Warren Buffett and Cathie Wood may both be stock-picking legends, but their portfolios might as well be from different galaxies. While Buffett cruises the investing seas with old-school juggernauts, Wood launches rockets hoping they'll land on the moon – or at least avoid burning up on re-entry.
Data from HedgeFollow suggests that in the fourth quarter of 2024, Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc (NYSE:BRK) (NYSE:BRK) clocked in a respectable 2.74% gain, quietly pushing his war chest to a towering $267 billion.
Meanwhile, Cathie Wood's ARK Innovation Fund (BATS:ARKK) lit up with a scorching 23.82% quarterly return – but before ARK fans pop champagne, the long-term picture tells a more sobering story.
Over the past three years, Buffett's top 50 holdings (weighted) returned +20.29%, while Wood's delivered a bruising -33.63%. That's not just a bad quarter – it's a full-blown crash landing.
The difference?
Buffett's portfolio is a fortress of slow-burning compounders. His crown jewel, Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL), takes up 28% of his portfolio and has returned a jaw-dropping +438.8% from its average buy price.
Throw in American Express Co (NYSE:AXP) (+277.6%), Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC) (+55.8%) and Coca-Cola Co (NYSE:KO) (+77%), and it's clear the Oracle of Omaha is still the king of buying great companies at great prices… and holding them forever.
Cathie Wood, on the other hand, is all about "disruption" — and sometimes, the disruption is in her portfolio’s value. Take Roku Inc (NASDAQ:ROKU), down 46.6% from her average buy-in, and Block Inc (NYSE:XYZ), down -50.1%. Her top bets, like Tesla Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) and Coinbase Global Inc (NASDAQ:COIN), have had moments of glory, but the overall portfolio has been whipsawed by volatility and drawn-out tech drawdowns.
To her credit, Wood’s fourth-quarter comeback shows that high-beta bets can pay off—just not consistently. While her fund has a whopping 181 holdings, many are moonshots still waiting for liftoff.
Overall, Buffett's performance shows the power of patience and pricing. Wood? She's still betting on the future – but it seems Buffett is quietly owning it.
Which camp would you rather retire in – the steady compounder or the volatile visionary?
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