Ron Baron bought Charles Schwab shares during Monday’s double-digit sell-off

Investing

In this article

Ron Baron, founder of Baron Capital
Anjali Sundaram | CNBC

Longtime investor Ron Baron said he bought the dip in Charles Schwab during Monday’s double-digit sell-off, CNBC’s Becky Quick reported.

The 79-year-old investor said he “modestly increased” his position in the financial name, seeing Monday’s pullback as a buying opportunity. He didn’t disclose how much he purchased. Baron Capital owned 7.8 million shares as of Dec. 31.

The stock jumped 13% in premarket trading Tuesday.

Schwab shares fell 11.6% on Monday as investors dumped the financial institution amid fears of a banking crisis in the aftermath of the collapses of tech-focused Silicon Valley Bank and crypto-related Signature Bank.

The Westlake, Texas-based financial company defended its financial position, saying it has plenty of access to liquidity and a low loan-to-deposit ratio. Schwab was taking hits along with other financial firms with massive bond holdings of longer maturities.

Articles You May Like

On LinkedIn, 220 million people are ‘open to work.’ Recruiters weigh in if the feature helps or hurts job seekers
Ray Dalio says cutting budget deficit is crucial to stabilize the bond market
BlackRock’s Fink sees potential risks and says the bond market will tell us where we are going
EA shares drop 7% after company lowers guidance due to weakness in soccer, other games
This free tax filing option is ‘fast and simple,’ IRS says. Here’s who can use it

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *