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D1's Dan Sundheim and SurgoCap's Mala Gaonkar spoke about investing in AI a Chicago conference. Sundheim said it won't be private companies leading this tech change for once. Gaonkar said the most promising industry for short-term AI advances is the medical technology field. Sundheim, whose portfolio has billions invested in both public and private companies, believes the best way to tap into the AI frenzy is through public companies. PitchBook notes that the firm has made 228 investments in private companies since six years ago.
Persons: Dan Sundheim, Mala Gaonkar, Sundheim, Gaonkar, , Lone, medtech, Julian Roberston's, Elon Organizations: Service, D1 Capital Partners, Tuesday's Invest, Kids, Business, Lone Pine, SurgoCap Partners, Institutional Investor, Tiger Cub, Viking Global, Tiger, Elon Musk's SpaceX, D1 Locations: Chicago
In the past five years, four other alums have either shuttered or stopped trading hedge fund strategies. It's the latest spinoff from long-running Tiger Cub Lone Pine Capital to shutter. Lone Pine, the $16 billion firm led by co-chief investment officers Kelly Granat and David Craver, was founded in 1997 by billionaire Steve Mandel. Inside the Lone Pine family treeGaonkar's experience is far from the norm for Lone Pine alums though. Firms like Lone Pine, Tiger Global, Coatue, Viking Global, Maverick, Light Street, and others have lasted for decades and minted billionaires along the way.
Persons: Scott Coulter's, Mala Gaonkar, , Coulter, Cowbird, Pine, Kelly Granat, David Craver, Steve Mandel, Mandel, Julian Robertson's, Lone, Coatue, redemptions, Gaonkar, David Byrne, SurgoCap, Abobe, David Stemerman's, Scott Phillips, Matt Iorio's, Li Ran's, Brian Eizenstat's, Paul Eisenstein's, Nikhil Trikha, Arthur Wit, that's, Andreas Halvorsen's, Dan Sundheim's, Ben Jacobs, Ning Jin, Marco Tablada, Robertson, Tom Purcell Organizations: Service, Business, Lone Pine, Julian Robertson's Tiger Management, Cubs, Roberston's Tiger Management, Tiger, CNBC, Nvidia, GE, Figma, Pine, Latimer, Elm, Sky Capital, CenterBook Partners, Ampersand Capital Group, Global, Fund Research, Tiger Cub, Tiger Management, Viking Global, Viking Locations: Lone, Lone Pine, Granat, Texas, Li Ran's London, California, Viking
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewViking Global — the $48 billion Tiger Cub launched in 1999 — has had to replace talented people many times throughout its 25 years of existence. AdvertisementA person close to the manager told Business Insider that the manager decided to be "proactive instead of reactive" in hiring analysts for its investing teams. Viking traditionally had hired analysts after they'd spent two years in banking and another two in private equity. The person close to the firm said that underneath Walsh, portfolio manager Previn Mankodi has been promoted to deputy CIO, and Scott Zinober and Hani Sabbagh have each been bumped up to senior portfolio manager.
Persons: , Brian Olson, David Ott, Andreas Halvorsen, Dan Sundheim, Ben Jacobs, Ning Jin, he's, they'd, Matt Sharp, Justin Walsh, Walsh, Previn Mankodi, Scott Zinober, Hani Sabbagh Organizations: Service, Tiger Cub, Business, Viking, Suvretta Locations: Suvretta Capital, Viking, China, India, France, Korea
Hardware is Wall Street's new favorite bet
  + stars: | 2024-06-17 | by ( Dan Defrancesco | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +7 min
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. In today's big story, we're looking at the Apple-Google partnership that shows why hardware has become Wall Street's new favorite bet . The big storyHardware is hotGetty Images; Chelsea Jia Feng/BISoftware may still eat the world, but only with the help of some serious hardware. But generative AI has put a considerable spotlight on a less sexy part of tech: hardware. That's playing out in the stock market, where hardware tech stocks have outperformed software tech stocks by 30 percentage points this year , writes BI's Matthew Fox.
Persons: , Chelsea Jia Feng, Marc Andreessen's, Hugh Langley, That's, BI's Matthew Fox, it's, Steve Schwarzman, Jon Gray, Brian Ach, Tyler Le, Andy Sieg, Merrill Wealth, Dan Sundheim, Chris Tuite, Trump, Elon Musk, hasn't, Jimmy Simpson, they're, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, George Glover, Annie Smith, Amanda Yen Organizations: Service, Elon, Apple, Business, Apple Intelligence, OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, Street, Nvidia, Broadcom, Blackstone, Merrill, D1 Capital, YouTube, Netflix, BI, Cannes Lions, advertising's Locations: That's, New York, London
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewThe public markets have been kind to Dan Sundheim this year. The most even-keeled of the big-name Tiger Cubs has been Viking Global, which will lose its chief investment officer, Ning Jin, at the end of August. Many of these firms struggled in 2022 when public and private tech companies slumped thanks to a global rise in interest rates. AdvertisementRepresentatives for Tiger Global, Coatue, and Viking Global either declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment.
