Billionaire Stephen Mandel’s Lone Pine Is Embracing The Tech Revolution

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In this article, we reviewed returns from billionaire Stephen Mandel's top ten stock picks to determine whether Lone Pine's strategy of embracing the tech revolution is working. Click to skip ahead and see Billionaire Stephen Mandel's Top 5 Stock Picks.

Julian Robertson's protege Stephen Mandel’s hedge fund Lone Pine Capital has generated annualized returns of 19.5% since inception. Mandel’s fund has extended gains in 2020 despite poor performance in the first quarter. Lone Pine Capital’s strategy of investing in e-commerce and internet stocks helped in rebounding in the second quarter and extending that momentum into the second half of the year.

Lone Pine employs a long-short strategy and the fund uses both value and growth strategies when picking stocks. The firm doesn’t hold the position for a long time. The average time held for the top ten positions stands around 4.00 quarters while the time held for the top 20 positions averages 4.20 quarters.

Mandel announced to quit the role of managing investments for his Lone Pine Capital in 2019, but he remains as managing director. The billionaire Stephen Mandel has one of the strongest track records when it comes to stock picking.

Lone Pine Capital 2015 Q2 Investor Letter
Lone Pine Capital 2015 Q2 Investor Letter

Stephen Mandel of Lone Pine Capital

Mandel's Lone Pine Capital seeks to diversify investments across several industries. However, the 13F portfolio shows the hedge fund has not been chasing old fashioned companies and banking giants. The fund has been investing heavily in companies that are offering technological innovations and following digital trends. The technology sector accounted for 46% of the overall 13F portfolio at the end of the September quarter, up 18% from the previous quarter. In 2019 we published an article based on Lone Pine's 2019 Q2 investor letter. Here is an excerpt from that letter that explains Lone Pine's investment approach:

“The combination of historically low interest rates — $13 trillion of global government debt, over 20% of the total outstanding, yields less than-zero— and historically high levels of technological disruption, has created a stock market with a number. of ‘distinct segments that have widely varying valuations. Any judgment about the overall level of the stock market misses the nuance of these underlying extremes,” said Lone Pine Capital’s 2019 Q2 investor letter.