Has Warren Buffett stopped investing? He seems to be pulling money out of the stock market left, right and centre. Heâs sold billions in Bank of America shares. Heâs sold tens of billions of Apple shares.
The cash position (of his firm Berkshire Hathaway) has ballooned to $334bn. Thatâs the kind of hoarding that would grab The Hobbit dragon Smaugâs attention.
The multi-billionaire market mogul, the âOracle of Omahaâ, the most famous investor worldwide, has taken a big old look at the markets and gone ânope!â
Good times rolling
Whatâs going on here then? Has the stock market been performing badly? No. Thatâs not it. Last yearâs trend of the markets smashing record highs continues in 2025 unabated. The S&P 500 broke through 6,100 in February.Â
Anyone investing even a year ago is up 18%. The good times continue to roll and therein may lie the problem. Times have been a little too good.Â
Buffett can boast of a chunky repertoire of famous quotes, but the most famous of all might be: âBe fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.âÂ
The basic idea is when everyone is doing one thing, do the other. Zig when they zag, as they say. American stocks have had a rapid rise. Itâs got to the point where folks from all corners the world are now banking on the S&P 500 as their pension option. Has it all got a bit too much?
The sky-high valuations of US stocks suggest so. Investing in companies across the pond costs a pretty penny these days. Thatâs the complete opposite approach to value investing where looking for underpriced stocks is the mantra.Â
One approach
Value investing, by the way, was Buffettâs modus operandi as he built his fortune, crediting much of his success to his mentor Ben Graham who popularised the idea. If Buffettâs looking for value investments today, I wouldnât be surprised if he grimaces at American valuations that are more than a touch reminiscent of those just before the dotcom crash.
Value investing isnât just about avoiding overpriced stocks though, itâs about finding underpriced ones too. And one place where stocks are undoubtedly at a cheap ebb is in the UK where the FTSE 100 average price-to-earnings ratio of 14 is around half that of the S&P 500.Â
Take BP (LSE: BP) as one example. The oil major trades at around 10 times earnings. Compare that to US competitors like ExxonMobil at 14 times earnings, or Chevron at 16 times earnings. As far as what youâre paying for each pound (or dollar) of profit, the British firmâs cheaper.Â
Is BP a buy for me? Well, thereâs a lot of uncertainty around the firm at the moment. Profits fell sharply in the last year. The fall has led to activist investors getting involved and, among other things, calling for the end to its Net Zero efforts.Â
Those arenât small hurdles the companyâs facing, if they can get over them smoothly then this could be an excellent value opportunity.
Not only do the shares trade at a discount to its peers but investors could buy in today for 20% less than it would have cost last year. Iâd say that could be one to consider.
This post was originally published on Motley Fool