2 "Magnificent Seven" Stocks Billionaires Are Buying

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Some of the wealthiest investors are still favoring top tech stocks in 2025.

  • Billionaire fund managers Stephen Mandel and Chase Coleman were buying more shares of two leading cloud service providers last quarter.

  • Microsoft and Amazon both reported strong first quarters, driven by growing demand for AI.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Microsoft ›

The "Magnificent Seven" includes some of the most profitable and dominant tech companies in the world. These are financially strong companies with a long history of delivering market-beating returns for shareholders, which is why they have earned the label "magnificent."

The most recent quarterly Form 13Fs revealed two notable fund managers buying more shares of Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) in the first quarter. Let's explore why these billionaires may favor these stocks in 2025.

Microsoft logo
Image source: Getty Images.

1. Microsoft

One of the most widely held stocks by investment managers is Microsoft. Billionaires Stephen Mandel of Lone Pine Capital and Chase Coleman of Tiger Global Management have held large stakes in Microsoft for several years, and both investors were buying more shares in the first quarter.

One reason that may explain why billionaire fund managers like Microsoft right now is the momentum in the company's cloud computing business. Revenue from Microsoft Azure grew 33% year over year in the first quarter, accelerating over the prior quarter's 31% growth rate. "We continue to see strong demand for our cloud and AI offerings as they help customers drive productivity, increase efficiencies, and grow their businesses," Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said.

Microsoft Azure is one of the top cloud services providers, and it is building a solid competitive advantage. It continues to expand its data center capacity worldwide. This is helping Azure offer superior regional availability for companies using popular enterprise software vendors like Oracle and SAP.

Microsoft has certainly lived up to its label as a Magnificent Seven stock. Its dominance in the software market with Windows and Office has made it one of the most profitable companies in the world, and its growth opportunity in cloud services points to a bright future. Over the last five years, its revenue and earnings per share have roughly doubled, sending its stock higher.

However, Microsoft will need to prove to investors that it can translate booming demand for cloud services into higher profits down the road. The capital required to build these data centers has weighed on the company's margins and earnings growth over the past year. On that note, Microsoft came through last quarter, delivering year-over-year earnings growth of 18%.