Buffett denies social media rumors after Trump shares wild claim that investor backs president crashing market
Warren Buffett went on the record Friday to deny social media posts after President Donald Trump shared on Truth Social a fan video that claimed the president is tanking the stock market on purpose with the endorsement of the legendary investor.
Trump on Friday shared an outlandish social media video that defends his recent policy decisions by arguing he is deliberately taking down the market as a strategic play to force lower interest and mortgage rates.
āTrump is crashing the stock market by 20% this month, but heās doing it on purpose,ā alleged the video, whichĀ Trump postedĀ on his Truth Social account.
The videoās narrator then falsely states, āAnd this is why Warren Buffett just said, āTrump is making the best economic moves heās seen in over 50 years.āā
The president shared a link to anĀ X postĀ from the account @AmericaPapaBear, a self-described āTrumper to the end.ā The X post itself appears to be a repost of a weeks-oldĀ TikTok videoĀ from user @wnnsa11. The video has been shared more than 2,000 times on Truth Social and nearly 10,000 times on X.
Buffett, 94, didnāt single out any specific posts, but his conglomerateĀ Berkshire HathawayĀ outright rejected all comments claimed to be made by him.
āThere are reports currently circulating on social media (including Twitter, Facebook and Tik Tok) regarding comments allegedly made by Warren E. Buffett. All such reports are false,ā the company said in a statement Friday.
CNBCāsĀ Becky QuickĀ spoke to Buffett Friday about this statement and he said he wanted to knock down misinformation in an age where false rumors can be blasted around instantaneously. Buffett told Quick that he wonāt make any commentary related to the markets, the economy or tariffs between now and Berkshireās annual meeting on May 3.
While Buffett hasnāt spoken about this weekās imposition of sweeping tariffs from the Trump administration, his view on such things has pretty much always been negative. Just in March, the Berkshire CEO and chairman called tariffsĀ āan act of war, to some degree.ā
āOver time, they are a tax on goods. I mean, the tooth fairy doesnāt pay āem!ā Buffett said in the news interview with a laugh. āAnd then what? You always have to ask that question in economics. You always say, āAnd then what?āā
During Trumpās first term, BuffettĀ opined at length in 2018 and 2019Ā about the trade conflicts that erupted, warning thatĀ the Republicanās aggressive moves could cause negative consequences globally.
āIf we actually have a trade war, it will be bad for the whole world ⦠everything intersects in the world,ā Buffett said inĀ a CNBC interviewĀ in 2019. āA world that adjusts to something very close to free trade ⦠more people will live better than in a world with significant tariffs and shifting tariffs over time.ā
Buffett has been in a defensive mode over the past year as heĀ rapidly dumped stocks and raised a record amount of cashĀ exceeding $300 billion. His conglomerate has a big U.S. focus and has large businesses in insurance, railroads, manufacturing, energy and retail.