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Warren Buffett unveils 11-word stock market warning

Warren Buffett issued a sharp warning during Berkshire Hathaway's annual meeting this year, and its significance extends to every investor watching this market.

Speaking to CNBC in an interview during the annual meeting weekend, the legendary investor offered an 11-word assessment of the current environment that carries more weight than most year-end analyst forecasts.

The American Association of Individual Investors' July 2, 2026, sentiment survey found bullish sentiment on stocks over the next six months plunged 13.6 percentage points to 31.4%, while bearish sentiment rose to 42.3%.

For most of June, CNN's Fear and Greed Index, which measures sentiment through several stock market signals, has remained firmly in the "fear" zone.

The warning arrives as one of the most decorated long-term investors of the modern era has assembled the largest cash position in Berkshire's history, a signal analysts have flagged as a valuation call in itself.

Buffett likens the stock market to a church overrun by its casino

During the CNBC interview at Berkshire's annual meeting, Buffett compared the stock market to a church with a casino bolted to its side.

That comparison frames his growing concern about investor behavior shifting toward short-term speculation in a year defined by all-time-high stock prices.

Then Buffett delivered the 11 words at the center of this concern: "We've never had people in a more gambling mood than now."

Those words reflect a behavioral warning rather than a directional market call, rooted in Buffett's view that speculation poses the greatest threat to portfolios.

Berkshire ended the first quarter of 2026 with $397.4 billion in cash and Treasury bills, the largest liquidity position in its history, company filings confirmed.

Buffett's preferred stock market valuation metric hits a record above 233%

The metric behind Buffett's caution is a ratio he introduced more than two decades ago, now widely known among analysts as the "Buffett indicator."

It divides the total value of all publicly traded U.S. stocks by gross domestic product, measuring whether equity prices have outpaced actual economic output.

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In a 2001 Fortune magazine essay he co-authored with Carol Loomis, Buffett explained how he used this measure to assess overall market pricing during the dot-com era.

"If the ratio approaches 200% as it did in 1999 and a part of 2000, you are playing with fire," Buffett wrote in Fortune.

That indicator has now surpassed 233%, the highest reading on record, well past the threshold Buffett identified 25 years ago, the Motley Fool reported.

Another popular valuation gauge, the cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio, sat at 41.60 as of July 2, 2026, according to multpl.com, a level previously reached only during the dot-com frenzy.

 Warren Buffett's favorite market valuation indicator has climbed above 233%, signaling stock prices may be dangerously detached from economic fundamentals.
Warren Buffett's favorite market valuation indicator has climbed above 233%, signaling stock prices may be dangerously detached from economic fundamentals.

J. Kempin/Getty Images

What the dot-com collapse revealed about overvaluation risk for stock investors

Buffett used the dot-com era to introduce the metric that now carries his name, and its parallels to the current market environment are striking.

During the late 1990s, hundreds of technology companies saw stock prices surge despite having little revenue, no profits, and unproven business models behind them.

When that bubble burst, many of those businesses did not survive, and the S&P 500 needed more than seven years to recover its previous peak.

Martin Romo, Chair and Chief Investment Officer of Capital Group, argued in the firm's 2026 Stock Market Outlook that the current market has moved beyond the phase where a handful of tech stocks drove all returns.

I believe the importance of active stock selection, supported by deep research, has never been clearer

The companies that endured were those with durable competitive advantages, genuine cash flows, and leadership teams committed to discipline, over growth at any cost.

A similar pattern unfolded after the Buffett indicator topped 200% in late 2021, when growth stocks with stretched valuations experienced the steepest declines, according to Current Market Valuation.

Berkshire Hathaway's record cash position tells its own story about stock valuations

Buffett stepped down as chief executive at the close of 2025, leaving Greg Abel with Berkshire's largest-ever cash position and a deliberately shrinking equity portfolio, the company's news release stated.

At the May 2026 shareholder meeting, Abel described Berkshire's cash reserves as both a defensive shield and a tool for seizing future opportunities, CNBC reported.

"We do not intend to be beholden to anyone," Abel told shareholders, reinforcing the philosophy of financial self-reliance that Buffett built over six decades.

That approach of building massive cash reserves reflects a conviction that the best investments require patience and that overpaying during euphoric periods erodes long-term returns.

Buffett has historically deployed capital during genuine market distress, investing $5 billion in Goldman Sachs during the 2008 financial crisis on terms only available in a panic, a playbook his record cash position now positions Berkshire to repeat.

Portfolio quality outweighs stock market timing for long-term investors

The S&P 500 has delivered total returns above 758% over the past 20 years through the first half of 2026, according to Motley Fool data cited in July 2026 coverage.

In Morningstar's 2026 outlook, David Sekera, Morningstar's chief U.S. market strategist argued that portfolio concentration in stocks trading on hype rather than earnings and competitive resilience is where the sharpest downside risk sits, not in equity ownership itself.

"I can't predict the short-term movements of the stock market," Buffett wrote in a 2008 New York Times column still cited among market analysts.

Buffett's 11 words echo a message he has repeated across six decades of shareholder letters and public commentary: that entry price shapes long-term returns and that speculative bursts have historically been followed by mean-reverting corrections.

Related: Warren Buffett's quietest bet already doubled. Now what?

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This story was originally published July 5, 2026 at 9:47 AM.

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