Billionaire Julian Robertson On Interest Rates and His Top Stock Picks For 2021

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In this article, we shared billionaire Julian Robertson's top 10 stock picks. You can skip our detailed discussion of Robertson's investment philosophy, his fund’s performance and go directly to Billionaire Julian Robertson's Top 5 Stock Picks.

The 88-year-old billionaire, Julian Robertson was in the U.S. Navy before working as a stockbroker for Kidder, Peabody & Co., when his family moved to New York. He eventually became the head of the firm's asset management division. In 1980, Robertson founded Tiger Management with $8 million. Using a long-short strategy and after 16 years of successful investment returns, Tiger Management grew its popularity and attracted more investors, resulting in a $7.2 billion of assets under management by 1996, and a peak of $22 billion two years later.

Robertson's Tiger Management holds the best hedge fund record in the 1980s up to 1990s. In the year 2000, due to a period of unimpressive performance, Julian Robertson decided to close his fund but he stayed active in the hedge fund business by mentoring and financing future hedge fund managers in exchange for a chunk of their fund management companies. He is considered to be the father of hedge funds after mentoring a group of people that eventually became successful fund managers. Billionaires Chase Coleman, Ole Andreas Halvorsen and Lee Ainslie are some of the former employees of Robertson whom he mentored and are now running their own hedge fund firms. They are called 'Tiger Cubs'. As of 2021, the legendary Julian Robertson has a net worth of $4.3 billion.

In a CNBC interview last May 2020, Robertson mentioned that interest rates and stock prices will go higher by 2021.

"There's a very good chance of that happening in through next year, and I'm sort of positioned already. Next year we could have an advance in interest rates to the point where the Fed would begin to slow down a little bit,".

Robertson has nothing but high praises for the 3 big tech companies he invested in at the time, namely Microsoft, Google, and Facebook. Asked if he's willing to hold these stocks for a long period, he replied:

"Very definitely. They probably sell on an average somewhere under a 20% premium to the market. That's not terribly high for the greatest companies in the world."

By the end of this article you will find out whether Robertson is still invested in these tech giants.

Robertson's Optimism on Zuckerberg and Facebook

Regarding Facebook's data privacy issues and the regulatory threats to its business model, Robertson said that it is definitely a negative factor for the company, however, he remains optimistic.