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Warren Buffett gets a laugh at market's expense

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Yes, it was the kind of week that gives an investor serious heartburn.

The major averages had their worst weeks in some time. In the case of the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, its 3.1% loss was its worst since the week of Sept. 2, when the index dropped 4.3%.

While the Dow Jones Industrial Average is still up a little (0.61%, to be exact), the S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite Index and the Nasdaq-100 Index have now seen their gains for the year disappear.

The S&P 500 is down 1.9%, and the Nasdaq is off 5.77%.

The Nasdaq-100 took 71 trading days from the Nov. 5 election to reach its record close of 22,175.60 on Feb. 19. That 9.6% gain disappeared in 10 days, and the shares are down 3.9% this year.

Related: Rare event could send Tesla stock surging

Warren Buffets gets the last laugh

Not even Warren Buffett could get out of the way, Berkshire Hathaway's class A  (BRK.A)  shares fell 4.1% on the week at $742.901,.

But here's where Buffett gets a chance to say, politely, "Told you so." Berkshire Hathaway shares are still up 11.4% since the election. They've risen 9.1% on the year.

The class B  (BRK.B)  shares, the so-called affordable Berkshire shares, fell 3.5% on the week to $495.62 but, like the pricier A shares, are up 11.4% since the election and 9.1% so far this year.

Mind you, the Oracle of Omaha likes stocks. Buffett said so in his shareholder letter a few weeks ago. But Buffett is a value investor and doesn't chase fads or hot stocks. His actions said he thought stock prices were too high in 2024 and going into 2025.

So, Berkshire sold billions of dollars of shares, especially Apple  (AAPL) . Many, many market pundits ripped Berkshire's stock sales, saying Buffett was missing the boat and getting too old. (He is 94.) They probably aren't ripping him now.

Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett at the company's 2019 annual meeting in Omaha, Neb.JOHANNES EISELE/Getty Images
Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett at the company's 2019 annual meeting in Omaha, Neb.JOHANNES EISELE/Getty Images

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So, what happens next?

A slump is what happens when stocks get overbought. Markets go up, something stops the uptrend, and markets go down until there's a catalyst to turn things around.

The S&P 500, in fact, dropped just about 10% between July 16, 2024 and Aug. 5, 2024 because of fears a recession was breaking out. The recession just plain didn't happen. In fact, the index rose 2.3% in August and basically surged into the end of the year.

If you're looking for a catalyst, consider Jerome Powell, who managed to throw a life buoy to the shell-shocked market last week.