Greg Abel, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, speaks in the course of the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Assembly in Omaha, NE on Might 2, 2026.
CNBC
Berkshire Hathaway agreed Sunday to accumulate homebuilder Taylor Morrison Dwelling in a $6.8 billion deal, deepening the conglomerate’s wager on the U.S. housing market after a protracted downturn.
The Omaha, Nebraska-based firm can pay $72.50 per share in money for Taylor Morrison, based on an announcement. The supply represents a 24% premium to the homebuilder’s closing value on Might 29 and values the corporate at about $8.5 billion, together with debt.
The acquisition marks one of many first main strategic offers below Warren Buffett’s successor Greg Abel, who took over as CEO initially of 2026. The acquisition, anticipated to shut within the second half of 2026, is comparatively modest by Berkshire requirements because it’s sitting on a money hoard nearing $400 billion.
“Berkshire is buying a best-in-class nationwide homebuilder, led by an distinctive staff and backed by a trusted repute for buyer expertise,” Abel mentioned within the assertion. “Over time, we count on to unify our site-built homebuilding operations right into a mixed platform enabling us to ship the dream of homeownership to extra Individuals.”
The deal suggests Berkshire is positioning for a restoration in U.S. housing demand regardless of elevated mortgage charges and affordability pressures which have weighed on the sector lately.
“They’re betting the housing cycle will flip and that there’s pent-up demand,” Invoice Stone, Glenview Belief CIO and a Berkshire shareholder, instructed CNBC.
The acquisition expands Berkshire’s already sizable footprint in housing. The conglomerate owns manufactured-home big Clayton Houses, a slew of constructing product firms in addition to Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, one of many largest residential actual property brokerage franchise networks within the U.S.
Berkshire’s final main deal got here in October, when it reached a $9.7 billion money deal to buy of OxyChem, the chemical enterprise of Occidental Petroleum.

