Before Retiring, Warren Buffett Left Investors With A $37…

By Adam Levy – Mar 21, 2026 at 6:00PM EST

Key Points

  • Buffett was a net seller of stocks for 13 straight quarters at the end of his run as Berkshire’s CEO.

  • There are two clear reasons for selling stocks, but only one reason he didn’t buy more.

  • History suggests that the next decade could be hard for investors, but it could also present an opportunity.

The $373 billion warning to investors

Buffett set a new record at Berkshire Hathaway when he closed the books on 2025. The company ended the year with $373 billion in cash and Treasuries on its balance sheet. That’s up from $321 billion at the end of 2024 and $129 billion at the end of 2022.

That pile of cash didn’t get there by accident. It resulted from massive stock sales led by Buffett and, more importantly, a dearth of purchases. In fact, Buffett sold more stock than he bought in each of the last 13 quarters of his tenure as CEO.

Some of his biggest sales included Apple and Bank of America. His decision to sell those holdings came after both companies produced phenomenal returns for Berkshire over the prior decade. New tax legislation lowered the corporate tax rate to just 21%, which Buffett viewed as an excellent opportunity to take gains on those stocks. The stock sales may have also helped Berkshire avoid the 15% alternative minimum tax in each of the last two years.

Berkshire Hathaway Stock Quote

NYSE: BRKB

Berkshire Hathaway

Today’s Change

(-0.11%) $-0.54

Current Price

$480.94

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$1.0T

Day’s Range

$479.66 – $485.12

52wk Range

$455.19 – $542.07

Volume

7.8M

Avg Vol

4.8M

Gross Margin

23.63%

But if Buffett simply wanted to lock in a favorable tax rate, he could have bought back the stock he sold without incurring any penalties. Instead, he let cash pile up on Berkshire’s balance sheet as he searched and waited for new investment opportunities. That suggests that he also felt Apple and Bank of America were overvalued when he sold them. Given that the stocks continue to trade near their recent highs, it’s ly he still feels that way.

The big warning behind the $373 billion on Berkshire’s balance sheet is that it suggests Buffett also thinks almost every other viable stock for Berkshire’s portfolio is overvalued. If he felt there was good value out there, he’d have bought it. That includes Berkshire’s own stock, which Buffett notably didn’t repurchase in his final 19 months as CEO.

In his last letter to holders, Buffett noted that when it comes to investing in equities, “Often, nothing looks compelling.” That seems to be the case for most of the last three years he spent running the company. He also notes that “very infrequently we find ourselves knee-deep in opportunities.” Buffett appears to be preparing Berkshire’s balance sheet for one of those periods, and history suggests it could be on the horizon.

What history says happens next

There are a handful of market valuation metrics suggesting that stocks, as a group, are very expensive right now. Buffett’s preferred valuation metric, market-cap-to-GDP, otherwise known as the Buffett Indicator, sits near a record high at 217%. While there are a few reasons for the metric to move higher over the last 20 years, it still sits at an abnormally high level, indicating U.S. stocks are overvalued.

Perhaps one of the strongest predictors of long-term returns in history is the cyclically adjusted price-earnings (CAPE) ratio, developed by Robert Shiller. The CAPE ratio divides the current price by the average earnings of the previous 10 years, adjusted for inflation. Today, the S&P 500’s CAPE ratio sits at 38.8. (It sat at 38.9 at the end of February.)

In every period since 1871, when the S&P 500’s CAPE ratio exceeded 38.8, the S&P 500 produced negative returns over the next 10 years. Robert Shiller himself expects annualized returns of just 1.5% over the next decade based on the current CAPE ratio. When you factor in inflation, that falls into negative territory.

S&P 500 Shiller CAPE Ratio Chart

S&P 500 Shiller CAPE Ratio data by YCharts.

There’s just one catch, however. There’s only ever been one period where the S&P 500 CAPE ratio exceeded 38.8: The height of the dot-com bubble. Drawing conclusions from the 10-year period that ed, which included the bubble popping and the Great Financial Crisis, might not be prudent. The Great Financial Crisis was completely unrelated to the dot-com bubble popping.

Of course, Buffett, a student of history, markets, and psychology, knows that. Still, he found it tough to find good value in today’s market. Investors who are willing to do their research can still find great values, though. You may be willing to look at companies Buffett ignored. Buffett famously avoided many tech stocks, and Berkshire’s size limited its investment universe to the world’s biggest companies.

While it may be wise to increase your cash allocation, you shouldn’t sell everything and wait for a market downturn. Buffett notably still held a $300 billion equity portfolio for Berkshire when he retired.

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About the Author

Adam Levy

Adam Levy is a contributing Motley Fool stock market analyst covering technology, consumer, and financial stocks and how policy, economic, and consumer trends shape personal finance, Social Security and retirement savings. Before The Motley Fool, Adam was a financial advisor at Edward Jones. He studied finance and electrical engineering at Carnegie Mellon University.

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Stocks Mentioned

Berkshire Hathaway Stock Quote

Berkshire Hathaway

NYSE: BRKB

$482.03

(+0.11%)+$0.55

Berkshire Hathaway Stock Quote

Berkshire Hathaway

NYSE: BRKA

$720,702.08

(-0.29%)-$2,075.69

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