Berkshire 2018 GAAP net income: the anatomy of $4 billion
Four components that composed the reported figure. From the 2018 Annual Report.

Warren Buffett's 2018 letter opens by declaring the year's official GAAP earnings figure ($4 billion) a distortion — then delivers something more durable: a five-grove valuation framework to replace the retiring book-value yardstick, the clearest accounting of how insurance float creates structural funding advantage, and a two-page essay tracing $114.75 invested in 1942 to $606,811 by 2019 as evidence that the most powerful force in American investing has always been the economy itself.

| Grove | Description | 2018 figure |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Non-insurance operating businesses | Fully and partially owned; dozens of companies | $16.8B after-tax earnings |
| 2. Equity portfolio | ~$173B in public stocks, typically 5–10% positions | $173B market value |
| 3. Shared-control companies | Kraft Heinz (26.7%), Berkadia, Pilot Flying J (38.6%), ETT | $1.3B after-tax earnings |
| 4. Cash and fixed income | T-bills, cash equivalents, bonds | $132B total |
| 5. Insurance operations | GEICO, General Re, Berkshire Hathaway Reinsurance | $122.7B in float |
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