Berkshire Hathaway's nearly $400 billion cash hoard stands to generate higher yields as the Federal Reserve signals it may raise rates rather than cut them.
Berkshire Hathaway's nearly $400 billion cash hoard stands to generate higher yields as the Federal Reserve signals it may raise rates rather than cut them.

Berkshire Hathaway ended the first quarter of 2026 with nearly $400 billion in cash and short-term investments, a position that becomes more lucrative as the Federal Reserve leans toward raising interest rates rather than cutting them.
The conglomerate's cash pile — built from decades of insurance float, retained earnings, and selective asset sales — generates income primarily through Treasury bills and money-market instruments. With the fed funds rate at 3.50 percent to 3.75 percent after four consecutive holds, those short-term holdings yield more than at any point since before the 2008 financial crisis.
The Federal Reserve left rates unchanged at its June meeting, the fourth straight hold under new Chair Kevin Warsh. Several officials signaled that rate hikes remain possible later this year, according to the Summary of Economic Projections, as inflation stays above target and tariff-related price pressures persist. Markets are now pricing a higher probability of a hike than a cut through year-end, a reversal from the start of 2026 when two to three cuts were the base case.
For Berkshire, the implications are straightforward. The company's cash and short-term investments — which totaled $334 billion at the end of 2025 before swelling to nearly $400 billion by March 31 — earn a floating rate tied to short-term yields. Each quarter that the Fed holds or raises rates adds hundreds of millions in interest income. In 2025, Berkshire's insurance operations alone generated more than $10 billion in net investment income, much of it from the cash portfolio.
The Fed's Hawkish Pivot
The shift in monetary policy expectations has been abrupt. In March, policymakers were still projecting one or two cuts by year-end. By June, the median projection had moved toward a possible increase, even as the committee remained divided. The change reflects persistent inflation readings and the economic impact of the U.S.-Iran conflict, which disrupted global oil routes through the Strait of Hormuz earlier this year before a ceasefire took hold.
Higher rates also affect Berkshire's equity portfolio, valued at $328 billion at the end of 2025. Rising discount rates typically compress valuation multiples, which could weigh on the conglomerate's holdings in Apple, Coca-Cola, and Alphabet — three stocks that account for more than one-third of the portfolio. Apple alone represents 19.7 percent of Berkshire's stock holdings, though the company has sold roughly three-quarters of its original stake since early 2024.
A Generational Cash Position
Berkshire's cash position has drawn attention because of its size and what it signals about management's view of markets. Under Warren Buffett, who stepped down as CEO at the end of 2025 after 60 years, the company often built cash during periods when valuations appeared stretched. New CEO Greg Abel, who worked alongside Buffett for more than two decades, has continued that approach — and has added aggressively to the Alphabet position this year at what the company considers an attractive price.
The cash also provides optionality. If rate hikes pressure equity markets broadly, Berkshire would have the firepower to deploy capital into distressed assets or opportunistic purchases, as it did during the 2008 financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic selloff. The company's insurance subsidiaries — including Geico, General Re, and Berkshire Hathaway Primary Group — provide a steady stream of premium income that replenishes the cash balance even during drawdowns.
For now, the calculus favors patience. With short-term yields above 4 percent on new Treasury bill purchases, Berkshire earns a real return on its cash while waiting for opportunities. If the Fed follows through on rate hikes, that return increases. If it doesn't, the cash still earns more than it did during the near-zero rate environment that persisted from 2020 through 2022.
The next Fed meeting in late July will provide the clearest signal of whether the hawkish shift has further to run. Markets will be watching for any change in language that could confirm or reverse the June projections.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.