let's break this down. The Apple story is pretty straightforward - Buffett had built up a massive position, but by the time he handed things to Greg Abel, he'd trimmed it by 75%. His reasoning? Valuation got ridiculous. When he first started buying back in 2016, Apple was trading at 10-15x earnings. By early this year it was sitting at 34.5x. Yeah, the company's got loyal customers and a solid buyback program, but at those multiples? Even the Oracle of Omaha wasn't interested anymore. Plus, physical device sales had basically flatlined for three years while the stock price kept climbing.
But here's what's more intriguing - why was warren buffett quietly buying Domino's Pizza quarter after quarter? The man purchased shares in Q3 2024, Q4 2024, Q1 2025, Q2 2025, Q3 2025, and Q4 2025, ending up with a 9.9% stake. That's not random activity. That's conviction.
The thesis is actually pretty compelling. Domino's did something brilliant in the late 2000s - they admitted their pizza wasn't great and rebuilt their reputation. For over 15 years they've been transparent with customers, and it's paid off spectacularly. The stock's up 6,700% since their 2004 IPO. But beyond brand trust, there's the international angle. They've now had 32 consecutive years of positive same-store sales growth overseas. That's the kind of consistent execution Buffett always loved.
Add in their AI-driven efficiency initiatives under their "Hungry for MORE" strategy, solid capital returns to shareholders, and a forward P/E of under 19 - which is a 31% discount to their five-year average - and you start to see why this might have appealed to someone looking for a final investment before retirement. It's got that classic Buffett ingredient: a time-tested business trading at a genuine discount.
What's wild is how this contrasts with the Apple exit. One's a mature position at peak valuation getting trimmed, the other's a fresh conviction bet on a consumer business with real moat and international runway. That's probably the clearest signal of where Buffett's head was at near the end of his tenure.