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You Have an Advantage Over Warren Buffett. He Just Told You What It Is.

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Warren Buffett is widely regarded as the best investor of all time. Over six decades, Berkshire Hathaway's stock has crushed the broader market, and a big part of that can be attributed to the stock-picking abilities of Buffett and the team at Berkshire.

Naturally, investors watch every move the 94-year-old and Berkshire make, hoping to glean valuable insights they can apply to their own portfolios. But what many retail investors fail to recognize is that while they may not have the same brilliance as Buffett, they actually have an advantage over him. In fact, Buffett just told you what that advantage is in his recently published annual letter to shareholders.

Berkshire Hathaway is effectively too big

In this year's letter to shareholders, Buffett discussed a variety of topics including his and Berkshire's mistakes, the company's performance in 2024, Berkshire's astounding $26.8 billion tax bill, and a unique acquisition Berkshire conducted in 2005 of an RV manufacturer.

However, Buffett largely avoided discussing the current state of the stock market or economy, something investors were curious about, considering Berkshire made so many moves suggesting the market is trading at elevated and perhaps unattractive levels. Berkshire was a net seller of stocks in 2024 by a wide margin. The company hoarded cash and amassed a stockpile of roughly $334 billion at the end of the fourth quarter, a truly staggering number.

Berkshire also sold big chunks of some of its largest positions including Apple and Bank of America. While Buffett and Berkshire likely view the market as overvalued, they also opined on how the sheer size of Berkshire can make it difficult for the company to be agile:

With marketable equities, it is easier to change course when I make a mistake. Berkshire's present size, it should be underscored, diminishes this valuable option. We can't come and go on a dime. Sometimes a year or more is required to establish or divest an investment. Additionally, with ownership of minority positions we can't change management if that action is needed or control what is done with capital flows if we are unhappy with the decisions being made.

This helps to explain why Berkshire often doesn't completely exit a large stake at one time or why Buffett may not buy a stock that retail investors view as so obviously cheap. The company doesn't own too many small-cap stocks and there are probably a lot of stocks that Berkshire finds attractive but that wouldn't make any sense for the company to invest in. In the letter, Buffett noted, "Often, nothing looks compelling; very infrequently we find ourselves knee-deep in opportunities."