Warren Buffett Is Selling Stocks at a Record Pace and Avoiding His Favorite Stock for the First Time Since 2018

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Warren Buffett is commonly regarded as one of the most successful investors in American history. Shares of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) have increased more than 5,400,000% since he took control of the company in the mid-1960s, due in large part to savvy acquisitions and stock purchases he engineered. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) has returned about 37,500%.

Buffett reportedly manages 90% of Berkshire's investment portfolio, while his understudies Ted Weschler and Todd Combs manage the rest. Buffett is also permitted to repurchase Berkshire stock when he believes it's undervalued. So, we can assume Buffett was largely responsible for these decisions in the third quarter:

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  • Berkshire sold about 100 million shares of Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) during the third quarter, such that Buffett has now slashed the company's stake in Apple stock by 67% year to date. However, Apple is still the largest position in Berkshire's portfolio.

  • Berkshire did not repurchase any stock in the third quarter, breaking a six-year streak during which Buffett allocated $78 billion to buybacks. That sum makes Berkshire his favorite stock, and the lack of buybacks in the recent quarter suggests Buffett believes Berkshire shares are overvalued.

  • Berkshire was a net seller of stocks during the third quarter, meaning Buffett and his fellow investment managers sold more stock than they bought. Indeed, Berkshire's net stock sales have exceeded $127 billion year to date, marking the most aggressive selling behavior in company history.

Importantly, Berkshire reported $325 billion in cash and short-term investments in U.S. Treasury bills on its balance sheet as of Sept. 30. That number, coupled with the aggressive stock sales, suggests Buffett is struggling to find buying opportunities. Here's what investors should know.

Is it time to sell Apple stock?

Apple has a strong market presence in several consumer electronics categories. Most important, it ranks second in smartphone shipments globally, but first in smartphone sales due to exceptional pricing power. The company also ranks first in smartwatch and tablet shipments, and it ranks fourth in personal computer (PC) shipments.

Apple has a booming services business that augments its products. The company only benefits once when someone buys an iPhone, but it can monetize iPhone users continuously with adjacent services like iCloud storage, App Store downloads and advertising, Apple Pay, and subscriptions like Apple TV+. Additionally, services have higher margins than hardware products, meaning that business segment will likely be Apple's greatest source of profit over time.