Berkshire Hathaway’s (NYSE: BRK-B | BRK-B Price Prediction) cash position has become one of the defining financial stories of recent years, swelling to truly historic proportions. The company ended 2025 with $373.3 billion in cash and cash equivalents, representing the largest corporate cash hoard in American business history. The initial peak occurred in the third quarter of 2025, when the pile reached $381.7 billion. That staggering amount was surpassed in the first quarter as the massive trove of T-bills swelled to $397 billion. The reserve is so large that it surpasses the combined cash holdings of Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, and Microsoft. This accumulation was by no means an accident. Between 2022 and 2024, Berkshire sold a net $172.93 billion in equities while buying relatively little in return, a deliberate, sustained exit from positions Warren Buffett believed had reached or exceeded fair value in overvalued markets. That included selling Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), and Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN), among others.
With Greg Abel taking the helm at the Berkshire Hathaway shareholders meeting for the first time in 2026, he stressed, in an attempt to soothe stockholders who are experiencing one of the few periods of underperformance from the investment giant in years, that the ultra-conservative path Berkshire Hathaway has taken for the past few years would stay the course. The reality is, who can blame him? The stock market is trading at or near all-time highs, oil prices are surging, and we could face a geopolitical meltdown if the situation with Iran worsens.
The reality for investors is that many have become spoiled by the rapid parabolic moves higher in chip companies and stocks with any artificial intelligence exposure. This comes as some of the Magnificent 7 are generating massive results and then being sold off, as was the case with Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) after it reported truly eye-popping results, and shares plummeted over 10% and erased roughly $160 billion to $170 billion in market value in a single session. Ouch!
The harder, colder reality is that we could be on the verge of a massive sell-off, the kind of sell-off so earth-shaking, as we saw in 2008 and especially in 2009, that cash-needy companies may be coming to Omaha for help, looking for a cash infusion, or to sell preferred shares, or even part of their company. The kind of assistance that Buffett offered General Electric, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), and others during times of extreme distress. By the end of 2009, Berkshire held preferred shares in several companies yielding substantial annual dividends. They may once again very well be in the on-deck circle for another round of investments like that if we see a 20% to 30% correction in the stock market. Never forget the adage attributed to Baron Nathan Mayer Rothschild, widely quoted across Wall Street and other financial capitals: “Buy when there’s blood in the streets, even if the blood is your own.” We may be edging closer to that abyss.

