Buffett Said "This Is Nothing". Is He Waiting For Further Decline?

The recent market crash has rattled plenty of investors. Yet Buffett brushed it off in a single line: "This is nothing."

This isn't empty reassurance. In his own historical frame of reference, Berkshire Hathaway's stock has gone through three separate drawdowns exceeding 50%. Measured against that, the current pullback barely registers.

This is the calm verdict of an investor who has survived more market cycles than most people can count.

Staying on the Sidelines Isn't Pessimism — It's Waiting for the Right Price

People ask: why isn't Buffett buying?

His answer was equally blunt: "We aren't in it to make 5% or 6%."

What he really means is that for a vehicle of Berkshire's size and investment philosophy, the current level of decline simply doesn't offer the odds that justify a large-scale move.

He's not looking for a technical bounce or a short-term recovery. He's waiting for something big enough, cheap enough, and worth going heavy on.

Not there yet? Then keep waiting.

If There's a Big Decline, We'll Act. $370 Billion on Standby

The most important line from the interview — and the one most people missed:

"If there is a big decline... we will deploy."

The 2025 Berkshire shareholder letter spells it out:

"Our cash and U.S. Treasury holdings now exceed $370 billion."

Over $370 billion in cash and Treasuries — not just words on a page. This is Berkshire's dry powder, ready to be deployed the moment the market delivers a genuine, large-scale mispricing.

That's the foundation of everything Buffett said in this interview.

💬 Let's Hear From You

Q1: What does Buffett's "big decline" actually mean to you? S&P 500 down another 10%?

Q2: If you were Buffett right now, what would you do?

Q3: What's your current positioning?

Drop your answers in the comments, or share your own read on where the market goes from here.

# Buffett Said "This Is Nothing". Is He Waiting For Further Decline?

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  • koolgal
    ·04-02 15:22
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    🌟🌟🌟The market is trembling, headlines are screaming but Warren Buffett is cool as cucumber.  When you are 95 years old, managing a trillion dollar empire, your portfolio doesn't just dip.  It shifts tectonic plates.

    However Buffett's decline doesn't mean the world is ending.  It means the market is rotating, repricing and reminding everyone that even legends bleed red sometimes.

    S&P500 down 10%?  That is not a collapse.  It is a sentiment flush.  Some investors maybe panicking but it is a great time to go bargain hunting.

    If I was Buffett, I wouldn't be doom scrolling, panic selling NVIDIA.  I would be doing what Buffett always does:

    Sitting on cash until the market gives me a fat bargain.

    Buying wonderful companies at fair price.

    Ignoring the noise.

    Warren Buffett doesn't chase dips.  He waits for discounts.

    If Buffett isn't panicking, why should I?

    One thing for sure, he never loses his discipline, his patience or his humour.  Neither should I.

    @Tiger_comments

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  • Aqa
    ·04-02 23:58
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    Warren Buffett recently called the current stock market sell-off “nothing “ compared with previous crashes he has navigated. He also noted that markets are now only about 5% to 6% cheaper the recent highs. He has decided to sit tight on Berkshire Hathaway’s $373 billion pile of cash and Treasury bills. In fact, Berkshire Hathaway has just bought another $17 billion in T-bills at auction. He advised that he will only buy “if there is a big decline.” I would like to be as patient as Buffett, waiting for prices low enough to justify long-term investing. With the uncertainties brought by the Iran and apparent inflation, stock market will undoubtedly be beaten going ahead. Thanks @Tiger_comments @TigerStars @Tiger_SG @icycrystal @1PC @Shyon
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    • icycrystal
      [Like] [Like] [Like]
      11:52
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    • 1PC
      Sit 🪑 & enjoy with 🍷🥂 [Happy]
      01:19
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  • Shyon
    ·04-02 13:35
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    When Warren Buffett says “this is nothing,” I actually agree. If you zoom out on the $S&P 500(.SPX)$ , this feels more like a sentiment reset than real capitulation. To me, a “big decline” means another 10–20% down, with genuine panic—forced selling, liquidity stress, and valuations finally breaking from fundamentals. We’re not there yet.

    If I were in his position, I’d still be waiting. Not because I’m bearish, but because opportunity cost matters. Deploying heavily for a 5–6% upside doesn’t make sense when true dislocations can offer much better risk-reward. I’d rather stay patient and keep dry powder for when quality assets are sold indiscriminately.

