David Rolfe · Warren Buffett
what they both own
Both David Rolfe (Wedgewood Partners) and Warren Buffett (Berkshire Hathaway) hold 3 of the same stocks per their latest 13F filings — a Jaccard overlap of 7.9% across portfolios of 18 and 23 positions. Combined position weight in shared names: 52.6% of each investor's portfolio capacity.
Shared positions, ranked by joint conviction
Joint conviction = David Rolfe's portfolio weight + Warren Buffett's portfolio weight. A stock that both investors size heavily ranks higher than one both hold marginally. Position weight reflects each investor's most recent 13F filing (45-day SEC lag applies; filings can be 1-3 months old).
Compare individually
Data note. Position percentages are derived from each investor's most recent SEC Form 13F filing (45-day lag), filtered to disclosed long positions only. 13F filings exclude short positions, options (mostly), foreign-domiciled holdings, and positions below the reporting threshold. Joint conviction is a descriptive sum, not a recommendation. Per HoldLens compliance: this page is factual portfolio comparison, not investment advice. Always verify against the source filing before acting.
Frequently asked questions
How many stocks do David Rolfe and Warren Buffett both hold?
Both David Rolfe (Wedgewood Partners) and Warren Buffett (Berkshire Hathaway) hold 3 of the same stocks per their latest SEC Form 13F filings — a Jaccard overlap of 7.9% across portfolios of 18 and 23 positions.
What is the biggest shared position between David Rolfe and Warren Buffett?
Highest joint-conviction shared position: AAPL. Joint conviction is the sum of each investor's portfolio weight in the same stock. The complete ranked list (top 25) is in the table below; full data sourced from each fund's latest 13F filing (45-day SEC lag applies).
What is the Jaccard overlap between David Rolfe and Warren Buffett?
7.9% — the Jaccard coefficient between Wedgewood Partners's and Berkshire Hathaway's tracked long positions. Calculated as |A ∩ B| / |A ∪ B| over shared tickers. Higher means more portfolio convergence; 0% means no shared names.
What is "joint conviction" on HoldLens?
Joint conviction is the sum of David Rolfe's and Warren Buffett's respective portfolio weights in a shared stock. 52.6% is the combined weight across all shared names — a descriptive measure of how much portfolio capacity both managers concentrate in overlapping positions, not a recommendation.