Persons: , Dan Sundheim, Philip Morris, Chase, Philippe Laffont's Coatue, Ning Jin, Julian Robertson's, Management — Organizations: Service, D1, Business, Viking, Philippe Laffont's Coatue Management, Tiger Cubs, Management, Tiger Global, Viking Global Locations: Marlboro, New York
Hedge funds took a diversified approach to technology investing in the first quarter as the sector built on its 2024 rally. Both Appaloosa and Coatue trimmed stakes in Nvidia during the period, with the latter shrinking his stake by 68% to $1.25 billion. Stanley Druckenmiller told CNBC last month that he cut his Nvidia stake in late March and called AI a "little overhyped" in the short run. Apple caught renewed attention from Viking Global and cuts from Coatue and Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway. Coatue, Third Point, Viking Global and Tiger Global upped their Amazon stakes, while Appaloosa and D1 Capital trimmed their holdings.
Persons: Michael Burry, Ole Andreas Halvorsen zeroed, David Tepper's, Chase, Seth Klarman's Baupost, Dan Sundheim's, Phillippe Laffont's Coatue, Dan Loeb's, Halvorsen, Tepper, Sundheim, Laffont, Brad Gerstner, Stanley Druckenmiller, Warren Buffett's Berkshire, Coatue Organizations: Technology, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Meta, Capital, Microsoft, Street's, CNBC, Apple, Viking Global, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, Tiger Global Locations: Coatue, Warren
Dan Sundheim's D1 Capital Partners raised its stake by more than 400% in a live entertainment stock during the first quarter, while reallocating funds across major technology winners. Keeping with the entertainment theme, Sundheim also opened a fresh $151 million position in music streamer Spotify Technology . Meta was the firm's fourth-largest position, totaling $382 million at the end of the period, despite a 37% cut. The hedge fund amassed a fresh $218 million stake in Pfizer during the period, making it the firm's 10 largest holding. D1 Capital also opened a position in UnitedHealth , while trimming Elevance Health and diabetes and medical device maker Insulet .
Persons: Dan Sundheim's, Sundheim, Meta, Philip Morris Organizations: Capital Partners, Entertainment, Spotify, Big Tech, Microsoft, Meta, Philip Morris International, Pfizer, D1, GE Vernova, Royal, Mastercard, Visa Locations: UnitedHealth, Royal Caribbean
Hedge funds appeared to take profits in a host of winning " Magnificent Seven " stocks during the fourth quarter at the end of a blowout year for the septet. Still, Nvidia shares rallied 14% in the fourth quarter, extending a 3% gain in the September quarter. Nor was Nvidia the only semiconductor maker that hedge funds cut back on in the fourth quarter. Reducing exposure to the rest of Magnificent Seven Hedge funds also took profits in a handful of other popular Magnificent Seven stocks that helped power 2023's AI-fueled market rally. Beyond the most prominent companies, hedge funds also made key reductions in other popular technology and semiconductor bets last quarter.
Persons: Dan Sundheim zeroed, Stanley Druckenmiller, David Tepper's, Phillippe Laffont's Coatue, Global's Chase Coleman, Jensen Huang, chipmaker, Tepper, Ole Andreas Halvorsen, Druckenmiller, Baupost Group's Seth Klarman, Coatue's Laffont, Point's Dan Loeb, Berkshire Hathaway, Value's Jeffrey Smith, Marc Benioff, Appaloosa's Tepper, Michael Burry, Druckenmiller amped, Point's Loeb, Coatue, Laffont, Tiger Global's Coleman, , Alex Harring, Yun Li Organizations: Appaloosa Management, D1, Technology, Wall, Nvidia, Management, Devices, Intel, Qualcomm, Taiwan Semiconductor, Viking, Arm Holdings, VanEck Semiconductor, Google, Microsoft, Duquesne, Viking Global, Corvex Management, Sundheim's D1 Capital, Baidu, Arista Networks, Scion, Oracle, Amazon, Tiger Global, Apple, Taiwan, Broadcom Locations: TSM, Meta, Berkshire, Salesforce, Chinese, China
Big investors took a selective approach to China-based technology stocks in the second quarter, recent regulatory filings suggest. Technology stocks continued their upward trend during the second quarter, including a slew of 2022's China-based tech losers. The fund scooped up a fresh position in e-commerce company JD.com worth nearly $64 million, and bought up China-focused exchange-traded funds KraneShares CSI China Internet (KWEB) and iShares China Large-Cap (FXI) . Other hedge funds raising bets on the company included Third Point's Dan Loeb, while Viking Global's Ole Andreas Halvorsen opened a minor stake worth $77.7 million. Not every investor bet big on the sector during the second quarter.
