Warren Buffett Has Repeated His Warning to Wall Street for 12 Quarters. Now, as 2026 Approaches, Is It Time to Listen?

Warren Buffett is known for his love of investing in stocks. Yet, over the past few years, he’s been doing more selling than buying. The billionaire chairman and chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway has been a net seller of stocks over the past 12 consecutive quarters, a move that could be seen as a warning to Wall Street as the S&P 500 marches higher. The major benchmark, driven by artificial intelligence (AI) stocks, climbed over the past two years for a 53% increase, and this year it’s heading for yet another double-digit gain.

Buffett, in keeping with his usual investing behavior, didn’t jump onto the bandwagon. Instead, the billionaire, through his actions, has suggested that investors should proceed with caution. In addition to selling stocks, Buffett built up a significant pile of cash, reaching record levels.

Still, investors have continued piling into stocks, driving the S&P 500 to multiple records. Now, though, as 2026 approaches, is it finally time to listen to Buffett’s warning? Let’s find out.

Warren Buffett is seen at an event.
Image source: The Motley Fool.

First, it’s important to understand why investors generally sit up and take notice when Buffett makes an investing decision. Buffett never follows market trends and doesn’t mind picking stocks that may be out of favor with other investors. This, along with a focus on choosing quality companies for reasonable prices, has helped Buffett guide Berkshire Hathaway to market-beating returns for nearly six decades. And the billionaire has invested throughout both bull and bear markets, showing that his techniques work during any market environment.

Considering all of this, investors pay attention to Buffett’s moves — and sometimes follow them — with the hope of generating big returns.

Before getting back to our question, it’s worth talking about the reason for Buffett’s caution in recent years. Buffett hasn’t spelled out exactly why he’s more often been a seller than a buyer of stocks or why he’s built the Berkshire Hathaway cash level to more than $381 billion, a record level. But one particular element likely is involved, and this is valuation. The S&P 500 Shiller CAPE ratio has reached its second-highest level ever — its highest level was during the dot-com boom — and this suggests that, overall, stocks are expensive right now.

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