    As for my positioning, I’m still invested but selective. I continue to DCA into high-conviction names while keeping some cash on the side after the recent volatility. If we get a deeper correction, I’ll scale in more aggressively—but until then, I’m comfortable staying patient.

    @Tiger_comments @TigerStars @TigerClub

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  • icycrystal
    ·11:51

    For Warren Buffett, the current market volatility is considered "nothing" compared to the significant downturns he has navigated throughout his career. Despite recent slides in major indexes, he remains patient, holding a record amount of cash until a truly compelling opportunity arises.

    Valuation Trigger: Buffett often looks at the "Buffett Indicator" (market cap to GDP ratio). He has stated that buying works well when this ratio is in the 70% to 80% range; as of early March 2026, it remained significantly higher at approximately 218%.

    If I were to follow Buffett's current playbook in April 2026, my strategy would likely involve:

    Extreme Patience: Avoid "chasing hype" or feeling pressured to invest just because you have cash.

    Building a Cash "Fortress": Continue accumulating liquid assets (like Treasury bills) to be ready for a "once-in-a-century" crash.

    Focusing on Intrinsic Value: Only buy businesses that are worth owning.

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  • Srikas
    ·08:34
    “ This is nothing.” — that line from Buffett says more than any market headline right now.
    Most investors react to short-term drops, but zooming out, this kind of volatility is routine. The real question isn’t if markets fall — it’s how you respond when they do.
    Q1: What counts as a “big decline”?
    Personally, I see -10% as noise. A true opportunity starts closer to -20%, but the real bargains show up when markets fall 25–30% and sentiment turns negative across the board.
    Q2: What would I do in Buffett’s shoes?
    Stay patient. Avoid chasing. Build cash reserves and wait for moments when strong companies are mispriced. That’s where conviction matters most.
    Q3: My positioning right now
    * Staying invested, not panic selling
    * Adding slowly on red days
    * Holding some cash for bigger dips
    * Prioritising quality over momentum
    At the end of the day, it’s less about timing the market and more about time in the market.
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  • Tigerz
    ·08:31


    When you look at history, markets have gone through far worse — 30%, 40%, even 50% drawdowns — and still recovered. So a small pullback doesn’t change the long-term game.
    Q1: What is a “big decline”?
    To me, it’s not just -10%. That’s normal volatility. A real “Buffett-level” opportunity starts around -20% (bear market territory), and becomes compelling at -30% or more — when fear is widespread and quality stocks get dragged down with everything else.
    Q2: If I were Buffett?
    I’d stay patient and hold cash, waiting for true dislocations. No rushing. When the market gives you discounts on great businesses, that’s when you deploy aggressively — not during mild dips.
    Q3: My current positioning
    * Majority still invested (long-term mindset)
    * Gradually adding on dips, not all-in
    * Keeping some dry powder for deeper corrections
    * Focus on strong fundamentals over hype
    The key takeaway: volatility is normal, but discipline is rare.
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  • That make senses because with his fund size, and others like GIC or Temasek, if and when they buy or sell, just by entering the market will result in a 5-10% changes. So he is stating the obvious, he only buy if it's cheap, not if it's "fair price "..
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  • ECLC
    ·04-02 12:50
    Buffett said "This is nothing" on recent market selloff is supposedly relative comparison to previous big crashes like that in 2008. It is wise not to go all in and be prepared for further decline.
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  • TimothyX
    ·04-02 12:13
    What he really means is that for a vehicle of Berkshire's size and investment philosophy, the current level of decline simply doesn't offer the odds that justify a large-scale move.

    He's not looking for a technical bounce or a short-term recovery. He's waiting for something big enough, cheap enough, and worth going heavy on.

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  • Cadi Poon
    ·04-02 12:09
    This isn't empty reassurance. In his own historical frame of reference, Berkshire Hathaway's stock has gone through three separate drawdowns exceeding 50%. Measured against that, the current pullback barely registers.
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  • yansuji
    ·04-02 11:31
    I'm mostly cash, waiting for that big dip like Buffett! [看涨]
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  • Benkrupt
    ·00:01
    He’s already sitting on a pile of gains in OXY. He’s enjoying at the sidelines. Lol
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  • highhand
    ·04-02 12:14
    yes,that's right. 10% or so correction is nothing. wait for the 20% decline
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  • Kelt
    ·07:28
    AI generated article. Distasteful.
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  • Great article, would you like to share it?
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  • decors imago
    ·04-02 13:00
    Great article, would you like to share it?
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