Warren Buffett Sent Wall Street a $93 Billion Warning. History Says the Stock Market Will Do This Next

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Warren Buffett took control of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) in 1965, and its Class A share price has since increased 5,500,000%. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) has returned 38,400%. Inspired by that outperformance, many investors carefully track the stocks Buffett buys and sells using the Forms 13F filed quarterly by Berkshire.

With that in mind, the company's stock purchases totaled $4.3 billion and its stock sales totaled $97.1 billion in the first half of 2024. That means Berkshire's net stock sales reached a record $93 billion through the June quarter. On the surface, that $93 billion warning signals a lack of buying opportunities in the current market environment, which itself hints at a possible drawdown.

That conclusion is further supported by the fact that Berkshire had $277 billion in cash and U.S. Treasuries on its balance sheet as of the June quarter, another record for the company. Finally, Buffett repurchased a mere $345 million in Berkshire stock during the June quarter, which marks his smallest allocation to stock buybacks in six years.

All of those clues point to an overvalued market, but the S&P 500 has historically delivered robust returns during the 12 months following years in which Berkshire Hathaway was a net seller of stocks. Here's what investors should know.

Warren Buffett's "warnings" have often preceded large gains in the S&P 500

Since 2010, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has been a net seller of stocks — meaning the total value of its equity security sales exceeded the total value of its equity security purchases — in seven years. In some cases, those events foreshadowed below-average returns in the S&P 500 in the subsequent year. But more often than not, the opposite was true.

The chart below shows (1) each year in which Berkshire was a net seller of stocks, (2) the total value of the stocks sold by Berkshire during the year, and (3) the S&P 500's return in the next year. For instance, Berkshire's net equity security sales totaled $1.6 billion in 2010, and the S&P 500 returned 0% in 2011.

Year

Net Stock Sales

S&P 500's Return During the Next Year

2010

$1.6 billion

0%

2012

$0.7 billion

30%

2014

$1.9 billion

(1%)

2016

$12 billion

19%

2020

$8.6 billion

27%

2021

$7.4 billion

(19%)

2023

$24.2 billion

23%*

Median

N/A

19%

Data source: YCharts. Note: The asterisk indicates that the S&P 500's year-to-date return of 23% is not a full-year figure.

As shown above, since 2010, the S&P 500 has returned a median of 19% during the 12-month period following years in which Berkshire Hathaway was a net seller of stocks. But we need to consider the other side of the situation to truly appreciate what Buffett's $93 billion warning might mean for the S&P 500 in 2025.