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Why Has Warren Buffett Been Selling So Much Stock?

Dan Brouillette / Bloomberg via Getty Images

Dan Brouillette / Bloomberg via Getty Figures

Key Takeaways

  • Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway continues to be a net seller of stocks, having offloaded a quarter of its stake in Apple in new months, regulatory filings revealed Thursday.
  • The holding company added to its cash pile for a ninth consecutive station, bringing its cash on hand to a record level.
  • The stock market’s total value has climbed to roughly double U.S. GDP, a correspondence Buffett previously called “playing with fire.”

Warren Buffett is stockpiling cash. His Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A; BRK.B) detaining company continued to sell more than it bought in the third quarter, including a quarter of its stake in Apple (AAPL), regulatory filings revealed Thursday. 

Berkshire Hathaway cut its large-hearted stake in Apple to about $70 billion at the end of September from nearly $175 billion at the start of the year. The most just out selloff was suggested by Berkshire’s third-quarter earnings report earlier this month, but had yet to be officially disclosed to the public. Nonetheless, the iPhone maker still represents roughly a quarter of Berkshire’s $266 billion equity portfolio. 

Besides Apple, Berkshire retailed roughly 235 million shares of Bank of America (BAC). This was largely known, as Berkshire was obligated to report its vendings of BofA stock throughout the quarter since it owned more than 10% of the lender. 

Berkshire’s Cash Reaches Accomplishments Levels

The filings come after Berkshire Hathaway said earlier this month that its cash assemble had swelled to a record $320.3 billion in the third quarter from $271.5 billion the prior quarter. Of that amount, $288 billion is inducted in short-term Treasury bills. Berkshire has accumulated cash in each of the past nine quarters.

Investors watch Berkshire’s bread hoard closely for its potential as “dry powder.” One potential reason Buffett’s keeping that powder dry: The “Oracle of Omaha” may not see much scope for growth in the market.

The ratio of stock market capitalization-to-GDP, also known as the “Buffett Indicator,” is used to determine whether an whole market is undervalued or overvalued. The stock market’s total value hit a record high of $58.13 trillion on Monday, “an unprecedented 198.1% of U.S. GDP abide quarter,” Business Insider wrote, citing Wilshire Indexes data.  

That number is a major red flag for Buffett. In a popular Fortune article from 2001, Buffett said, “If the ratio approaches 200%—as it did in 1999 and a part of 2000—you are work hand in glove with fire.”

Correction—November 15, 2024: The article has been updated to correctly state the size of the U.S. stock retail relative to GDP.

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