Persons: David Tepper's, Point's Dan Loeb, Ole Andreas Halvorsen, Baidu, Management's Philippe Laffont, Dan Sundheim, Tiger Global's Chase Coleman, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Technology, Reuters, Retail, CSI China Internet, Viking, Li, PDD Holdings, Kanzhun Locations: China, Alibaba
Hedge funds beefed up A.I. bets in the second quarter
  + stars: | 2023-08-15 | by ( Samantha Subin | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +5 min
2023 has been the year for artificial intelligence stocks, and hedge funds in the second quarter beefed up their bets on the growth sector despite its sharp run up this year. Doubling down on Big Tech Despite the uptick in tech shares by the end of the first half, many hedge funds amped up their bets on Alphabet during the second quarter. David Tepper's Appaloosa bet big on AI winners , growing positions in Alphabet, Amazon , Meta Platforms and Microsoft during the period. Betting on chip stocks Nvidia shares have popped 200% as the company triumphs as AI chipmaker to beat this year. Beyond these pure-play AI bets, Coleman added to semiconductor Lam Research .
Persons: Bill Ackman's, Dan Loeb's, David Tepper's, Baupost's Seth Klarman, Philippe Laffont's Coatue, Tiger Global's Chase Coleman, Mark Zuckerberg's, Dan Sundheim's, Ole Andreas Halvorsen, Loeb, Coleman, Sundheim, Baupost, Keith Meister's, Laffont, Yun Li, Sarah Min, Brian Evans Organizations: Big Tech, Microsoft, Tiger Cub, Management, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, Meta, Nvidia, Devices, Viking, Taiwan Semiconductor, Micron Technology, AMD, Intel, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Marvell Technology, Materials, Global, Lam Research, Netflix, Viking Global, NXP Semiconductors, Semiconductor Locations: Apple, Amazon
Sundheim also added 59% to a position in Jack Dorsey's Block in the second quarter, now worth $101 million. D1 also exited its position in tech giants Amazon , Alibaba and Salesforce in the second quarter, the filing showed, and sold 21% of a stake in Google parent Alphabet. Meanwhile, D1 added new semiconductor holdings. Elsewhere, D1 added to positions in General Electric , Insulet and Elevance Health . The firm managed about $27 billion at the end of the second quarter, according to WhaleWisdom.com , including about $5 billion in 13F securities.
Persons: Dan Sundheim's, Sundheim, Jack Dorsey's Block Organizations: Capital Partners, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Facebook, Microsoft, AMD, Nvidia, General Electric, Elevance Health, Nation Entertainment Locations: Hilton
Charlotte Hornets owner Michael Jordan responds to a question during a news conference at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina, Oct. 28, 2014. Basketball legend Michael Jordan has agreed to sell his majority stake in the National Basketball Association's Charlotte Hornets to wealthy investors Gabe Plotkin and Rick Schnall, a representative for Jordan confirmed Friday. Jordan took a majority stake in the Hornets in 2010 for $275 million. Under the ownership of the six-time NBA champion Jordan, the Hornets have struggled, only making the playoffs two times. Plotkin acquired a minority stake in the Hornets in 2019 and has served as an alternate governor on the NBA Board of Governors.
Persons: Charlotte, Michael Jordan, Basketball Association's Charlotte, Gabe Plotkin, Rick Schnall, Jordan, Plotkin, Schnall, Clayton, Dan Sundheim, J, Cole, Eric Church Organizations: Charlotte Hornets, Spectrum Center, Basketball Association's, Basketball Association's Charlotte Hornets, Hornets, NBA, of Governors, Tallwoods, NBA's Atlanta Hawks, Hawks, D1, North Carolina, Hornets Sports & Entertainment, G League, Greensboro Swarm, Spectrum, Forbes Locations: Charlotte , North Carolina, Dubilier
Tiger Global and Coatue have also returned double-digits this year thanks to the resurgence of tech stocks. The Tiger Cub's fund rose 5.60% in May and has gained 19.48% year to date, according to HSBC's Hedge Weekly performance report. This is a welcome turn of events for the Tiger Cubs, funds founded by portfolio managers who worked under the legendary Tiger Management head Julian Robertson. Tiger Global finished the year down 56%, and Coatue lost 18.8%. Fellow Tiger Cubs Lone Pine and grand cub D1 Capital also had double-digit losses, while Viking Global reported a single-digit loss.
