Mario Gabelli Stock Portfolio: 10 Top Stock Picks

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In this article, we discuss the 10 top stock picks of Mario Gabelli. If you want to skip our detailed analysis of these stocks, go directly to Mario Gabelli's Top 5 Stock Picks.

The stock market in the United States is full of investors looking to make a lot of money in a short space of time. This is primarily the main reason behind the incredible rise of growth stocks like Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL), Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), and Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOG), at the expense of more value-oriented entities. One person on Wall Street who still refuses to buy the growth mantra is Mario Gabelli, the billionaire chief of GAMCO Investors, a hedge fund with an equity portfolio worth over $8 billion. 

Gabelli has had a career in the stock market that has spanned over five decades, starting back in 1977. Over the course of this time, he has stuck to the basics, investing in firms that are undervalued based on their fundamentals, and making a tidy profit by buying and selling their shares at the right time. Gabelli is old-school in that he likes to hold on to his stakes in these value entities over long periods, only shedding or loading up in miniscule amounts. This strategy has generated a quarter-on-quarter return of over 4% for his fund in the past two years.

His latest dealings in equities paint an interesting picture. Per latest 13F data, at the end of September 2023, the top ten holdings of his equity portfolio comprised around 15% of the portfolio. He has, on average, held on to his top ten holdings for more than nine quarters. These holdings are mostly in the industrial and consumer goods sectors. Between June and September, GAMCO Investors reduced holdings in 398 stocks, made new purchases in 41, sold out of 51, and made additional purchases in 205 stocks. 

In a recent interview with PI Online, Gabelli outlined how technology, stock trading applications, and the advent of artificial intelligence have changed value investing, Per the veteran investor, even though the new tech was evolving the field of stock trading, it was still paramount that human beings and investors, with their experience and fact-checking instincts, be central to the whole process. Gabelli noted that he did not give too much credence to macro conditions when investing in a firm, firmly focusing on value for price instead. 

“We think top-down all the time, but we don't invest that way. OK, will there be a recession? Will the Fed go to stay higher longer? Is inflation going to happen? What we want to understand is, is it a good company, with a good business, good management, and a reasonable price? So price is important to me. It's very hard for me to see a company with $800 billion market cap. How much can it grow over the next five years? I have been through these cycles. You basically have to take a practical dynamic. What is a business worth? And that's what we try to do.”