Key Highlights
- Warren Buffett’s conglomerate is purchasing a 2.5% position in Tokio Marine Holdings through National Indemnity for $1.8 billion.
- Approximately 48 million treasury shares will be transferred directly from the Japanese insurance giant.
- A reinsurance collaboration allows National Indemnity to participate in Tokio Marine’s risk portfolio.
- The agreement restricts Berkshire from exceeding 9.9% ownership without board consent.
- Share repurchases funded by the transaction will offset potential dilution for current investors.
Warren Buffett’s investment powerhouse continues expanding its Japanese footprint through a significant new insurance partnership. Berkshire Hathaway has unveiled plans to purchase a 2.5% ownership position in Tokio Marine Holdings, valued at approximately $1.8 billion, creating a strategic alliance with Japan’s premier insurance provider.
Berkshire Hathaway will invest $1.8 billion in insurer Tokio Marine, marking a significant increase in the US conglomerate’s exposure to the Japanese market https://t.co/LD64sJrwZq
— Bloomberg (@business) March 23, 2026
National Indemnity, Berkshire’s reinsurance subsidiary, will execute the transaction by acquiring roughly 48 million treasury shares in a direct transfer from Tokio Marine, bypassing traditional market channels.
Beyond the equity investment, both parties have established a reinsurance arrangement. National Indemnity gains entry to Tokio Marine’s reinsurance panel and will assume responsibility for a segment of its risk portfolio under a quota share structure.
Berkshire Hathaway Inc., BRK-B
According to Tokio Marine, the collaboration aims to stabilize earnings fluctuations, especially those stemming from natural disaster exposures. The alliance seeks to leverage Tokio Marine’s acquisition expertise alongside Berkshire’s formidable financial resources.
Tokio Marine shares currently trade near 5,800 yen on Japanese exchanges. With a market capitalization approaching $70 billion, the company maintains U.S. trading presence through the TKOMY ticker symbol.
Buffett Amplifies Japanese Investment Thesis
This transaction represents a significant evolution in Berkshire’s Japan investment strategy. The Nebraska-based conglomerate currently maintains approximately 10% positions across five prominent Japanese trading corporations — including Mitsubishi, Itochu, and Mitsui — collectively valued near $35 billion as of early 2025.
Berkshire initiated its trading house investments in July 2019. Buffett has consistently highlighted these companies’ disciplined capital deployment and shareholder-friendly policies. The Tokio Marine investment extends this philosophy into Japan’s insurance industry.
Ajit Jain, who oversees Berkshire’s insurance divisions as vice chairman, stated both organizations anticipate the arrangement will create “compelling long-term opportunities.” Tokio Marine’s chief executive, Masahiro Koike, characterized the partnership as a “major step forward” toward sustained value creation.
Strategic Restrictions Govern Partnership
The agreement includes specific ownership limitations. Berkshire has committed to maintaining its stake below 9.9% unless it receives explicit authorization from Tokio Marine’s board of directors.
Any future stake increases beyond the initial 2.5% acquisition must occur through public market transactions rather than additional direct share purchases from the company.
National Indemnity has further agreed to align its voting decisions with Tokio Marine’s management recommendations — a provision that preserves significant governance influence for the Japanese insurer.
To mitigate shareholder dilution concerns, Tokio Marine intends to allocate transaction proceeds toward share repurchase initiatives.
Tokio Marine has accumulated substantial capital reserves following the Japanese government’s initiative encouraging the unwinding of cross-shareholding arrangements — a longstanding practice where insurers and corporations maintain reciprocal equity positions. CEO Koike indicated late last year that approximately $10 billion from these divestitures awaited deployment into acquisitions and strategic growth opportunities.
The Berkshire arrangement provides access to a financially robust partner to execute that capital allocation strategy.
