When Warren Buffett speaks, Wall Street listens — and the “Oracle of Omaha” issued a full-throated defense of stock buybacks in his latest annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders. That’s why we’re shining a light on the Club holdings that repurchase the most stock, including Morgan Stanley (MS), Meta Platforms (META) and Apple (AAPL). Buffett’s argument, which mirrors the Club’s thinking, is simple: “When the share count goes down, your interest in our many businesses goes up. Every small bit helps if repurchases are made at value-accretive prices,” Buffett wrote in the letter , published Feb. 25, alongside Berkshire’s fourth-quarter earnings report. In other words, buybacks allow investors to own a greater percentage of a company’s earnings without needing to spend more money on additional shares. Not all repurchases are created equal, as Buffett rightfully pointed out in his much-anticipated annual letter. They can be done at irresponsible times, such as when a company’s stock price is overvalued. But, in general, buybacks are a beneficial tool at management’s disposable. “When you are told that all repurchases are harmful to shareholders or to the country, or particularly beneficial to CEOs, you are listening to either an economic illiterate or a silver-tongued demagogue (characters that are not mutually exclusive),” wrote Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway’s chairman and CEO. Buffett has overseen Berkshire, a multinational holding company whose myriad subsidiaries span most corners of the U.S. economy, since 1965. He is one of the most successful investors and wealthiest in the world, with a net worth over $100 billion. For more than a year, the Club’s investment mantra has emphasized companies that return cash to shareholders via buybacks and dividends. “It really helps to know that’s what Buffett is focused on, so we’re of course going to put our portfolio through the Buffett test,” Jim Cramer said on Monday’s “Homestretch ,” our daily afternoon audio feature to get members ready for the last hour of trading. He added: “We like to test ours in every single way.” So, here’s a full breakdown of buyback activity for the 35 companies in Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust in one big chart. Notes on methodology: All numbers are courtesy of Factset. For each company, the repurchase activity covers the firm’s most recent four quarters of reported results. Most Club holdings have reported for the current earnings season, but we’ve yet to hear from Costco (COST) and Salesforce (CRM). Those two companies report on Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively, meaning there is a slight lag on their four-quarter buyback activity. Market capitalization figures are based on Friday’s closing prices. Context Here’s some additional color on the buyback activities of seven key Club holdings. Devon Energy (DVN): The oil-and-gas producer slowed down its pace of buybacks in the second half of 2022 after buying Validus Energy for roughly $1.8 billion. Devon bought back just $183 million worth of stock in the third and fourth quarters combined, compared with $535 million in the first six months of 2022. However, management has said the company expects to be “active buyers” of its stock in 2023 . Coterra Energy (CTRA): Repurchases are set to be a bigger focus for the company this year . After spending more than $1.2 billion on stock buybacks in 2022, Coterra’s board approved a $2 billion buyback authorization last week. The company’s capital return priorities also will emphasize buybacks over its variable dividend, CEO Tom Jorden said on Coterra’s earnings call Thursday. Costco: In January, the wholesale retailer’s board reauthorized a $4 billion stock repurchase program , which is set to expire in four years. However, we don’t expect them to aggressively buy back stock because history indicates they prefer to use excess cash to issue special dividends. Wells Fargo (WFC): After buying back roughly $6 billion worth of shares in the first quarter of 2022 , the bank stopped doing buybacks in the final nine months of the year. However, management said on the firm’s fourth-quarter earnings call it intended to resume repurchases in the current quarter . Starbucks (SBUX): The coffee chain recently restarted its buyback activity, following a roughly two-quarter pause after Howard Schultz took over as interim CEO last spring. Schultz instead upped the company’s investment in its stores and employees. Repurchases returned in Starbucks’ fiscal 2023 first quarter totaled $191.4 million. The company has said it expects to return $20 billion to shareholders by the end of fiscal 2025 through dividends and buybacks. Haliburton (HAL): The oilfield services giant resumed share repurchases in the fourth quarter of 2022 , buying up $250 million worth of stock. It was the company’s first major buyback activity since the first quarter of 2020, following a multiyear commitment to reduce debt levels. Haliburton also recently committed to a framework that will see them return at least 50% of free cash flow to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. Salesforce: The enterprise software maker’s first-ever buyback program commenced in the quarter ended Oct. 31, during which the company repurchased $1.7 billion worth of stock to minimize dilution. It’s part of a $10 billion buyback authorization issued by Salesforce’s board last August. Bottom line Buffett’s buyback commentary hits the nail on the head. As the chart makes clear, the vast majority of Club holdings engage in some level of stock repurchases, which is good news for shareholders. We’re big proponents of wisely-executed buybacks, allowing us to have a bigger piece of our companies’ earnings than we otherwise would absent the repurchase activity. (See here for a full list of the stocks in Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.
The logo of Meta Platforms is seen in Davos, Switzerland, May 22, 2022.
Royal Enfield’s new electric motorcycle brand, Flying Flea, just pulled the wraps off its second model – the scrambler-inspired FF.S6 – at EICMA 2025, and it’s an agile, tech-packed machine that brings serious trail-ready vibes to city streets.
Inspired by the iconic 1940s Flying Flea motorcycle (which was literally parachuted into battle, hence the logo), the FF.S6 is a modern reimagining with off-road chops and futuristic tech. Royan Enfield assures us that this is a far cry from an average urban electric motorcycle. Instead, it’s a lightweight, connected, and capable machine that blends classic scrambler style with serious smart features.
Built on a lightweight frame with staggered 19-inch front and 18-inch rear wheels, a USD front fork, and chain final drive, the FF.S6 is ready for both tight urban corners and loose gravel backroads. A high-torque electric motor paired with a magnesium finned battery case keeps weight low while enhancing cooling, and the long enduro-style seat offers comfort for longer rides.
