Sign in
Edition of 20:00 CETFriday, July 3, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages81 briefings today
Economy & MarketsTuesday, June 30, 2026

Buffett Halts Midyear Gates Foundation Donation for First Time in 20 Years Amid Epstein Review

The billionaire investor awaits an external probe into the foundation’s historical ties to Jeffrey Epstein, as a generational shift in philanthropy challenges traditional giving models.

Warren Buffett has suspended his customary midyear donation to the Gates Foundation, breaking a two-decade pattern of transferring billions of dollars in Berkshire Hathaway shares each June or early July. The pause, reported by US financial media and confirmed by sources close to the investor, leaves the foundation’s annual funding cycle in limbo and marks a tangible rupture in one of the world’s most consequential philanthropic partnerships.

The decision is directly tied to the foundation’s ongoing external review of its historical engagement with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The Gates Foundation commissioned law firm WilmerHale in March to assess past interactions and current vetting policies, following the US Department of Justice’s release of Epstein-related files. Those documents, which included flight logs and contact records, have placed Bill Gates’s relationship with Epstein under renewed scrutiny. Buffett, who has not spoken with Gates since the files became public, is withholding his annual contribution—totalling roughly $48 billion since 2006—until the review’s findings are known. The foundation has stated that a small number of employees once explored a potential funding collaboration with Epstein, but that no partnership materialised and no payments were made.

The pause unfolds against a backdrop of shifting philanthropic norms. While the Giving Pledge, co-founded by Buffett and Gates, has long encouraged billionaires to commit their fortunes to charity, younger heirs are increasingly steering family wealth toward impact investing, advocacy, and systemic change rather than traditional grant-making. Katherine Lorenz, who leads the pledge’s Next Gen group, notes that many in the rising generation are urging parents to distribute wealth faster and to address root causes of inequality. MacKenzie Scott’s trust-based, unrestricted giving is cited as an exemplar of this approach. This generational pivot, combined with the Epstein-linked reputational strain, is reshaping expectations around how and when vast fortunes are deployed.

Buffett has indicated he may postpone his giving decision until his annual Thanksgiving letter, while the WilmerHale review is expected to conclude this summer. The foundation’s leadership, including CEO Mark Suzman, has been in direct communication with Buffett’s circle. The outcome will not affect Buffett’s other philanthropic commitments, including foundations run by his children, but it could redefine the Gates Foundation’s access to one of its largest benefactors at a moment when Millennial and Gen X heirs are projected to inherit $124 trillion by 2048, further concentrating influence over philanthropic capital.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

0%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressIndian & South Asian press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Economic
PragmatismSkepticism

Buffett's delayed donation to the Gates Foundation is part of a broader generational wealth transfer, with younger heirs showing little loyalty to traditional advisers and pushing for more impact-driven philanthropy. The pause pending the Epstein investigation reflects a growing demand for accountability and transparency.

Indian & South Asian press
SkepticismPragmatism

Buffett's pause breaks a 20-year tradition and aligns with a generational shift in philanthropy, as billionaires' children favor impact investing and advocacy over traditional donations. The Epstein probe adds urgency to this redefinition of priorities.

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
A Private Concert, a Global Stage: Justin Bieber and the World Cup Halftime Show·Oil’s Slide Fans Inflation Worries, Reshaping Rate Expectations·NATO Ankara Summit to Pledge €140bn Ukraine Aid as Allies Seek to Defuse Trump Tensions·Record Tax Receipts in Tokyo and Brasília Contrast with Mounting Fiscal Strain in Berlin and Cairo·Pope Leo XIV, Receiving Liberty Medal, Calls on US to Reclaim Immigrant Heritage·India Clears $6.3bn Arms Package as Japan Ties Prompt Beijing Warning·NYC Mayor Mamdani Redefines American Exceptionalism in Implicit Rebuke of Trump·Balogun’s red card triggers US diplomatic protest but FIFA confirms one-match ban·A Private Concert, a Global Stage: Justin Bieber and the World Cup Halftime Show·Oil’s Slide Fans Inflation Worries, Reshaping Rate Expectations·NATO Ankara Summit to Pledge €140bn Ukraine Aid as Allies Seek to Defuse Trump Tensions·Record Tax Receipts in Tokyo and Brasília Contrast with Mounting Fiscal Strain in Berlin and Cairo·Pope Leo XIV, Receiving Liberty Medal, Calls on US to Reclaim Immigrant Heritage·India Clears $6.3bn Arms Package as Japan Ties Prompt Beijing Warning·NYC Mayor Mamdani Redefines American Exceptionalism in Implicit Rebuke of Trump·Balogun’s red card triggers US diplomatic protest but FIFA confirms one-match ban·
Upd. 02:59 PM1 language · 3 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
3 outlets|1 language|2 min read
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Buffett Halts Midyear Gates Foundation Donation for First Time in 20 Years Amid Epstein Review

