The Best Warren Buffett Stocks to Buy With $1,000 Right Now
Got an extra $1,000 you would like to put to work but don’t quite know how? Don’t make it complicated. Just poach a pick or two (or several) from one of the world’s best-known and most-proven stock pickers. He’s Warren Buffett, of course. There’s a reason he has been able to reliably lead Berkshire Hathaway to market-beating performances.
With that as the backdrop, here’s a closer look at three of Berkshire’s holdings that are solid prospects for you at this time, in no particular order.
Coca-Cola
It’s such a commonly suggested Buffett pick that it has almost become a cliché. Nevertheless, there’s good reason Coca-Cola (KO 0.06%) continues to be highlighted as a stock you might want to own, too.
Not only is its namesake cola woven into the world’s cultural fabric, but its other well-known brands like Gold Peak tea, Minute Maid juice, Dasani water, and Powerade sports drinks (to name just a few) also mean this beverage behemoth always has something to sell regardless of consumers’ ever-changing tastes.
That doesn’t mean things are always easy. Coke shares have fallen 16% from their early September high in response to a small but alarming drop in the total amount of product sold (as measured by volume) during the company’s fiscal third quarter of last year.
Operating income and net earnings fell even more during the three-month stretch, with no indication that the headwind was likely to abate during the quarter ending in December.
This is a timeless business, though, and Coke’s brands seem just as timeless. You’ll simply need to give this stock enough time for the company to prove it’s worth the wait.
Buffett has certainly done so anyway. Berkshire began amassing its current 400 million shares in late 1998. The stock has nearly doubled in value since then, while the dividend — perhaps the chief reason Buffett’s such a fan — has more than tripled during this time, extending an annual growth streak of 62 years.
Newcomers will be stepping in while the forward-looking dividend yield stands at just under 3.2%.
Apple
Just as much as Coca-Cola, Apple (AAPL) is a frequently suggested Buffett pick. And as with Coke, that’s for a good reason. Apple is another one of those timeless stalwarts with a well-deserved reputation for performance.
That’s not necessarily been easy to believe of late. Revenue has been stagnant since mid-2022, while sales of its flagship iPhone (as measured by revenue as well as unit sales) have been just as stagnant for just as long.
Buffett and his lieutenants have also been paring back the size of Berkshire’s stake in Apple of late, shedding roughly 600 million shares just since early last year. It certainly doesn’t seem like a vote of confidence.
Just keep things in perspective. Berkshire Hathaway’s position in Apple had grown to enormous proportions — even by Buffett’s liberal standards — at a time when it looked like unrealized stock gains might become subject to income taxation. He may have simply been thinking strategically.
And either way, Berkshire’s $70 billion stake in Apple is still its single biggest position, accounting for about one-fourth the value of all the conglomerate’s total stock holdings combined.
The company may be on the cusp of significant and prolonged growth. Near the end of last year, Apple launched an AI-powered tool that is run directly from its newer devices. That is as opposed to being run in the cloud, as most similar platforms like ChatGPT or Alphabet‘s Gemini typically are at this time. Apple is also developing a processor chip that could power its own artificial intelligence (AI) data centers.
It’s not exactly clear where or what Apple’s place in the ever-changing AI arena is. But given IDC’s expectation that the worldwide AI platform market will grow at an annual pace of more than 40% through 2028, the company isn’t wrong to throw its hat into the ring and capture whatever growth it can.
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