When Warren Buffett builds a position in a company, Wall Street pays attention. His firm, Berkshire Hathaway, doesn’t typically accumulate an 8.3% stake in a business unless it believes deeply in what that company does and where it’s headed.
That’s what made Berkshire’s investment in Pool Corp so noteworthy and the exit equally striking.
Berkshire quietly unwound its entire position in Pool (POOL) during the first quarter of 2026.
The stake, which had been worth roughly $650 million, is now gone. And the stock itself tells a painful story: it’s sitting nearly 70% below its all-time highs.
Why did Warren Buffett invest in Pool stock?
Pool is the world’s largest wholesale distributor of swimming pool supplies, equipment, and related products.
Think of it like the middleman between manufacturers and the roughly 120,000 contractors, retailers, and service companies that keep America’s backyard pools running.
The business model is built around recurring, nondiscretionary spending on pool chemicals, filters, and pumps, which aren’t skipped just because the economy slows.
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The business ticked most boxes for Warren Buffett, given predictable demand, pricing power, and a strong network that’s difficult to replicate.
Pool Corp also pays a dividend, which adds to its appeal for long-term income investors. Down almost 70% from all-time highs, POOL stock currently offers a yield of 2.8%.
New pool construction boomed during the COVID era as Americans poured money into their homes. That surge in demand eventually cooled, and new unit construction by pool builders fell sharply.
According to Pool Corp’s first-quarter 2026 earnings call, new pool units for 2025 totaled 58,000, a fraction of the pandemic-era peak.
Pool posted solid Q1 2026 results
For the first quarter of 2026, the company reported:
President and CEO Peter Arvan pointed to broad-based growth across product categories.
Chemicals grew by 8%, driven in part by strong demand for the company’s private-label brands.
Equipment grew by 7% and building materials were up 5%.
Geographically, California grew 10%, and Texas grew 7%, boosted by favorable weather and strong maintenance demand.
During the earnings call, Arvan stated:
“We are off to a solid start in 2026, with net sales up 6% and operating income growing 7% year-over-year. Maintenance demand remained resilient, and we saw continued, though still gradual, recovery in discretionary categories.”
