Berkshire Hathaway is making a $6.8 billion cash bet on US housing at a moment when much of the sector looks stuck in reverse.
The move is Greg Abel’s first major acquisition as Berkshire’s chief executive, and it comes with an obvious tension.
Mortgage rates are near yearly highs, new residential construction has weakened, and homebuilders are still using incentives to keep buyers engaged.
Yet Berkshire, sitting on a record cash pile of roughly $397 billion, has agreed to buy Taylor Morrison, one of America’s largest homebuilders.
The deal says less about today’s housing market than about where Berkshire thinks the cycle is heading.
Contrarian logic behind the deal
Berkshire will pay $72.50 a share for Taylor Morrison, a 24% premium to its May 29 closing price. On the surface, that looks generous, but under the hood, the price looks more disciplined.
Citizens analyst James McCanless estimates Berkshire is paying about 0.9 times Taylor Morrison’s tangible book value.
In plain English, that means Berkshire is buying the company for slightly less than the estimated value of its hard assets after liabilities.
Taylor Morrison was also trading on a price-to-earnings ratio of 8.79 before the announcement, a low multiple for a profitable national builder.
That valuation matters because the backdrop is not easy. US housing starts fell 2.8% in April, while single-family starts dropped 9%.
The average 30-year mortgage rate recently reached 6.65%, the highest level since August 2025, making affordability worse for buyers.
Taylor Morrison has felt that slowdown as its first-quarter home closings revenue fell 28%, driven by fewer deliveries and slightly lower prices.
That is exactly why Berkshire is moving now.
“They are betting the housing cycle will turn and that there is pent-up demand,” Bill Stone, chief investment officer at Glenview Trust and a Berkshire shareholder, told CNBC.
More than an acquisition: A platform play
This is not just a purchase of one homebuilder, but a scale move.
Berkshire already owns Clayton Homes, a major manufactured and site-built housing business. Taylor Morrison brings more than 350 communities across 21 markets in 12 states, with a footprint concentrated in high-growth Sun Belt markets.
Combined with Clayton’s homebuilding operations, Berkshire would become the fourth-largest US homebuilder by 2025 closings, behind only D.R. Horton, Lennar and PulteGroup, according to ResiClub analysis.
That ranking is important because scale matters in housing.
Big builders can negotiate better land deals, manage materials costs more efficiently and offer mortgage-rate buydowns that smaller competitors struggle to match.
In a market where affordability is tight, those advantages can decide who keeps selling homes.
Abel also made clear that Berkshire is not simply adding Taylor Morrison as another standalone subsidiary, but expects over time to unify its site-built homebuilding operations into a combined platform.
That is a notable shift for a company long known for letting subsidiaries run independently.
Greg Abel’s opening move
The deal gives investors the clearest early sign yet of how Abel wants to use Berkshire’s cash mountain.
Since taking over from Warren Buffett at the start of 2026, Abel has faced a familiar Berkshire problem: the company has too much cash and too few obvious places to deploy it at sensible prices.
Taylor Morrison offers a partial answer as the deal is large enough to matter, but small enough to fit Berkshire’s cautious culture.
Wall Street had already seen value in Taylor Morrison before Berkshire moved.
Wolfe Research maintained an Outperform rating and raised its price target to $76 in April, while Raymond James also had an Outperform rating and a $70 target after the company’s first-quarter results.
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