The Best Warren Buffett Stocks to Buy With $1,000 Right Now

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Got an extra $1,000 you're looking to park in an investment worth owning for a while? That's easier said than done right now. Although the market isn't exactly dangerous at this time, stocks are relatively expensive, given the degree of economic uncertainty ahead.

Nevertheless, a handful of tickers are not only still worth owning here but also worth buying at their current prices. If you need help finding some of these names, just start with the stocks Warren Buffett is holding, if not buying more of.

To this end, here's a closer look at three stocks currently found in Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) portfolio that would likely be at home in your portfolio, too.

Sirius XM Holdings

It's not entirely clear what Buffett himself sees in Sirius XM Holdings (NASDAQ: SIRI), but he clearly sees something. Berkshire's 110 million-share stake in the company is one-third of Sirius itself, thanks to the purchase of another $42 million worth of the stock just within the past few days.

Of course, Sirius XM is North America's one and only satellite radio service, although the company is more than that. In addition to web-accessible access to its satellite-delivered programming, Sirius owns the internet radio platform Pandora. Roughly three-fourths of its revenue comes from subscription fees, and most of the rest comes from advertising.

It's a business model that's being increasingly questioned, and understandably so. There's a virtual universe of audio entertainment available online, and Pew Research reports that 90% of adults living in the United States own a smartphone -- they have their own web-connected entertainment device with them at all times, in and out of a vehicle.

Consumers arguably don't need satellite radio anymore. In this vein, the company's subscriber base has dwindled from its late-2022 peak of nearly 32.4 million to just under 31.5 million paying customers as of the middle of this year. It's not catastrophic, but it is a concern.

This attrition may also have run its full course, however, and is set to reverse direction. Sirius is still adding new podcasts, overhauling its pricing plans, and -- thanks to the introduction of an advertising-sales technology (Trade Desk's Unified ID 2.0, to be specific) -- is well positioned to grow the advertising aspect of its business, which will ultimately make its programming cheaper (or even free) to tune in to. This will also create and free up funds to do more marketing.

Of course, Sirius XM stock's forward-looking dividend yield of 4% isn't too shabby either.