The billionaire investor awaits an external probe into the foundation’s historical ties to Jeffrey Epstein, as a generational shift in philanthropy challenges traditional giving models.

Warren Buffett has suspended his customary midyear donation to the Gates Foundation, breaking a two-decade pattern of transferring billions of dollars in Berkshire Hathaway shares each June or early July. The pause, reported by US financial media and confirmed by sources close to the investor, leaves the foundation’s annual funding cycle in limbo and marks a tangible rupture in one of the world’s most consequential philanthropic partnerships.

The decision is directly tied to the foundation’s ongoing external review of its historical engagement with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The Gates Foundation commissioned law firm WilmerHale in March to assess past interactions and current vetting policies, following the US Department of Justice’s release of Epstein-related files. Those documents, which included flight logs and contact records, have placed Bill Gates’s relationship with Epstein under renewed scrutiny. Buffett, who has not spoken with Gates since the files became public, is withholding his annual contribution—totalling roughly $48 billion since 2006—until the review’s findings are known. The foundation has stated that a small number of employees once explored a potential funding collaboration with Epstein, but that no partnership materialised and no payments were made.

The pause unfolds against a backdrop of shifting philanthropic norms. While the Giving Pledge, co-founded by Buffett and Gates, has long encouraged billionaires to commit their fortunes to charity, younger heirs are increasingly steering family wealth toward impact investing, advocacy, and systemic change rather than traditional grant-making. Katherine Lorenz, who leads the pledge’s Next Gen group, notes that many in the rising generation are urging parents to distribute wealth faster and to address root causes of inequality. MacKenzie Scott’s trust-based, unrestricted giving is cited as an exemplar of this approach. This generational pivot, combined with the Epstein-linked reputational strain, is reshaping expectations around how and when vast fortunes are deployed.

Buffett has indicated he may postpone his giving decision until his annual Thanksgiving letter, while the WilmerHale review is expected to conclude this summer. The foundation’s leadership, including CEO Mark Suzman, has been in direct communication with Buffett’s circle. The outcome will not affect Buffett’s other philanthropic commitments, including foundations run by his children, but it could redefine the Gates Foundation’s access to one of its largest benefactors at a moment when Millennial and Gen X heirs are projected to inherit $124 trillion by 2048, further concentrating influence over philanthropic capital.

Source divergence

Economy & Markets · 3 outlets · 1 language

0%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral100%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressIndian & South Asian press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Economic
PragmatismSkepticism

Buffett's delayed donation to the Gates Foundation is part of a broader generational wealth transfer, with younger heirs showing little loyalty to traditional advisers and pushing for more impact-driven philanthropy. The pause pending the Epstein investigation reflects a growing demand for accountability and transparency.

Indian & South Asian press
SkepticismPragmatism

Buffett's pause breaks a 20-year tradition and aligns with a generational shift in philanthropy, as billionaires' children favor impact investing and advocacy over traditional donations. The Epstein probe adds urgency to this redefinition of priorities.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 1 language

Broaden your view

From Geopolitics & Politics

Trump Debuts Qatar-Gifted Air Force One Amid Bipartisan Ethics Scrutiny

10 languages · 26 outlets

From Technology

India freezes WhatsApp username rollout, extends scrutiny to Telegram and Signal

4 languages · 16 outlets

From Science & Health

Sleep Duration and Cholesterol Control Emerge as Twin Pillars of Healthy Ageing

4 languages · 6 outlets

Read more