The U.S. stock market is printing fresh highs again, but one of Wall Street’s best-known valuation gauges is flashing a far less comfortable message. This time, the warning is coming from the so-called “Warren Buffett Indicator,” which has climbed to its highest level on record as major indices keep pushing upward.
Barchart posted on X, highlighting that the “Warren Buffett Indicator” has hit an all-time high while stocks hovered near record levels. The metric, which is technically the U.S. stock market capitalization divided by GDP, is widely used as a rough way to measure whether equities are getting ahead of the underlying economy. Warren Buffett famously described it in a 2001 Fortune interview as “probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment.”

As of May 11, Macromicro showed the U.S. market-cap-to-GDP ratio at roughly 232%, a record reading that suggests listed equities are now worth well over twice annual U.S. economic output. At the same time, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite were still notching fresh records, underscoring just how far the market’s rebound has run.
That does not automatically mean a crash is next. Even bullish analysts argue that today’s market has features the Buffett Indicator did not fully account for decades ago, including the huge overseas revenue exposure of U.S. multinationals and the outsized role of asset-light, high-margin technology companies.
As Geiger Capital told his 349,000 followers on X:
Have you considered the possibility that it’s not a bubble and the world is indeed changing at a pace humanity has never seen before, anon.
Still, the signal is hard to ignore. A market trading at record highs while its broadest valuation gauge also sits in uncharted territory is likely to invite fresh debate over whether the rally reflects durable earnings strength—or just a growing willingness to pay almost any price for AI-led growth.
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