The Warren Buffett Indicator reached 236% on May 29, the highest reading in history, with US stocks more overvalued relative to the economy than at any prior peak.
The Warren Buffett Indicator reached 236% on May 29, the highest reading in history, with US stocks more overvalued relative to the economy than at any prior peak.

The S&P 500 rose 0.6% to a fresh record, pushing the Warren Buffett Indicator — total US market capitalization divided by gross domestic product — to an all-time high of 236%.
Warren Buffett, who called the ratio "probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment," has historically warned that readings above 200% signal excessive speculation. The previous record of 218% was set in late 2021, months before the S&P 500 entered a bear market.
The Nasdaq Composite added 0.9% to its own record, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 30 points, or 0.1%. All three major indexes had closed at all-time highs the prior session. The rally accelerated after Axios reported a draft US-Iran ceasefire agreement extending the truce by 60 days, pending President Donald Trump's approval. Wall Street added roughly $350 billion in market value within 15 minutes of the headline, according to Bull Theory. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell 2 basis points to 4.46%, while West Texas Intermediate crude retreated to $88.78 a barrel from an overnight high above $92.50.
The Buffett Indicator's ascent to 236% means US equities have never been more expensive relative to economic output. Previous peaks — 142% during the dot-com bubble and 218% in late 2021 — preceded sharp corrections. With the S&P 500 trading at elevated multiples and the Federal Reserve holding rates at restrictive levels, the risk of a mean-reversion event is rising, though no single catalyst has emerged to trigger one.
Eight of 11 GICS sectors closed higher, led by consumer discretionary and technology. Dollar Tree soared 16.2% after reporting better-than-expected profit, while Snowflake jumped 39.4% on strong AI-driven revenue. Kohl's rallied 18.4% and Best Buy climbed 18.5% on earnings beats. Energy was the weakest sector, falling 0.8% as oil prices eased on the ceasefire news. The Cboe Volatility Index fell 0.7 points to 14.2, near the low end of its trailing one-year range, reflecting complacency even as valuation metrics flash warning signals. Trading volume on the New York Stock Exchange was 8% above the 20-day average, driven by the afternoon surge on the Iran headline.
The Buffett Indicator has exceeded 200% only twice before: briefly in late 2021 and during the 2022 bear market rally. Each instance was followed by elevated volatility and, eventually, a correction of at least 10%. The current reading of 236% surpasses both prior peaks by a wide margin, suggesting the equity risk premium is compressed to levels that historically have not been sustained. Gold, a traditional hedge against market stress, traded near $5,000 an ounce, while Bitcoin fell 5% to $72,890, moving inversely to equities — a pattern billionaire investor Mark Cuban said undermines Bitcoin's narrative as a hedge asset.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.