Try GOLD - Free
Replacing Buffett's insurance mastermind is Berkshire's next succession mystery
Mint New Delhi
|June 03, 2025
Now that Warren Buffett has said Greg Abel will succeed him as Berkshire Hathaway's CEO at year-end, Berkshire watchers are turning their attention to a different succession mystery: Who will fill Ajit Jain's shoes?
For nearly four decades, Jain has been the brains behind Berkshire's insurance powerhouse. Its profits have helped Buffett expand his conglomerate and seed his stock portfolio. A risk-pricing mastermind, Jain has crafted policies insuring Chicago's tallest building against terrorist attacks, Pepsi against having to award a $1 billion raffle prize, and baseball teams in the event that star players such as Alex Rodriguez got hurt. Along the way, he has made Berkshire billions of dollars.
"Even kryptonite bounces off Ajit," Buffett once wrote. But Berkshire's man of steel (and statutory accounting) is now 73, and last year Jain said he gave Berkshire's board a shortlist of possible successors. Whoever follows Jain will inherit a business in transition. New competitors are moving in. Berkshire's biggest insurance moneymaker in recent years has been auto coverage. Buffett and Jain declined to comment for this article, and Berkshire hasn't disclosed the names on Jain's list. But insurance-industry insiders have some ideas.
Joe Brandon, CEO of Alleghany
Brandon, 66, is on his second stint at Berkshire after the company's 2022 purchase of Alleghany, a Berkshire-like conglomerate whose business spans insurance, steel fabrication and Squishmallow plush toys. He "understands both Berkshire and insurance," Buffett said at the time of the purchase. Brandon also spent seven years running General Re, one of Berkshire's major providers of reinsurance, or insurance for insurance companies. He resigned in 2008 after federal prosecutors pressured Buffett to let him go following fraud convictions of four other former Gen Re executives. Brandon was never charged.
Todd Combs, CEO of Geico
This story is from the June 03, 2025 edition of Mint New Delhi.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi
What do festive sales say about e-commerce?
E-commerce slowed in India in 2024, and was tepid in the first half of 2025. While festive sales usually buoyed e-commerce each year, the last two years have been muted. Will it be different this season?
2 mins
September 29, 2025
Mint New Delhi
America's drug daze
Only a sliver of India's pharmaceutical exports to the US, placed at roughly $10.5 billion in 2024-25, appears to face the 100% tariff hurdle likely to be erected this week by American President Donald Trump.
1 min
September 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi
H-1B row, tariffs, FPI exit may sting rupee
Trump hit on remittances, exports; FPI selloff adds to pressure
2 mins
September 29, 2025
Mint New Delhi
REPO RATE CUTS ARE LOST IN TRANSMISSION
Since February, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has lowered the repo rate by 100 basis points.
3 mins
September 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi
Fabindia sued by subsidiary founders over exit clause
The co-founders of Fabindia Ltd's personal care subsidiary, Biome Life Sciences India Pvt. Ltd, have sued the apparel retailer in the Delhi high court, seeking to enforce an exit clause they say value their shares at ₹196.16 crore.
3 mins
September 29, 2025

Mint New Delhi
US senators mount scrutiny on IT cos
Even as US president Donald Trump's steep hike in H-1B visa fee threatens to hit Indian software services providers, US lawmakers and agencies have separately intensified scrutiny of the offshoring sector.
3 mins
September 29, 2025
Mint New Delhi
A plan to hunt down digital arrest crooks takes shape
To crack down on surging online financial frauds such as 'digital arrests', a parliamentary panel has recommended that banks use government-issued IDs to trace, freeze and blacklist mule accounts siphoning crores of rupees. Experts call it a crucial first step, but banks warn implementation will be difficult.
3 mins
September 26, 2025
Mint New Delhi
Why this is the toughest test yet for Indian shrimp
As if the 50% tariff imposed by the US was not debilitating enough, Indian shrimp exporters are staring at an additional anti-dumping duty of as much as 40%. How will this impact exporters and the 16 million people dependent on the seafood sector? Mint explains:
2 mins
September 26, 2025

Mint New Delhi
HI-B crisis sparks legal scramble for new HR solutions
Law firms and corporations are racing to tackle the human resources impact of the vexed H-1B matter, after US President Donald Trump's latest immigration crackdown threw India's $283 billion IT sector into turmoil.
3 mins
September 26, 2025
Mint New Delhi
CAFE-3 pitches big relief for small cars
Lower fleet-wise emissions for small cars in latest BEE draft
4 mins
September 26, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size