The internet is in awe of Warren Buffett’s perfectly timed cash-out

Warren Buffett playing a ukelele with a microphone in front of him.
Warren Buffett is the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway.Paul Morigi/Getty
  • Warren Buffett is being praised for paring Apple and stacking cash before the market slumped.

  • Social media is full of Buffett quotes about market downturns and memes featuring the investor.

  • Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway sold a net $134 billion of stocks in 2024 and built a record cash pile.

Warren Buffett has sparked a raft of comments and memes on social media after the legendary investor sold most of his massive Apple stake and built a record cash pile before the stock market tumbled earlier this week.

Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway nearly doubled its stockpile of cash, Treasury bills, and other liquid assets last year to $334 billion (or $321 billion if you subtract payables for T-bill purchases).

The conglomerate’s cash hoard ballooned largely because it sold a net $134 billion of stocks in 2024, and spent less than $3 billion on buybacks, halting them entirely in the second half. For comparison, it sold a net $24 billion of stocks and repurchased more than $9 billion worth of Berkshire stock in 2023.

“Despite what some commentators currently view as an extraordinary cash position at Berkshire, the great majority of your money remains in equities,” Buffett reassured Berkshire shareholders in his annual letter in February, referring to both the stocks and businesses that his company owns.

Buffett didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Berkshire owned about 906 million shares of Apple worth $174 billion at the start of 2024, meaning the iPhone maker accounted for 49% of the total value of its stock portfolio. Over the next nine months, it cut its top holding by 67% to 300 million shares, worth $75 billion at the end of December.

Buffett and his team also pared their No. 2 holding, Bank of America, by 34% to 680 million shares in the second half of 2024, cutting the position’s value from $41 billion to just under $30 billion.

As of Tuesday’s close, Apple and Bank of America shares have dropped 15% and 20% each from their November highs.

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