Warren Buffett: Get Ready for the Perfect Storm

Warren Buffett’s latest investment moves may be ringing alarm bells in the ears of investors, but are the bearish headlines on his moves overblown?

The latest investment moves by Warren Buffett are nothing short of terrifying.

The man placed a big bet on Barrick Gold and grocers; he threw in the towel across his entire position in the U.S. airlines as he trimmed his bank exposure, all while Berkshire Hathaway‘s cash hoard continues to swell in size. The man mostly sat on his hands when stocks tumbled back in February and March. And Berkshire’s annual shareholders’ meeting had a rather sombre tone to it, with Warren Buffett, and no Charlie Munger by his side, running through slides that flashed back to the days of the Great Depression.

Warren Buffett is ready for the perfect storm

Indeed, it appears that Buffett is preparing for the perfect storm in the form of a stock market crash that could wipe out a considerable amount of the gains posted over the last several months. And while it is wise to pay attention to the moves of Warren Buffett, should investors be worried about a market reversal, given the U.S. Fed has our backs as investors?

While Warren Buffett tends to give invaluable clues to investors for where the best top-down opportunities may lie at any given instance,  investors should take Buffett’s latest moves with a fine grain of salt.

Why?

Your portfolio isn’t the same as Warren Buffett’s. Through Berkshire, Buffett is quite heavily exposed to the COVID-19 impact. Many of Berkshire’s businesses have been feeling the full force of the COVID-19 impact. Moreover, Buffett’s portfolio got blindsided by the pandemic.

Bringing the portfolio into balance

The COVID-19 crisis has been rather unkind to the financials and travel industries, both of which Warren Buffett was heavily exposed to, either through Berkshire’s insurance businesses or his bank-heavy portfolio of publicly traded stocks. So, Buffett’s decision to de-risk his portfolio, swapping air travel and banks for gold miners, grocers, and lowly-correlated Japanese trading companies should come as no surprise to investors.

Heck, your portfolio may have steered clear of the COVID-19 crisis if you had a minimal weighting across sectors that were hit hardest by the pandemic. And if that’s the case, you shouldn’t feel the need to follow in Warren Buffett’s footsteps by de-risking.

You see, COVID-hit stocks serve a vital role in a portfolio. The pandemic isn’t going to last forever. Once it ends, it’ll be 2020’s biggest losers that could come soaring back, as the 2020 winners look to take a backseat. After Warren Buffett’s latest risk-off moves, his portfolio is looking better balanced given the slate of risks brought forth by COVID-19.

While it may seem like Buffett thinks the pandemic could last forever, it’s important to remember that through Berkshire, he owns many COVID-hit businesses such as Precision Cartparts entirely.

Foolish takeaway

Warren Buffett is merely preparing his portfolio for whatever ends up happening next. Today, his investments are better balanced, regardless of what the pandemic has in store next. If you’ve got a balanced barbell portfolio of Canadian stocks that stand to win, irrespective of when the pandemic concludes, then you’re in a good spot and shouldn’t feel the need to rotate out of stocks and into cash and gold.

Does Warren Buffett think the perfect storm is coming?

I’m not too sure. Regardless, he’s ready for anything. And you should be, too!

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Joey Frenette owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway (B shares). The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Berkshire Hathaway (B shares) and recommends the following options: long January 2021 $200 calls on Berkshire Hathaway (B shares), short January 2021 $200 puts on Berkshire Hathaway (B shares), and short September 2020 $200 calls on Berkshire Hathaway (B shares).

More on Coronavirus

A airplane sits on a runway.
Coronavirus

3 Fresh Stocks I’m Likely Buying in 2025

I am likely buying Air Canada (TSX:AC) stock in 2025.

Read more »

RRSP Canadian Registered Retirement Savings Plan concept
Coronavirus

Canadian RRSP Stocks to Buy Now for Retirement

Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc (TSX:ATD) is a quality retirement stock.

Read more »

A train passes Morant's curve in Banff National Park in the Canadian Rockies.
Coronavirus

Retirees: What Rising Inflation Means for Your CPP Payments

If you aren't getting enough CPP, you can consider investing in stocks and ETFs. Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR) is one…

Read more »

Coronavirus

Air Canada Stock Is Starting to Get Ridiculously Oversold

Air Canada (TSX:AC) has been beaten down to absurd lows.

Read more »

Coronavirus

Should You Buy Air Canada Stock While it’s Below $18?

Air Canada (TSX:AC) stock is below $18. Should you invest?

Read more »

Illustration of data, cloud computing and microchips
Stocks for Beginners

3 Canadian Stocks That Could Still Double in 2024

These three Canadians stocks have been huge winners already in 2024, but still have room to double again in the…

Read more »

Aircraft Mechanic checking jet engine of the airplane
Coronavirus

Can Air Canada Stock Recover in 2024?

Air Canada (TSX:AC) stock remains close to its COVID-19 era lows, even though its business has recovered.

Read more »

A airplane sits on a runway.
Coronavirus

3 Things to Know About Air Canada Stock Before You Buy

Air Canada stock continues to hover below $20 despite the sharp rise in travel demand seen across the industry. What's…

Read more »