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Berkshire Buys Homebuilder Taylor Morrison For $8.5 Billion

Published Jun 10, 2026
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Wood-framed houses under construction at sunset, with stacks of lumber in the foreground and a finished house in the background, on a dirt lot. Logo for BriefsFinance is in the bottom right corner.
Summary:
  • Berkshire Hathaway agreed to buy homebuilder Taylor Morrison for $72.50 a share in cash.
  • The deal values the company at about $8.5 billion, a 24% premium over its late-May price.
  • New-home sales fell 11.3% in April from a year earlier, which makes the timing a contrarian bet.

Warren Buffett's company does not chase hot markets. It buys quality when others get nervous.

So a 24% premium for a builder is a surprise. Home sales are falling, yet Berkshire paid up.

The Deal

Berkshire Hathaway agreed to buy Taylor Morrison. It is the sixth-largest public homebuilder in the country.

The price is $72.50 a share in cash. That works out to about $8.5 billion once you count debt.

The offer sits 24% above the stock's May 29 close. So Berkshire paid nearly a quarter more than the market did days earlier.

"Berkshire is acquiring a best-in-class national homebuilder," said Greg Abel. He took over from Buffett at the top this year.

Taylor Morrison is based in Scottsdale, Arizona. The purchase is one of the first big deals on Abel's watch.

The deal still needs a shareholder vote. It is set to close in the back half of 2026.

We break down the moves smart money is making each morning in Market Briefs, and it takes five minutes. You also get a free masterclass on smart investing when you join.

Why Pay Up In A Down Market

The backdrop looks rough. New-home sales fell more than 11% in April from a year earlier.

Builder confidence has been negative for two straight years. So the mood in the trade is grim.

Borrowing is part of the squeeze. The 30-year mortgage averaged 6.48% in early June, down from 6.85% a year ago.

Cash is fading from the market too. All-cash deals slipped below 29% of sales, off a 35% peak in 2023.

Trouble signs are showing as well. Foreclosure filings rose 26% in the first quarter from a year earlier.

Bank repossessions jumped 45% too. Analysts blame high rates, taxes, and insurance, not reckless loans.

There is some relief for buyers, though. New listings rose nearly 9% from March to April, so there is more to pick from.

Many builder stocks now trade below book value. That is like a house listed for less than the land alone is worth.

It usually happens when investors expect hard times. It is also when patient buyers go shopping.

"Sophisticated buyers think valuations have bottomed," housing advisor Margaret Whelan told CNBC. She added that they would just wait if they saw prices falling more.

Stock prices tend to turn before the rest of the market. So bottoming builder shares may mean housing is close behind.

The Smart Money Angle

Buffett built his name buying strong firms when the crowd was scared. This deal fits that mold.

Watching that kind of smart money is why so many people track Berkshire's every move.

What To Watch

Forecasts are modest, not booming. A Fannie Mae panel expects home prices to rise about 1.7% this year.

That slow grind fits Buffett's style. He is happy to wait while others rush.

The smartest money in the room just made a very large bet on homes.

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