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Billionaires Sell Nvidia Stock Before the Market Crash and Buy a Golden ETF Up 166% in 10 Years

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Key Points

  • Hedge fund billionaires Israel Englander and Paul Tudor Jones sold Nvidia stock and bought positions in the SPDR Gold Shares ETF in the fourth quarter.

  • Some investors have turned bearish on Nvidia due to concerns about AI spending and export restrictions, but the chipmaker is still well positioned for growth.

  • The SPDR Gold Shares ETF has outperformed the S&P 500 year to date as tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump have pushed investors away from risk assets.

The hedge fund billionaires listed below sold shares of Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) during the fourth quarter, ahead of the recent stock market crash. They also purchased SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEMKT: GLD), an exchange-traded fund that soared 166% in the last decade.

  • Israel Englander of Millennium Management sold 1.1 million shares of Nvidia, reducing his position by 10%. And he bought 185,700 shares of the SPDR Gold Shares ETF, increasing his position by 280%.

  • Paul Tudor Jones of Tudor Investment sold 501,700 shares of Nvidia, reducing his position by 37%. And he bought 17,300 shares of the SPDR Gold Shares ETF, increasing his position by 13%.

Here's what investors should know about Nvidia and the SPDR Gold Shares ETF.

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Nvidia: A chipmaker that dominates the market for AI accelerators

Nvidia specializes in accelerated computing, a discipline that uses specialized hardware and software to speed up complex data center workloads like scientific computing and artificial intelligence (AI). It is best known for its graphics processing units (GPUs), also known as AI accelerators, where it holds 84% market share. But the company also provides adjacent hardware and software.

Nvidia has recently struggled against two headwinds. First, Chinese start-up DeepSeek trained sophisticated large language models with less computing power than U.S. rivals. The market assumed Nvidia GPU sales would falter as AI infrastructure spending slowed. But that has not happened. Instead, Nvidia expects demand to rise as cost efficiencies let more businesses adopt AI, and reasoning models create a need for even more computing power.

Second, the Trump administration recently hit Nvidia with export restrictions on its H20 GPUs in China, which could cost the company as much as $18 billion in revenue this year, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. But Nvidia still dominates the AI accelerator market, which is forecast to increase at 29% annually through 2030, according to Grand View Research.