Tech-wise, the FF.S6 goes way beyond what you’d expect from a typical commuter. A circular high-res touchscreen display nods to the original Flying Flea while delivering fully connected features, including lean-angle sensing ABS, traction control, off-road mode, and built-in navigation. Voice Assist lets riders launch music or maps hands-free through their phone, and OTA updates ensure the bike gets smarter over time.
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The system is powered by a Snapdragon QWM2290 processor, the same class of chip you’d find in advanced smartphones. Riders can use a smartwatch or phone app to manage everything from keyless start to charging status and diagnostics.
Production of the FF.S6 is expected to begin by the end of 2026.
Electrek’s Take
Sure, this is largely just an experiment in applying some mods to the same motorcycle prototype that Royal Enfield showed us last year, but it’s a cool-looking example of it! And while we’re still waiting to see what these bikes will cost (not to mention a few more hard and fast tech specs), I’m glad to see that Royal Enfield’s Flying Flea team is jumping in with bold design and bleeding-edge software. The FF.S6 looks like a scrambler but thinks like a smartphone and rides like an urban bike – likely. And for a new wave of connected urban riders, that might be the perfect combination.
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A turbine blade is lifted onto a rack near tower sections at the Revolution Wind project assembly site at State Pier in New London, Connecticut, US, on Friday, Oct. 24, 2025.
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Danish renewables giant Orsted on Wednesday reported a quarterly net loss as the beleaguered company continues to battle U.S. President Donald Trump’s anti-wind policies.
The world’s biggest offshore wind farm group posted a net loss of 1.7 billion Danish kroner ($261.8 million) for the July-September period. The result, which was slightly better than analysts feared, was significantly down from profit of 5.17 billion Danish kroner in the same period last year.
The company, however, reiterated its full-year earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) guidance of 24-27 billion Danish kroner, excluding earnings from new partnerships and cancellation fees.
It comes shortly after the company announced it had reached a deal to sell a 50% stake in its Hornsea 3 offshore wind farm in the U.K. to Apollo Global Management in a deal worth $6 billion.
“I’m satisfied with the good progress across our entire construction portfolio and our solid operational performance,” Orsted CEO Rasmus Errboe said in a statement.
“Our key focus is to continue delivering on our business plan, which will enable Ørsted to remain a global leader of offshore wind with a strong foothold in Europe,” he added.
Shares of Orsted were 1.2% higher on Wednesday morning. The stock price has fallen sharply this year amid concerted efforts from the White House to halt several ongoing developments and suspend new licensing.
The firm on Wednesday said that operating profit came in at 416 million euros ($477.8 million) for the July-September period, above expectations of 305 million euros estimated by analysts in a company-compiled consensus.
Shares of Vestas jumped more than 14% on the news, soaring to the top of the pan-European Stoxx 600 index, as investors welcomed signs of a successful turnaround following years of losses.
Asked about some of the headwinds facing the wind industry, notably from the Trump administration, Vestas CEO Henrik Andersen said the company has a “well-established” supply chain in the U.S.
“For us, we see the U.S., both customers and the buildout in the U.S., as some of our core responsibility to help the U.S. with,” Andersen told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Wednesday.
“Then sometimes maybe we have to get a bit of a slap that it is not everyone that likes the nature of a wind turbine. But I think, in general, … energy drives decision making and [the] cost of energy drives decision making,” he added.
Earlier this year, we covered the unveiling of the NIUMM, an electric microcar designed for urban residents (and especially those with a NIU scooter already, since it shares the same batteries). Now the company is actually bringing it to market.
The electric microcar was on display at EICMA 2025, the Milan Motorcycle Show, where NIU showed off how it shares the same drivetrain as its NQi-series scooters.
The small format L6e quadricycle uses a pair of NQi batteries – the same ones from NIU’s scooters – to power the little not-a-car up to around 70 km (43 miles) at speeds of up to 45 km/h (28 mph). That’s the maximum allowable speed for the L6e class.
For anyone who already owns the scooter, those two batteries may be sufficient. But the range can be nearly doubled by carrying a second pair of batteries in the convenient extra battery slots built into the vehicle.
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When the NIUMM was originally launched, it wasn’t yet clear if it was actually headed for production, or at least when that may be. But NIU’s Director of International, Sieghart Michielsen, explained that the vehicle is finishing homologation testing now, marking the last major obstacle to its commercial launch.
L6e quadricycles have carved out a unique and growing niche in European cities, where their compact size, low speed, and lightweight classification make them ideal for navigating dense urban environments. These light four-wheeled vehicles are limited to a top speed of 45 km/h (28 mph) and a maximum weight of 425 kg (excluding batteries), allowing them to be driven with a moped license in many countries.
That accessibility, combined with their affordability and electric drivetrains, has made L6e quadricycles especially popular among teenagers, city dwellers, and older adults looking for an easy-to-use alternative to cars.
One of the most iconic examples is the Citroen Ami, a no-frills, ultra-compact electric vehicle that has gained cult status in urban areas thanks to its minimalist design, €7,000 price tag, and availability through subscription or car-sharing services. My wife and I spent a week living with a Citroen Ami while on vacation in Greece, and it proved to be a fascinating way to navigate around.
Other standout L6e models like the Renault Twizy, the Microlino, and the Eli Zero, have helped demonstrate real demand for niche, small vehicles. These vehicles offer just enough comfort and protection from the elements for short city trips, while avoiding the cost, complexity, and parking headaches of full-size cars –making them an increasingly attractive option in Europe’s car-light future.
NIU could leverage the growing momentum for these types of vehicles if it can stick the landing with the NIUMM. While we still don’t have solid pricing or availability timelines yet, it looks like we’re looking at sooner rather than later.
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