Warren Buffett Keeps Selling Stocks, Builds Record $381 Billion Cash Stash. Is a Market Crash Imminent?
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Berkshire Hathaway‘s (BRK-A,BRK-B) cash hits a record $381.7 billion as it continues to be a net seller of stock for the 12th straight quarter.
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Berkshire’s operating profit was up 34% in Q3, but revenue growth slowed to 2% amid economic drags.
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As Buffett steps down as CEO and Abel takes over, Berkshire Hathaway’s cash deployment will come into even greater focus.
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Legendary investor Warren Buffett has been steadily unloading stocks at Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK-A)(NYSE:BRK-B) while amassing a massive cash reserve, sparking questions about a potential market crash. If the Oracle of Omaha is selling and stashing cash, should we be buying?
In the third quarter, Berkshire’s cash holdings ballooned to a record $381.7 billion, even as U.S. markets hit new highs. This cautious stance comes as Buffett, now 95, prepares to step down as CEO at year’s end, handing the reins to Greg Abel. But does this really signal an impending market crash? Analysts are divided, viewing it as a mix of prudence and missed opportunities in a rallying economy.
Berkshire’s latest earnings report underscores Buffett’s conservative approach. For the 12th consecutive quarter, the conglomerate was a net seller of equities in its $312 billion portfolio, which still includes major stakes in Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and American Express (NYSE:AXP). Buffett also didn’t buy back any Berkshire stock for the fifth straight quarter, despite Berkshire’s shares underperforming the broader market.
The S&P 500 has surged ahead this year, leaving Berkshire’s stock down 2% since Buffett announced his CEO exit in May and trailing the index by 12 percentage points for the full year.
Still, why the hoarding? Buffett has long preached buying undervalued assets, but current valuations seem to appear too rich for his taste. The Oracle is not known for chasing valuations higher.
“If you feel like stocks are expensive, including your own shares, you’re eventually going to be right, but you can be wrong for a long time,” said James Shanahan, an analyst at Edward Jones who recently upgraded Berkshire to a “buy” rating. This echoes Buffett’s history of sitting on cash during frothy markets, only to deploy it during downturns — like the 2008 financial crisis when he snapped up bargains.
Despite the caution, Berkshire posted solid results. Third-quarter operating profit climbed 34% to $13.49 billion, or about $9,376 per Class A share, beating Wall Street’s expectations. Net income rose 17% to $30.8 billion, fueled by lower insurance losses and the absence of major catastrophes. Currency fluctuations contributed over two-fifths of the operating gain, while Geico saw policy growth but higher acquisition costs.