Key Takeaways:
- Berkshire Hathaway holds $397.4 billion in cash, nearly triple its 2022 level
- Forward P/E of 24 implies earnings compression ahead for the stock
- Selling has outpaced buying as the company struggles to find large-scale deals
Key Takeaways:

Berkshire Hathaway's $397 billion cash reserve now accounts for nearly a third of its total assets, the highest proportion in the company's history.
Berkshire Hathaway held $397.4 billion in cash and short-term investments as of March 31, nearly triple the $128.6 billion it held at the end of 2022 and raising questions about the company's ability to find attractively priced large-scale investments.
"The cash pile reflects a scarcity of opportunities that meet our threshold for size and certainty," Greg Abel, chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway, said in the company's annual meeting in May.
The cash balance has grown from $347.7 billion a year earlier, even as total assets reached $1.22 trillion and long-term equity investments rose to $657 billion from $536.3 billion in 2023. Berkshire's selling has outpaced buying: the company systematically reduced Bank of America across eight transactions in September and October 2024, sold 1.22 million DaVita shares on May 5, and exited Liberty Media positions entirely in September 2024. New purchases — Sirius XM accumulated from late 2024 through August 2025 and Occidental Petroleum additions in December and February — have been narrower in scale.
The stock's valuation reflects the uncertainty. Berkshire trades at a trailing P/E of 15 but a forward P/E of 24, implying earnings compression ahead. The analyst consensus price target of $520.33 offers less than 3% upside from the July 2 close of $507.78, which sits near the top of the stock's 52-week range of $455.19 to $516.85. With a beta of 0.617, the stock moves less than the market in both directions — a feature for defensive holders but a drag during rallies.
What the Cash Pile Means for Returns
The cash position creates a structural challenge for long-term holders. Berkshire's return on equity stands at 10.5% and return on assets at 5.39%, but the more capital that sits in cash equivalents yielding roughly 4% to 5%, the harder it becomes to sustain those returns. The company pays no dividend and insider ownership is just 0.261%, concentrating the deployment decision at the top.
Where Deals Could Come From
Berkshire's $8.5 billion acquisition of Taylor Morrison in June, announced by Abel, signals a willingness to deploy capital into housing — a sector where the company sees long-term value. The deal, Berkshire's largest under Abel, suggests the new CEO may pursue contrarian bets in industries where valuations have compressed. Investors will watch the next quarterly filing for further clues on portfolio shifts.
The $397.4 billion cash pile is both a fortress and a question mark. For a company built on compounding, holding roughly a third of assets in cash equivalents tests whether Berkshire can still deliver the returns that built its legend. The next 13-F filing, due in August, will show whether Abel is finding opportunities where Buffett could not.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.