Warren Buffett 2024 Portfolio: Top 12 Stock Picks

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In this article, we will take a detailed look at the Warren Buffett 2024 Portfolio: Top 12 Stock Picks. For a quick overview of such stocks, read our article Warren Buffett 2024 Portfolio: Top 5 Stock Picks.

Warren Buffett recently penned his anticipated annual letter to Berkshire shareholders. The key themes of Buffett's letter were similar to what they are every year, and understandably so. Buffett does not believe in changing his investing strategies based on short-term market movements. Buffett said Berkshire's goal remains owning entire or parts of businesses which "enjoy good economics that are fundamental and enduring."

Buffett on Lack of Good Investing Opportunities

What caught the market's attention was Buffett's revelation that Berkshire's cash pile has soared to about $167.6 billion as of the end of 2023. But what was alarming in this figure was the reason why Buffett, who is always a fan of letting the money do the work, is not deploying this cash. Buffett said that there remain "only a handful" of companies that impress Berkshire in the US and outside the country there are "essentially no candidates" for capital deployment opportunities for Berkshire.

Buffett said to think that investors have gotten wiser over time would be a mistake. The billionaire said the constant availability of financial news and trading platforms have only made the investors "active" because of the "casino-like" behavior of the markets.

"Market Seizures": An Opportunity for Warren Buffett

In his latest letter, Warren Buffett talked about how he likes to view "market seizures" as investing opportunities:

"Occasionally, markets and/or the economy will cause stocks and bonds of some large and fundamentally good businesses to be strikingly mispriced. Indeed, markets can – and will – unpredictably seize up or even vanish as they did for four months in 1914 and for a few days in 2001. If you believe that American investors are now more stable than in the past, think back to September 2008. Speed of communication and the wonders of technology facilitate instant worldwide paralysis, and we have come a long way since smoke signals. Such instant panics won’t happen often – but they will happen. Berkshire’s ability to immediately respond to market seizures with both huge sums and certainty of performance may offer us an occasional large-scale opportunity. Though the stock market is massively larger than it was in our early years, today’s active participants are neither more emotionally stable nor better taught than when I was in school. For whatever reasons, markets now exhibit far more casino-like behavior than they did when I was young. The casino now resides in many homes and daily tempts the occupants."