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6 big things investors learned from Warren Buffett at this year’s Berkshire shareholder meeting


Warren Buffett speaks during the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on May 3, 2025.

CNBC

OMAHA, Neb. — Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett shocked shareholders during the conglomerate’s annual gathering on Saturday by announcing his intention to step down. For hours before that, the billionaire touched on a wide range of topics across the business and political spheres.

Here’s some of the biggest takeaways from Buffett’s 4.5-hour question-and-answer session:

1. His plans to step down

2. He doesn’t like tariffs

3. He thinks recent market turbulence is a blip

4. He believes in America’s exceptionalism

While Trump’s tariffs have called into question the U.S.’ leadership on the global economic stage, Buffett still expects the country to lead the way.

“We’ve gone through great recessions, we’ve gone through world wars, we’ve gone through the development of an atomic bomb that we never dreamt of at the time I was born, so I would not get discouraged about the fact that it doesn’t look like we’ve solved every problem that’s come along,” Buffett said. “If I were being born today, I would just keep negotiating in the womb until they said you can be in the United States.”

Buffett, whose father was a U.S. congressman, called the day he was born in the U.S. “the luckiest day in my life.”

5. He thinks deficits are a problem

When asked about Trump’s government efficiency initiative commonly referred to as “DOGE,” Buffett said he found the country’s growing deficit concerning.

“We are operating at a fiscal deficit now that is unsustainable over a very long period of time. We don’t know whether that means two years or 20 years, because there’s never been a country like the United States, but this is something that can’t go on forever,” Buffett said.

Buffett did not discuss DOGE specifically but did say he sees value in reducing government spending to sustainable levels.

“It’s a job I don’t want, but it’s a job I think should be done,” he said. “Congress does not seem to be doing it.”

6. Berkshire almost spent $10 billion of record cash position



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