Warren Buffett has been making the same argument about market downturns for decades. He doesn’t dress it up. His position is that bad news in financial markets is good news for investors who are prepared. “Bad news is an investor’s best friend,” he has said, The Motley Fool reported. For anyone who has watched his track record at Berkshire Hathaway, it’s not hard to see where the conviction comes from.
The context makes this worth paying attention to right now. Markets are dealing with tariff uncertainty, the ongoing Iran conflict, rising energy costs, and real questions about whether the enormous spending on AI infrastructure will pay off. Buffett has been watching all of this and saying for months that stocks look expensive relative to what the underlying businesses are actually earning.
What Warren Buffett has said about bear markets and buying opportunities
Buffett’s relationship with market crashes isn’t complicated. He treats them as buying events. “Three times since I’ve taken over Berkshire, it’s gone down more than 50%,” he said in a CNBC interview earlier this year, as TheStreet reported. He didn’t frame those as disasters. He framed them as part of the deal, and as opportunities for investors who weren’t forced to sell at the bottom.
His broader view is that the best conditions for buying and the worst conditions for sentiment are often the same moment. When markets fall and the news cycle turns negative, stocks in companies that haven’t actually deteriorated go on sale. That’s the version of “bad news is an investor’s best friend” that has actually driven his returns over 60 years.
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He also said in May that in 60 years of investing, only five were truly “juicy” with opportunity, as TheStreet reported. The rest rewarded patience more than urgency. That framing matters right now, when the temptation to act impulsively in either direction is high.
Why Buffett’s bear market warning feels more relevant right now
The market’s recent run has been exceptional. Six of the last seven full calendar years delivered double-digit returns on the S&P 500. The index is up another 10.2% in 2026 through July 14, above its long-term historical average of roughly 10% annually. That kind of streak eventually corrects, and Buffett has been watching the math build.
The Buffett Indicator, which measures total stock market value against gross domestic product, hit 227% earlier this year, well above the 200% threshold Buffett has called a warning sign, as TheStreet reported. When that number ran high in previous cycles, it preceded periods of below-average returns.