Warren Buffett's $348 Billion Warning to Wall Street, and Why the Stock Market May Crash

Key Points

Warren Buffett has a track record that very few investors can match. Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) stock has returned 20% annually since he took control in 1965, nearly doubling the annual gain in the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) .

Buffett created that value for shareholders by making smart capital allocation decisions. Sometimes that meant buying entire businesses, and other times it meant buying stocks. Regardless, his knack for investing is why Berkshire has become a trillion-dollar company.

However, Buffett just sent Wall Street a warning. Berkshire held a record $348 billion in cash and equivalents on its balance sheet in the first quarter, even though the S&P 500 dropped into correction territory in March . That suggests Buffett struggled to find reasonably priced stocks despite the drawdown, which implies a sharper decline may be coming.

Here's what investors should know.

Warren Buffett's $348 Billion Warning to Wall Street, and Why the Stock Market May Crash

Historically, the S&P 500 has always crashed after reaching its current valuation

The cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings (CAPE) ratio is used to determine whether stock market indexes are overvalued. It measures price against the average inflation-adjusted earnings from the past decade. The CAPE ratio is sometimes referred to as the Shiller PE ratio because it was developed by Nobel-winning economist Robert Shiller.

The S&P 500 currently has a CAPE ratio of 34.8, an expensive valuation seen just 7.6% of the time since the index was created in 1957. The months in which the CAPE ratio topped 34 were clustered around two events: the dot-com bubble (1998 to 2001) and the COVID-19 pandemic (2021 to 2022). And the outcome was always a market crash.

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