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Berkshire Hathaway to buy Taylor Morrison for $6.8 billion in cash to expand in housing

By Thomson Reuters May 31, 2026 | 3:42 PM

By Jonathan Stempel and Rishabh Jaiswal

May 31 (Reuters) – Berkshire Hathaway agreed on Sunday to buy Taylor Morrison Home Corp for $6.8 billion in cash, expanding the conglomerate’s housing business.

The transaction is Berkshire’s first multi-billion-dollar acquisition since Greg ​Abel became chief executive at the start of 2026, replacing Warren Buffett, ‌who remains chairman.

It also lets Abel spend some of Berkshire’s cash hoard, which ended March at $380.2 billion. Abel also oversees most of Berkshire’s common stock portfolio, led by Apple and including a growing stake in Google parent Alphabet.

Berkshire agreed to pay $72.50 per share for Taylor Morrison, a 24% ‌premium ​over the Scottsdale, Arizona-based company’s closing stock price of $58.50 on Friday.

The ⁠companies said the takeover has ⁠an enterprise value of $8.5 billion. Taylor Morrison posted net income of $782.5 million on revenue of $8.12 billion in 2025.

Berkshire, based in Omaha, Nebraska, has long owned and invested in the housing industry.

It acquired the Clayton Homes manufactured home builder in 2003.

Other ​Berkshire subsidiaries include building products companies such as Acme Brick, Benjamin Moore paint and Johns Manville insulation, and one of the largest U.S. residential real estate ⁠brokerages. Berkshire’s stock portfolio included stakes in home ⁠builders Lennar and NVR at the end of March.

BERKSHIRE ENVISIONS ‘COMBINED PLATFORM’ ​FOR HOMEBUILDING

In a statement, Abel called Taylor Morrison a “best-in-class national homebuilder,” and said Berkshire ​expects to “unify our site-built homebuilding operations into a combined platform” to make ‌it easier for Americans to buy homes.

Taylor Morrison operates in 12 U.S. states under the Taylor Morrison, Esplanade and Yardly brands, including entry-level and “resort lifestyle” housing.

It ranks No. 6 among Builder magazine’s top 100 home builders. Taylor Morrison also provides mortgage financing, ⁠as do some Clayton units.

Sheryl Palmer, Taylor Morrison’s chief executive, called Berkshire’s long-term focus “uniquely well-suited to the multi-year investment cycle of homebuilding,” and said the purchase “will allow us to ⁠scale the Taylor Morrison platform ‌in ways that would not be possible as a standalone ⁠company.”

The transaction is expected to close in the second half ​of ‌2026 pending shareholder and regulatory approvals, and Palmer will remain ​chief executive.

Taylor ⁠Morrison and Berkshire did not immediately respond to requests for additional comment.

In January, Berkshire paid $9.5 billion in cash for Occidental Petroleum’s chemicals business. That transaction was announced last October.

Goldman Sachs, Moelis and the law firms Simpson Thacher & Bartlett and Mayer Brown advised Taylor Morrison on the transaction, the company said.

(Reporting by Rishabh Jaiswal in Bengaluru; Editing by Chris ​Reese and Sergio Non)