27% of Warren Buffett's $320 Billion Portfolio Is Invested in 3 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks
The legendary investor’s portfolio may not feature many tech players, but it does includes a few companies that are using AI to enhance their products and services.
After six decades leading Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett will retire from his role as CEO at the end of the year. Over his tenure, the conglomerate has absolutely trounced the market. From 1965 through 2024, Berkshire shares increased by 5,502,284% compared to a 39,054% return for the S&P 500.
Some, though certainly not all, of that growth was driven by the gains of its extensive stock portfolio, which today is valued at $320 billion. Safe to say, Buffett’s portfolio is still a great place to get investing ideas.
While he has largely shied away from investing in tech stocks, there are some companies using artificial intelligence (AI) among Berkshire’s holdings — and three of them currently make up 27% of the portfolio.
Image source: Getty Images.
1. Apple
Buffett started investing in Apple (AAPL 0.29%) in 2016, and it’s now the largest position he has, at 23.9% of Berkshire’s portfolio. Apple hasn’t exactly been leading the pack when it comes to AI — its rollout of Apple Intelligence started in 2024, and some promised features have been delayed until 2026 — but it has incorporated AI technology across its product lineup. Apple devices now have AI-powered real-time text analysis, battery management optimization, and augmented reality (AR) enhancements.
Unlike other major tech companies, Apple hasn’t developed its own competitive AI models. Instead, it has partnered with AI companies including OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, and Alphabet. It will reportedly pay Alphabet $1 billion per year to use a custom Gemini AI model to power its Siri virtual assistant.
Today’s Change
(-0.29%) $-0.78
Current Price
$272.17
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$4025B
Day’s Range
$269.60 – $275.96
52wk Range
$169.21 – $277.32
Volume
2.3M
Avg Vol
50M
Gross Margin
46.91%
Dividend Yield
0.00%
Considering the growing concerns that the tech sectors’ AI spending may have become excessive, Apple’s approach could end up being more cost-effective. Apple may not perform like a growth stock anymore, but it should continue to do well for shareholders, especially given the level of brand loyalty its products generate.
2. Chubb
The insurance business has been a lucrative one for Buffett. Berkshire owns several insurance companies, including Geico. In 2023 and 2024, Berkshire invested in Chubb (CB 0.25%), an American-Swiss company that provides commercial, personal, overseas general, and life insurance policies to customers worldwide.
Chubb is known for taking an innovative approach to its business, and its use of AI technology is one example of that. The insurer has incorporated AI to automate underwriting workflows, claims assessment and processing, and fraud detection. Earlier this month, Chubb also unveiled an AI-powered optimization engine that analyzes data and provides personalized insurance product recommendations to customers.
Today’s Change
(-0.25%) $-0.73
Current Price
$295.49
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$116B
Day’s Range
$294.00 – $300.00
52wk Range
$252.16 – $306.91
Volume
1.4M
Avg Vol
1.8M
Gross Margin
0.00%
Dividend Yield
0.01%
A forward-thinking approach is great, but it’s ultimately the results that matter. Chubb’s combined ratio — one of the main metrics insurance companies use to gauge their profitability — demonstrates just how efficient it is. A combined ratio of 100% indicates that an insurer is breaking even; any figure below that indicates it’s profitable. Chubb’s property and casualty (P&C) combined ratio in 2024 was 86.6%, 10% better than the industry average of 96.6%.
Chubb currently makes up 2.5% of Berkshire’s portfolio. If you’re looking for more stable stocks that are benefiting from AI, you may want to add this insurance provider to yours.
3. Visa
Visa (V 1.80%) went public in 2008, and Buffett bought shares a few years later in 2011. That holding now makes up nearly 1% of Berkshire’s portfolio.
While AI exploded in popularity following the release of ChatGPT in late 2022, the technology had been evolving for decades before that, and Visa was an early adopter. In 1993, it became the first payment network to use AI in risk and fraud management. Visa Advanced Authorization, a real-time payment product powered by Visa’s AI platform, now prevents an estimated $28 billion in fraud annually.
Today’s Change
(-1.80%) $-6.06
Current Price
$330.02
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$632B
Day’s Range
$329.03 – $336.08
52wk Range
$299.00 – $375.51
Volume
6.4M
Avg Vol
5.8M
Gross Margin
77.31%
Dividend Yield
0.01%
Visa is also using AI to streamline the online shopping experience. It’s developing agentic AI tools that can make purchases for LLM users based on queries about products and services, eliminating their need to visit other websites.
Visa and rival Mastercard dominate their industry: The two combine to handle 90% of all payment processing outside China. This makes Visa one of the better wide-moat stocks and a fairly safe investment.