Warren Buffett “gives” away his fortune yet somehow remains among the top five richest men in the world – Year after year

By Jonathan StempelReuters – June 27, 2025

My cmnt: Bill Gates is a lustful womanizer, friend of Jeffrey Epstein, and possible pedophile. Warren Buffett is none of these things. Buffett is however a man who has gotten fabulously wealthy by buying and raping companies to the detriment of the employees and often the company itself. If the companies do not return his required profit he sells off the pieces of the enterprise to its ruin and his gain. Buffett, as a good democrat, turns a blind eye to Gates behavior and remains good buddies with him. Click here and here to read more about the evil Gates and his “charitable” Foundation. Click here for some insight into Buffett.

My cmnt: Bottom line: Gates and Buffett recycle their fortunes thru his so-called charitable foundation and Buffett keeps it all in the family by supplying his children’s foundations. Both Gates and Buffett become wealthier year after year in spite of “giving” so much wealth away. This is because they gain as much if not more in tax relief and virtue signaling than by simply paying their taxes.

Warren Buffett donates record $6 billion Berkshire shares

Summary

Buffett donates $6 billion in Berkshire stock to charities

Buffett’s total charitable giving exceeds $60 billion

Children to oversee charitable trust after Buffett’s death

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Warren Buffett donated on Friday another $6 billion of Berkshire Hathaway (BRKa.N) stock to the Gates Foundation and four family charities, his biggest annual donation since he began giving away his fortune nearly two decades ago.

The donation of about 12.36 million Berkshire Class B shares boosted Buffett’s overall giving to the charities to well over $60 billion.

He donated 9.43 million shares to the Gates Foundation; 943,384 shares to the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation; and 660,366 shares to each of three charities led respectively by his children Howard, Susie, and Peter: the Howard G. Buffett Foundation, Sherwood Foundation and NoVo Foundation.

Warren Buffett still owns 13.8% of Berkshire’s stock, based on reported shares outstanding.

His $152 billion net worth prior to Friday’s donations made him the world’s fifth-richest person, according to Forbes magazine.

Buffett would rank sixth after the donations, which surpassed the $5.3 billion he donated last June. He donated another $1.14 billion to the family charities last November.

In a statement, Buffett maintained he does not intend to sell any Berkshire shares.

Now 94, Buffett began giving away his fortune in 2006.

He changed his will last year, designating 99.5% of his remaining fortune after his death to a charitable trust overseen by his children.

They will have about a decade to distribute the money, and must decide where it goes unanimously. Susie Buffett is 71, Howard Buffett is 70, and Peter Buffett is 67.

Warren Buffett has led Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire since 1965.

The $1.05 trillion conglomerate owns close to 200 businesses including Geico car insurance and the BNSF railroad, and dozens of stocks including Apple (AAPL.O) and American Express (AXP.N).

Susie Buffett leads the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, which funds reproductive health and is named for her mother, who was Warren Buffett’s first wife.

The Sherwood Foundation supports Nebraska nonprofits and early childhood education. The Howard G. Buffett Foundation focuses on global hunger, combating human trafficking and mitigating conflicts. The NoVo Foundation has initiatives focused on marginalized girls and women, and on indigenous communities.

Buffett said last June that donations to the Gates Foundation would end when he dies.

Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Sandra Maler

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles

2 thoughts on “Warren Buffett “gives” away his fortune yet somehow remains among the top five richest men in the world – Year after year

  1. I find it funny that the rich want their money doing the opposite of what I want from it. All I want my money doing is working for others, helping to grow random honest industry and business, out of my concern on the whole. For rich people, they have to have their money working for them, it seems, and are not terribly concerned about it working for others. I really think everything except the standard deduction should be removed from the tax code. If the less wealthy do not benefit from giving their things away, why should the more wealthy?

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    1. As I noted, the rich receive all kinds of kudos from their virtue signaling by “giving” their wealth to their own foundations or foundations of their friends. They should have to pay their taxes like everyone else and receive no pats-on-the-back for doing it – just like everyone else.

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