harge57 said:
Bonfire97 said:
It seems if you go back and look at the Berkshire Hathaway cash holdings that they always increase before a large drop in the stock market (2001, 2007, 2022 at least). Just take a look at this graph versus the S&P:
https://companiesmarketcap.com/berkshire-hathaway/cash-on-hand/#google_vignette
He knows how to "time the market", even though, publicly, he says it's impossible.
Has anyone ever tried to look at indicators (MAs, MACD, combination of things) that line up to the Berkshire cash draw downs (i.e. when they "jump back in")?
He never tries to time the market. He is a 100% fundamentals investor.
He sells when he thinks a business is valued high/too high and buys businesses he thinks are undervalued. according to him they do zero macro economic analysis/timing.
In his early days, it was all about value investing for attractive P/E based on Benjamin Graham's philosophy. Benjamin Graham was Warren Buffett's college professor who taught him about business valuations.
If you buy "The Intelligent Investor" on Amazon, it was written by Benjamin Graham. Buffett has called it the best book ever written on investment and outlines how he decides when to buy / sell.
Buffett's main challenge now is that Berkshire Hathaway has become so large, it's much harder to find undervalued investments significant enough to make an impact to BRK bottom line.
Buffet response has been to make himself known as a go-to source for massive amounts of quick cashlike he did with Bank of America after 2008. He's the guy big players call when they've run out of places to turn for cash. They know it won't be cheap coming from him. That's his "edge" these days.
Also worth considering…
A major part of Berkshire Hathaway is insurance underwriting, and with inflation, the cost of replacing things has skyrocketed. All the inflation we've seen since 2020 should in theory show up as cash on buffet's balance sheet to cover higher replacement cost for insurance losses.