Despite sitting on a record cash reserve of nearly $400 billion, Berkshire Hathaway has opted to pull back from equity markets rather than deploy capital into stocks.

The company ended the first quarter of 2026 with $397.4 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term Treasury bills, a record for Berkshire, according to the company’s quarterly filing.

CEO Greg Abel and chairman Warren Buffett have chosen to keep the money parked in government securities rather than buy stocks at current prices. 

Berkshire sold $24.1 billion in equities during the quarter while purchasing about $16 billion, extending a net-selling streak that has persisted for over three years.

Buffett has been characteristically direct about the reasoning behind the restraint, telling CNBC’s Becky Quick that a market decline of 5% or 6% was not enough to put Berkshire’s cash to work: “If they’re 5% or 6% cheaper… we aren’t in it to make 5% or 6%.”

He noted that Berkshire’s own share price has declined more than 50% on three separate occasions during his tenure: “Three times since I’ve taken over Berkshire, it’s gone down more than 50%.”

Berkshire Hathaway’s Buffett Indicator hits record territory

The valuation metric guiding Berkshire’s caution compares total U.S. stock market capitalization to gross domestic product, a ratio Buffett endorsed in a 2001 Fortune article. 

The Buffett indicator now sits at around 230%, according to GuruFocus, comparing the total value of corporate equities to gross domestic product.

Current Market Valuation’s March 31 reading puts the indicator at 219%, approximately 64.84%, or 2.1 standard deviations, above its historical trend line, suggesting that at the lower estimate the stock market is still significantly overvalued relative to GDP.

GuruFocus data shows that when the Buffett Indicator has reached current levels, forward-looking stock returns have historically run below the long-term average for years

That pattern helps explain why Berkshire is comfortable earning roughly 4% to 5% on Treasury bills rather than buying equities at record prices.

Greg Abel restarts Berkshire buybacks after a 21-month pause

Abel authorized Berkshire’s first share repurchases since May 2024 on March 4, 2026, and the company bought back $234 million of its stock during the quarter, according to its Q1 2026 Form 10-Q filing.

The pause had lasted 21 consecutive months, during which the share price traded at a premium both Buffett and Abel viewed as too steep for any buybacks.

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The company has long maintained a policy of repurchasing shares only when leadership believes the stock trades below its intrinsic value.

Abel also disclosed a personal purchase of approximately $15.3 million in Berkshire Class A shares, roughly equal to his full after-tax annual salary. 

He committed to repeating that investment every year he serves as CEO, directly tying his financial outcome to shareholders, CNBC reported.

“We were just a little surprised by the absence of any sort of dividend, and a little more by the stated sustained unwillingness to pay dividends,” Meyer Shields, an analyst at KBW, wrote in a March 2026 note after Berkshire’s Q4 2025 results and Abel’s first shareholder letter, CNBC reported. 

Greg Abel restarts Berkshire buybacks and invests $15.3 million personally, reinforcing confidence in the company’s long-term value.

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Berkshire’s operating results reinforce the case for patience

Berkshire’s first-quarter operating earnings rose 18% to $11.35 billion, driven by a 28.5% jump in insurance underwriting profit, the company’s earnings release showed. 

Net income more than doubled to about $10.1 billion from $4.6 billion in the same period a year earlier, with insurance leading the gains.

That’s been a hundred percent successful. Greg is doing everything I did and then some, and he’s doing it better in all cases. He’s the right person.

Those results came during Abel’s first quarter as CEO, suggesting the company’s operating businesses remain strong even as the company avoids deploying cash into equities. 

The bulk of Berkshire’s liquid reserves, roughly $339 billion, sits in short-term Treasury bills currently yielding around 3.7%, according to U.S. Treasury data. 

Berkshire’s Q1 2026 10-Q reported $3.07 billion in discount accretion on Treasury bills during the quarter alone, putting the cash pile on track to generate roughly $12 billion in annualized interest income, enough to reduce the opportunity cost of waiting.

What Berkshire Hathaway’s restraint signals for the broader market

Berkshire’s choice to accumulate cash does not predict an imminent crash, but it reflects a valuation framework that long-term investors find difficult to dismiss. 

Brian Meredith, a UBS analyst, writing in a note to clients, suggested that Berkshire’s strategy could pay off. He said he expects Berkshire to outperform the broader market amid elevated geopolitical tensions, CNBC reported. 

Meredith characterized the conglomerate as a fundamentally defensive holding that tends to benefit when economic and geopolitical uncertainty rises across global markets.

Whether Berkshire’s enormous cash reserve ultimately proves to be brilliant patience or excessive caution will depend on where the stock market goes from here. 

The company Buffett built over six decades is choosing to wait, and the data behind that choice offers a clear window into current valuations.

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