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Taylor Morrison Jumps After Berkshire Buys Stake in $8.5 Billion Deal
1 June 2026
2 mins read

Taylor Morrison Jumps After Berkshire Buys Stake in $8.5 Billion Deal

New York, June 1, 2026, 09:06 EDT

  • Berkshire Hathaway is buying Taylor Morrison for $72.50 per share in cash, a deal that puts a 24% premium on the company’s last close.
  • Taylor Morrison is valued at around $6.8 billion in equity from the deal, or $8.5 billion with debt.
  • Shares moved higher in premarket trading ahead of the NYSE open, with investors factoring in the takeover.

Berkshire Hathaway is buying Taylor Morrison Home Corp. for $72.50 a share in cash, sending Taylor Morrison shares higher on Monday. The deal values the Scottsdale, Arizona-based builder at about $6.8 billion in equity, or $8.5 billion including debt and stock. The agreement comes as the housing market continues to deal with high mortgage rates.

Berkshire is jumping into homebuilding right after data showed April new U.S. home sales dropped, and ahead of the NYSE open on Monday. Taylor Morrison last traded at $58.50 on May 29. Reuters said the stock jumped 22% in premarket after word of the deal.

Berkshire’s deal is Greg Abel’s first major buy since he took over as CEO at the beginning of 2026, though Warren Buffett stays on as chairman. The purchase adds to Berkshire’s housing bets, folding in with Clayton Homes plus its building-products names like Acme Brick, Benjamin Moore, and Johns Manville.

The board at Taylor Morrison signed off on the merger agreement, according to a filing. The transaction still requires a green light from Taylor Morrison shareholders and regulators, including U.S. antitrust scrutiny, and could wrap up in the second half of 2026. Once done, Taylor Morrison would go private and exit the NYSE.

Taylor Morrison chairman and CEO Sheryl Palmer said Berkshire’s long-term strategy was “uniquely well-suited to the multi-year investment cycle of homebuilding.” Greg Abel called Taylor Morrison a “best-in-class national homebuilder” and said Berkshire looks to create a “combined platform” for its site-built home business. SEC

The buyer is taking on higher costs in a market where builders are relying on incentives, rate buydowns and price cuts to drive sales. Freddie Mac said the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate rose to 6.53% as of May 28 from 6.51% the week before. That rate is still a drag on affordability.

U.S. new single-family home sales dropped 6.2% in April to a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 622,000 units, and are now off 11.3% from last year. Builders’ supply climbed to 9.4 months, showing inventory is still high.

Competitive signals aren’t clear. Taylor Morrison is one of the biggest U.S. homebuilders, but D.R. Horton and Lennar are still larger names in public markets. Berkshire’s bid could push investors to reconsider if scale, land holdings and lending units should trade higher inside a big parent.

RBC Research analyst Mike Dahl told Reuters the deal “adds further fuel” to homebuilder consolidation and flagged it as notable with Berkshire in the mix, and after other public-builder offers earlier this year. His take put the move into a wider market lens: more than just one stock—possibly a test of how private or strategic buyers might value homebuilders while public investors stay cautious. Reuters

Builder sentiment picked up a bit in May. The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index moved up to 37 from 34 in April. A score under 50 means most builders rate conditions as bad rather than good. Trading Economics, using NAHB data, said 32% of builders lowered prices in May. Buyer traffic stayed soft.

Taylor Morrison’s “clean cash” headline still faces hurdles. The merger filing says the deal could be held up or fall apart if required approvals don’t come through, if lawsuits are filed, or if Taylor Morrison gets hit with business disruption before closing. The filing also says shares could drop if the acquisition doesn’t go through. If Taylor Morrison walks for a better offer or under some other conditions, it would owe Berkshire a $221.6 million breakup fee. SEC

Taylor Morrison is trading more like a merger spread than a typical homebuilder right now. Investors are watching not just mortgage rates but whether Berkshire will finish the deal close to the $72.50 cash offer.

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the founder and CEO of TS2 Space, a satellite communications company serving customers around the world. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he has more than two decades of experience in telecommunications, satellite services and technology ventures. He writes about satellite communications, space technology, artificial intelligence and the stock market, with a particular focus on technology companies, semiconductors, emerging industries and the trends shaping global innovation.

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