**GLITCH in the MATRIX: Berkshire Hathaway’s Stock Logs a Single Trade at $0.00 – Seconds Before the Market Closed**

GLITCH IN THE MATRIX: Berkshire Hathaway’s Stock Logs a Single Trade at $0.00 – Seconds Before the Market Closed

OMAHA, NE – In what analysts are calling either a “catastrophic coding error” or “proof the simulation is buffering,” Berkshire Hathaway’s Class A shares (BRK.A) recorded a single, inexplicable trade at exactly $0.00 at 3:59:59 PM EST this afternoon.

Here’s where it gets weird. The trade was immediately flagged by the SEC’s automated surveillance system as an “impossible zero-volume parity error.” Yet, the timestamp confirms a real exchange of shares occurred.

  • The Glitch: According to raw exchange data, someone sold one share of Berkshire Hathaway for zero dollars. The buyer’s account was credited with the share. The seller’s account was debited… $0.00.
  • The Coincidence: This phantom trade happened exactly 4 years, 7 months, and 11 days after Warren Buffett’s cryptic (and now-deleted) 2019 tweet: “When the price hits zero, the algorithm breaks.” At the time, it was dismissed as a joke about negative interest rates.
  • The Matrix Echo: The buyer’s account is linked to a dormant brokerage based in Delaware—the same address as a shell company that once owned a single share of Berkshire Hathaway in 1976. That share was supposedly lost in a fire.

What Experts Are Saying:

  • “A $0.00 trade is statistically impossible,” says Dr. Jane Thorpe, Data Anomaly Researcher at MIT. *“Either the exchange’s ledger is lying, or the share was somehow transferred through a quantum data gap. This is the kind of glitch you see in a video game, not the New York