As Wall Street grapples with one of its worst downturns in years, Warren Buffett is shrugging it off — and buying stocks.
The war between the US and Israel in Iran hit the markets hard in early 2026. The Nasdaq fell by 7% in Q1, the S & P 500 fell by almost 5% and the Dow shed 4% (1) – the worst quarterly performance since 2022 (2).
CNN reports that the Dow and Nasdaq have both entered correction territory, with the Nasdaq closing more than 12.5% below its October record, as oil prices continue to rise (3).
For many investors, it’s the kind of environment that causes fear. For Buffett, it barely registers.
“This is nothing to get excited about,” he said in a CNBC interview.
The 95-year-old “Oracle of Omaha” revealed that despite giving the role of CEO Berkshire Hathaway to Greg Abel on Jan. 1, 2026, he still comes to the office every day and is constantly dealing with financial decisions.
Buffett explained his routine: he calls Mark Millard, Berkshire’s chief financial officer, before the market opens each morning to discuss developments. Based on their conversation, Millard then makes a trade, although “I’m not going to make (investments) that Greg thinks are wrong,” Buffett explained to CNBC. “Greg gets the (updates) page every day.”
He also revealed that he recently bought “a small amount” – without disclosing what the investment was (4). The surprising purchase price has generated immediate speculation among investors, given Berkshire’s record cash flow and US Treasury assets of more than $370 billion at the end of 2025 (5).
In addition, the company recently bought $17 billion in Treasury bills at a weekly auction, Buffett shared in the interview.
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Buffett has put today’s uncertainty in historical context.
“The three times I’ve been in power, it’s actually gone down by more than 50%,” he said, pointing to the injuries that weakened the current backbone.
In his opinion, the market being priced a few percent below its recent peak does not change the investment figures for a firm like Berkshire.
“We’re not in it to make five or six percent,” he said (4).
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