Stakes approximate based on latest filings.
Snowflake's ownership structure is conventional but its investor register contains two remarkable entries. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway bought $735 million in Snowflake shares at the IPO price in September 2020. Buffett has consistently said he does not invest in technology companies he does not understand and does not approve IPO allocations. Berkshire's investment therefore raised immediate questions about whether it was approved by Buffett personally or by investment manager Todd Combs or Ted Weschler. The investment has been attributed to Combs. Salesforce Ventures buying at the Snowflake IPO was also unusual given Salesforce's competitive interest in enterprise data platforms. Both stakes represent minority financial positions rather than governance influence.
Vanguard at 8.3% and BlackRock at 6.7% are passive. T. Rowe Price at 2.2% is a long-term growth investor. Berkshire Hathaway's 1.2% and Salesforce Ventures' 1.4% are small enough to be financially irrelevant but are signal stakes. Salesforce's Slack and Data Cloud products compete with Snowflake's data sharing marketplace in certain use cases. Berkshire's stake has not generated the activist pressure or strategic alignment that one might expect from a Buffett investment: it appears to be a conventional financial position rather than a strategic one. The board transition in 2024 from Slootman to Ramaswamy was the most significant governance event in Snowflake's post-IPO history.
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Snowflake's brand architecture is platform-centric. The Snowflake Data Cloud is the product and brand umbrella. Cortex AI and Snowflake Intelligence are the AI capability brands being added to the platform. Snowflake Marketplace is the data sharing network. Snowpark is the developer tool brand. The core Snowflake brand has been strengthened by consistent positioning as the neutral, multi-cloud alternative to hyperscaler data warehouses: a customer can run Snowflake on AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud simultaneously with a unified data experience, which single-cloud products cannot match. That multi-cloud positioning is the primary brand differentiation and the reason major enterprises choose Snowflake over native cloud data warehouse options.
Bubble size reflects relative market share.
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Snowflake faces existential competitive pressure from Databricks, which has grown from a data engineering platform to a full AI data platform competitor with over $2 billion in annual revenue. Databricks' open-source Apache Spark and Delta Lake technology created a developer community that competes with Snowflake's SQL-first approach. The competitive dynamic has shifted toward AI: both Snowflake and Databricks are building AI inference capabilities on top of their data platforms. Snowflake's multi-cloud architecture is a genuine differentiation from Google BigQuery and Amazon Redshift, which are single-cloud products. The question is whether AI capability or architectural flexibility will be the primary selection criterion for enterprise buyers over the next five years.
Bubble size reflects relative deal value.
| Company Acquired | Deal Value | Year | Description |
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Snowflake's acquisitions have been focused on developer experience and AI capability. The Streamlit acquisition in 2022 for $800 million was the most significant completed deal: Streamlit is an open-source Python framework for building data applications, and its 1 million monthly users represented a developer community Snowflake wanted to bring onto its platform. The Neeva acquisition in 2023 brought Sridhar Ramaswamy and an AI search team into Snowflake, where the technology was integrated into Cortex AI. Palantir has not made acquisitions; Snowflake has made targeted ones. Neither company has pursued transformative M&A, reflecting different but both deliberate organic-first strategies.
Snowflake's September 2020 IPO was the largest software IPO in history at the time, raising $3.36 billion. The decision to list on NYSE as a traditional IPO rather than via direct listing like Palantir, which listed the same month, was Frank Slootman's preference. The IPO price was set at $120 per share; the stock opened at $245 and rose to $320 on the first day of trading. Berkshire Hathaway's $735 million prearranged purchase at the IPO price proved prescient: Snowflake's first-day price gain meant the Berkshire stake appreciated over $1 billion on day one. The CEO transition from Slootman to Ramaswamy in 2024 was managed without financial disruption but represented a fundamental shift in the company's operational leadership profile.
Snowflake was founded in 2012 by Benoit Dageville, Thierry Cruanes, and Marcin Zukowski, all of whom had worked at Oracle or similar database companies. Their founding insight was that cloud computing had fundamentally changed what a data warehouse could be: instead of sizing for peak load and operating expensive hardware, enterprises could use cloud infrastructure to scale instantly and pay only for what they use. The Snowflake architecture, which separates storage from compute, was novel in 2012 and has since become the standard approach for cloud data warehousing. Frank Slootman joined in 2019 and transformed the company from a technically excellent startup into an enterprise sales machine, growing revenue from under $100 million to over $2 billion during his tenure. Ramaswamy's appointment in 2024 signalled the next chapter: AI-first data intelligence rather than data warehousing scale.
Snowflake Inc. is a publicly traded cloud data platform company. Its founders Benoit Dageville, Thierry Cruanes, and Marcin Zukowski do not retain significant equity positions. Sridhar Ramaswamy, who became CEO in February 2024 after Frank Slootman stepped down, holds approximately 0.2% of outstanding shares. The institutional ownership structure is conventional: Vanguard at 8.3% and BlackRock at 6.7% are the two largest holders. Two unusual strategic shareholders exist: Berkshire Hathaway, which bought $735 million in Snowflake shares at the IPO price in 2020 in a prearranged purchase, and Salesforce Ventures, which also bought at IPO. Both investments were unusual given Berkshire's aversion to technology and Salesforce's competitive interest in the data platform space.
Snowflake's dispersed institutional ownership with no founder control means the CEO is fully accountable to the board and through the board to institutional shareholders. The CEO transition in 2024, from Frank Slootman who led the IPO and subsequent growth phase to Sridhar Ramaswamy, was a consequential governance decision made by the board. Ramaswamy, who founded and sold Neeva to Snowflake, is an unusual CEO choice: he comes from the AI side of the business rather than the enterprise sales and go-to-market background that Slootman brought. The board's choice signals a belief that AI execution is the next competitive battleground for Snowflake, which is a reasonable assessment given the AI data platform competition intensifying from Databricks.