Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway purchased $17 billion in U.S. Treasury bills on April 1, a significant flight to safety that suggests a bearish outlook for risk assets like Bitcoin.
"Three times since I took over, for sure it's gone down more than 50%. ... This is nothing to make you get excited," Buffett said in a CNBC interview Tuesday, commenting on recent stock market volatility.
The massive T-bill purchase adds to Berkshire's already large cash pile, which exceeded $370 billion at the end of 2025. The move rotates a substantial amount of capital into the safest government debt, signaling a defensive posture from one of the world's most-watched investors. This action comes as markets have shown some weakness, though Buffett believes the current dip is minor compared to historical downturns.
Buffett's defensive allocation could foreshadow a broader capital rotation away from equities and crypto. For Bitcoin, which often trades in correlation with high-risk tech stocks on the Nasdaq Composite Index, such a major risk-off signal from a key market influencer could increase selling pressure and challenge the crypto's recent upward trend. Traders are now watching key technical levels for signs of a breakdown in price.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.