Veteran Wall Street trader's move will surprise Nvidia investors
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This article is based on TheStreet's Stock & Markets Podcast, Episode 4. Hosted by the veteran Wall Street investor Chris Versace, the weekly podcasts are available early to members of TheStreetPro investing club.

One bucket or two?

Now, we're not talking about kicking the bucket, a bucket of blood, or the song by the Kings of Leon.

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This is about investing buckets, and TheStreet's Todd Campbell recently explained his approach to Chris Versace, lead portfolio manager for TheStreet Pro Portfolio.

A self-professed “stock market junkie,” Campbell loves everything that has to do with the markets.

Related: Chipmakers like Nvidia, AMD get a gift from Washington

In his career he’d sold research to hedge funds and mutual funds for 20-plus years and wrote TheStreet Smarts column for TheStreet Pro. His resume also includes a tenure as editor in chief for TheStreet.

"I think I've tried every single investment style known to mankind with mixed results," he said. "And all of that has been part of a journey for me that has brought me to something I guess I'd call opportunistic buy and hold."

Veteran investor changes Nvidia position

Campbell discussed Warren Buffett’s investing method. Buffett, who recently said he would retire at year's end as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway  (BRK.A)   (BRK.B) , buys stocks at prices that he thinks are fair, “where he's going to have solid risk-reward, he's going to make some money," Campbell said.

“But he is ruthless,” Campbell said. “If he buys something and his mind changes, that stock is gone from Berkshire Hathaway's portfolio within a quarter or two, or quickly, he can unwind it, depending on how much he bought.”

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Campbell has all his stocks in two buckets: forever and rental. The "forever" stocks are the ones he has no timetable to sell, such as AI-chip colossus Nvidia  (NVDA) , which is scheduled to report first-quarter earnings on May 28.

"I've owned Nvidia since 2017 and I bought it because I believe that their [graphics processing units] were better than AMD's  (AMD)  and anybody else's," he said.

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"And I believe that GPUs were the best solution for gaming and for crypto. That was my original thesis, that they were going to enjoy revenue strength and profit growth off of that."