Billionaire Philippe Laffont Has 30% of Coatue's $22.7 Billion Portfolio Invested in 4 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks -- and Nvidia Isn't One of Them

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Key Points

  • Quarterly-filed Form 13Fs allow investors to track which stocks Wall Street's brightest money managers have been buying and selling.

  • Though Nvidia was once billionaire Philippe Laffont's top holding, he's been a persistent seller of Wall Street's artificial intelligence (AI) darling for the last two years.

  • As of the end of March, a mix of four well-known AI hardware and applications companies made up roughly 30% of Coatue Management's invested assets.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Meta Platforms ›

Important data releases happen with frequency on Wall Street. A seemingly endless parade of earnings reports, economic data releases, and policy changes from the Donald Trump administration, can make it easy for something important to get overlooked by investors.

Arguably the most-telling of all data releases occurred three weeks ago on May 15. This marked the deadline for institutional investors overseeing at least $100 million in assets to file Form 13F with the Securities and Exchange Commission. A 13F provides investors with a snapshot of which stocks Wall Street's smartest money managers bought and sold in the latest quarter (in this case, the first quarter).

While Warren Buffett is the most-followed asset manager on Wall Street, he's far from the only billionaire investor with a phenomenal track record. Coatue Management's Philippe Laffont, who closed out March with $22.7 billion in assets under management, has a propensity for making money in the stock market.

A money manager using a smartphone and stylus to analyze a stock chart displayed on a computer monitor.
Image source: Getty Images.

Whereas Buffett is a staunch value investor, Laffont leans heavily into growth stocks and companies riding the latest technological waves, such as the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution.

Although Laffont ended March overseeing 70 stocks, just four of these positions (all AI stocks) account for roughly 30% of Coatue's invested assets. Interestingly enough, AI leader Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) isn't among these top AI assets, with Laffont persistently selling shares of Nvidia over the last two years. Though Nvidia was Coatue's largest holding from April 1, 2023 – Dec. 31, 2023, a combination of profit-taking and other possible nefarious factors has led to a notable reduction in this position.

Meta Platforms: 9.5% of invested assets

In four of the last five quarters, social media titan Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) has been billionaire Philippe Laffont's top holding. Coatue's more than 3.75-million-share stake equated to almost $2.2 billion in market value at the end of March.

While Meta is wagering heavily on an AI future, the lion's share of its revenue and profits are currently derived from advertising. In March, Meta's family of apps, which includes Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Threads, and Facebook Messenger, attracted an average of 3.43 billion daily active people. Since no other social platform comes particularly close to luring as many people on a daily basis, businesses are eager to advertise on Meta's social media sites. In turn, Meta often enjoys significant ad-pricing power.