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Panicking Over Trump’s Tariffs? 2 Warren Buffett Pearls of Wisdom to Remember

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It was always something of a mystery what was being liberated on President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day,” but one thing is now clear: Billions of dollars in brokerage accounts across the country have been set free. The president’s announcement of a blanket 10% tariff on all imports and higher taxes on most major trading partners clobbered investors.

After stocks edged up in regular trading Wednesday, the announcement set off a shock after hours. As of 7:15 p.m. ET, futures had not yet started trading, but some major names were down sharply. Shopify, the e-commerce software leader, had lost 9%. Tesla and Apple had each fallen 7%. Nvidia had slipped 5%. The rest of the “Magnificent Seven” stocks that had led the bull market of 2023 and 2024 had gotten hit hard as well, and the wipeout may be unprecedented in modern market history, at least for after-hours trading.

Much of this sell-off seems to be a visceral reaction to the news, and to the economic experiment driving it: The Trump administration has asked Americans to endure some economic pain in order to (according to its reasoning) strengthen the U.S. economy over the long term. It says tariffs will reshore businesses, reduce the trade deficit and dependence on foreign imports, and rebuild the country’s manufacturing base.

Given the sea of red after hours on Wednesday, it’s not surprising that investors would be panicking, especially since stocks were at all-time highs just weeks ago.

At times like these, it’s worth remembering the sage advice of Warren Buffett, the Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) CEO and 94-year-old generally regarded as the greatest investor of all time. Two aphorisms in particular stand out at the moment.

Warren Buffett at Berkshire Hathaway's annual conference.
Image source: The Motley Fool.

There’s no shortage of Buffett wisdom on value investing, but one quote sticks out right now. Discussing his contrarian approach to investing, Buffett once said, “If they buy a stock and they think if it goes up it’s wonderful, and if it goes down it’s bad — we think just the opposite. When it goes down we love it, because we’ll buy more.”

What Buffett is saying might seem counterintuitive, but it makes sense. For net buyers of stocks, it’s good for stock prices to go down, because it allows them to buy more shares for the same amount of money.

Ultimately, you are investing in a company. And if the long-term prospects and health of that business hasn’t been damaged by the sell-off in question, then you’re getting a better deal buying shares at a lower price.

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2025-04-03 00:49:00

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