Warren Buffett's Most Contrarian Bet: Why He Bought Airlines When Everyone Was Selling
Buffett's $8 billion airline gamble in 2016 defied his own advice — and made him billions before he exited at the perfect moment.

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Buffett's $8 billion airline gamble in 2016 defied his own advice — and made him billions before he exited at the perfect moment.

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In 2016, Warren Buffett did the unthinkable: he invested $8 billion in airlines (AAL, DAL, UAL, LUV) after famously calling the industry a "death trap" for investors. His Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) became the largest shareholder in four major carriers. The move violated his own principle against capital-intensive businesses with thin margins.
Yet by 2019, the position had doubled in value before Buffett sold near the pre-pandemic peak. The lesson? Even strict value investors must adapt when industries transform. Airlines had consolidated from 9 major players in 2000 to just 4 by 2016 — fundamentally changing the economics.
Buffett's edge isn't just buying cheap stocks. It's identifying capital allocation superiority — companies that reinvest cash at high rates like AAPL (27% ROIC) or KO (15% ROIC). His 1988 Coca-Cola investment demonstrates this:
His portfolio construction mirrors private equity: concentrated positions (AAPL is 43% of holdings), long time horizons, and bets on pricing power. Compare this to index funds holding hundreds of mediocre companies.
| Ticker | % of Portfolio | Years Held | Avg Annual Return | ROIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAPL | 43% | 7 | 31% | 27% |
| BAC | 11% | 13 | 14% | 8% |
| KO | 7% | 34 | 12% | 15% |
| AXP | 7% | 30 | 10% | 9% |
| OXY | 4% | 5 | 18% | 6% |
Notice the pattern? Buffett pays premium valuations for elite capital allocators (AAPL, KO) but demands bargains for cyclical plays (OXY bought during 2020 oil crash).
At 2026 valuations, he'd likely focus on:
His recent HPQ purchase at 7x earnings shows he still hunts for traditional value — but only when combined with strong free cash flow (HPQ yields 4%).
Buffett's real genius? Knowing when to break his own rules. See how 6 legendary investors value these stocks — including Buffett's intrinsic price for AAPL.
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AAL ranks #140 of 162 · score 38. These 3 lead the sector: