Today: 5 July 2026
Buffett cash pile faces market warning, Berkshire at $373.5 billion
5 July 2026
2 mins read

Buffett cash pile faces market warning, Berkshire at $373.5 billion

OMAHA, Nebraska, July 5, 2026, 10:07 CDT

  • Berkshire reported $373.5 billion in net cash and U.S. Treasury bills across insurance and other businesses as of March 31, equal to 1.22x its equity and fixed-maturity securities book.
  • The company unloaded roughly $24.1 billion in equities in Q1, over five times what it sold a year ago.
  • Buffett’s warning on a “gambling mood” in markets faces a new test as high valuations and more complex ETFs keep piling up. The Motley Fool

Berkshire Hathaway set the number on Warren Buffett’s latest market caution: $373.5 billion. That’s how much cash and U.S. Treasury bills, less pending T-bill buys, sat in its insurance and other operations as of March 31. That total is $67.8 billion above the book value of equity and fixed-maturity securities in those units.

Investors get a clearer take from the number than just the quote. On July 4, Motley Fool pointed to Buffett’s 11-word warning about people getting more into gambling. The Economic Times tied his warning to hidden market risk. NewTraderU put it in the lens of household debt and crowd behavior. Berkshire’s latest filings echoed that, with moves to sell stocks, buy more T-bills, and keep buybacks modest.

U.S. stocks last traded ahead of the holiday break. NYSE and Nasdaq list July 3 as the observed Independence Day, with normal hours, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET. Berkshire Hathaway Class B ended at $507.78, up 1.6% from its last close on Sunday data.

At Berkshire’s annual meeting on May 2, Buffett said, “We’ve never had more people in a gambling mood than now.” He also said “prices for an awful lot of things will look awfully silly.” Reuters

Berkshire gaugeLatest figureEarlier figure / comparisonInvestor read
Net cash and T-bills, insurance and other units$373.5 bln$305.7 bln equity and fixed-maturity securitiesCash held at 1.22 times securities
Short-term U.S. Treasury bills$339.3 bln$321.4 bln at Dec. 31Rose 5.5% for Q1
Equity securities$288.0 bln$297.8 bln at Dec. 31Fell 3.3% in Q1
Equity-sale proceeds$24.1 bln$4.7 bln in Q1 20255.1 times last year

Berkshire listed its top five stocks as American Express , Apple , Bank of America , Coca-Cola , and Chevron . Those names accounted for 61% of the equity book at March 31, a slip from 65% at the end of December.

This matters since cash now pays. Berkshire’s bigger Treasury-bill bets boosted after-tax corporate investment income by $98 million in the first quarter, though some of that was offset by lower rates. If short-term rates move down, that income drops off. If stocks drop, the cash can be put to work.

Market signalLatest or recent readingInvestor problem
Shiller P/E41.60 as of July 2, just below the dot-com high of 44.19Valuations offer little buffer if earnings disappoint
U.S. ETF assets$15.7 trillion at the end of May, up 17% since end-2025More risk is built into mainstream ETF products
2026 ETF launchesAlmost 700 so far, with about 200 leveraged or inverse fundsPacking vehicles for quick bets is now common
Buffett indicator cited by Motley FoolOver 233%Total market value is well above GDP

ETF growth puts some weight behind Buffett’s old warning. Morningstar analyst Dan Sotiroff told Reuters that the new filings make it hard to tell what counts as an investment product and what makes public markets “more of a casino.” Reuters

Goldman Sachs isn’t buying the idea that valuations are set for a sharp drop. Ben Snider, a strategist at the firm, told Business Insider that investors shouldn’t count on multiples going back to past averages. He now sees the S&P 500 delivering 7% annualized returns over the next decade. That’s above Goldman’s previous 3% estimate but still below the historical pace.

Berkshire, under Greg Abel, made moves. Reuters said June 1 that the company put $16.8 billion to work across two days, with $10 billion going to Alphabet shares and $6.8 billion to Taylor Morrison Home . “Everyone has been waiting for Greg to do his thing,” said Steven Check, president of Check Capital Management. Reuters

Berkshire is still sitting on a huge pile of cash. The company ended March with $380.2 billion in cash, Reuters reported. Operating profit for the first quarter jumped 18% to $11.35 billion. Stock buybacks were just $234 million. “It doesn’t mean you need to deploy all your capital and spend all your money,” Abel said to shareholders. “It is very difficult to sit there and do nothing,” vice chair Ajit Jain added. Reuters

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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