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Why Did Warren Buffett Just Sell Investments He's Recommended Millions of Others Buy?

The Motley Fool

Warren Buffett wrote to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders in 2014 that most investors shouldn't try to pick individual stocks to buy because they couldn't "predict their future earnings power." Instead, he recommended that the typical investor buy a "low-cost S&P 500 index fund." But the conglomerate doesn't own the ETFs anymore.

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Warren Buffett's $277 Billion Warning That the Stock Market Could Be Headed for Trouble

The Motley Fool

In his 2021 letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, he wrote that he prefers to have 100% of his money invested in equities. It's by far the largest cash position for the conglomerate ever. The conglomerate still has positions in 43 stocks and two exchange-traded funds (ETFs) worth more than $313 billion.

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Billionaires Warren Buffett and Ken Griffin Both Own This Vanguard ETF. Should You?

The Motley Fool

The easy way of making money to which I'm referring is investing in exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Great minds think alike Buffett made an intriguing revelation about his will to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders in his 2013 annual letter. The conglomerate's portfolio owns dozens of stocks but also features two ETFs.

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2 Outstanding Dividend King Stocks and 1 ETF to Buy for a Lifetime of Passive Income

The Motley Fool

But there are criteria you can use to determine the durability of a dividend-paying company or exchange-traded fund (ETF). A large part of why American States Water is so successful at returning capital to shareholders via the dividend is that the company primarily operates in regulated markets.

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Warren Buffett Recently Plowed Another $345 Million Into His Favorite Stock, But Here's Why It Could Spell Trouble for the Market

The Motley Fool

The position accounted for almost half of the conglomerate's entire stock portfolio, and considering it only had a cost-basis of around $38 billion, it was sitting on a very nice profit. Since the conglomerate is sitting on $277 billion in dry powder right now, why isn't Buffett being more aggressive?

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Should You Invest Like Warren Buffett or Cathie Wood? One Way Clearly Outperforms the Other

The Motley Fool

The conglomerate that he has steered since 1965, Berkshire Hathaway , has outperformed the market by a breathtakingly wide margin over those years. Cathie Wood is newer to the investing scene, and many of the exchange-traded funds (ETF) she manages through her firm, Ark Invest, skyrocketed when the pandemic started.

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Here's How Much Money You'd Have Now If You Invested $10,000 in Warren Buffett's Favorite ETF 10 Years Ago

The Motley Fool

But Buffett has also bought some exchange-traded funds (ETFs) along the way. The conglomerate's position in the Vanguard ETF tops $21.5 Buffett's 2013 letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders also supports the premise that he likes the Vanguard ETF better. Its costs are low. I think he's right.