Persons: Lee, Ainslie, Wall, Lee Ainslie's, Ainslee, Chase, Philippe Laffont's Coatue, Dan Sundheim, Andreas Halvorsen's Viking, Julian Robertson, Maverick, Coatue, Bloomberg's Katherine Burton, Hema Parmar Organizations: Nvidia, Tiger Global, Facebook, Bloomberg, D1, Andreas Halvorsen's Viking Global, Tiger Cubs, Tiger Management, Fellow Tiger Cubs, Viking Global, Fund Research
Tiger Global and Coatue have also returned double-digits this year thanks to the resurgence of tech stocks. The Tiger Cub's fund rose 5.60% in May and has gained 19.48% year to date, according to HSBC's Hedge Weekly performance report. This is a welcome turn of events for the Tiger Cubs, funds founded by portfolio managers who worked under the legendary Tiger Management head Julian Robertson. Tiger Global finished the year down 56%, and Coatue lost 18.8%. Fellow Tiger Cubs Lone Pine and grand cub D1 Capital also had double-digit losses, while Viking Global reported a single-digit loss.
Persons: Lee, Ainslie, Wall, Lee Ainslie's, Ainslee, Chase, Philippe Laffont's Coatue, Dan Sundheim, Andreas Halvorsen's Viking, Julian Robertson, Maverick, Coatue, Bloomberg's Katherine Burton, Hema Parmar Organizations: Nvidia, Tiger Global, Facebook, Bloomberg, D1, Andreas Halvorsen's Viking Global, Tiger Cubs, Tiger Management, Fellow Tiger Cubs, Viking Global, Fund Research
Securities filings released this week signaled that many hedge funds also appear to be catching the AI bug. Betting on AI heavyweights Alphabet popped up as one of the most common AI plays among big investors in the first quarter. Microsoft bet billions on AI capabilities, funneling another multibillion-dollar investment in January into ChatGPT maker OpenAI. Beyond Alphabet and Microsoft Outside heavyweight giants Alphabet and Microsoft, many hedge funds beefed up other AI-related holdings in the first quarter. His Nvidia bet equaled roughly $1.4 billion at the end of March.
Andreas Halvorsen's Viking Global Investors took new positions in Lululemon Athletica and Sherwin-Williams in the first quarter, according to the hedge fund's latest 13F filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Fellow hedge fund manager Dan Sundheim of DQ Capital Partners dumped his entire holding in Sherwin-Williams in the first quarter. A 46% increase to Halvorsen's McKesson stake put the stock in the number two slot among his biggest holdings, at $1.14 billion. Of Halvorsen's top 10 holdings, all were increased stakes in the quarter besides Amazon, which was cut almost 40%. Correction: A previous version misstated Viking Global's actions in the first quarter as a result of an incorrect quarterly comparison.
Dan Sundheim's D1 Capital Partners bet on PNC Financial Services as turmoil unraveled across banks in the first quarter. The hedge fund, founded in 2018, opened a $43-million stake in the Pittsburgh-based regional bank in the first quarter, which saw the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in March, according to securities filings. D1 also made new bets on the healthcare sector, opening new positions in UnitedHealth and Danaher , and a stake worth at least $314 million in Elevance Health . While technology stocks rebounded during the first quarter, and investors gravitated back toward beaten-up growth stocks as bonds yields offered some relief, D1 reduced its exposure to some popular names. D1 managed roughly $27.6 billion in assets at the end of March, according to securities filings.
The New York-based hedge fund bought a $205 million initial position in Floor & Decor Holdings , and $104 million worth of shares in mattress maker Tempur Sealy in the fourth quarter. Sundheim placed new bets on fintech companies Bill.com Holdings and Intuit , buying about $91 million and $14 million worth of shares in each company, respectively. D1 also bought $81 million worth of Alibaba . D1 managed about $40 billion at the end of the fourth quarter, according to WhaleWisdom.com. Sundheim started D1 in 2018 after a stint as chief investment officer at Viking Global Investors.
A stunning reversal in Chinese stocks in November has investors once again reassessing whether now is the time to double down on this once-hot market. "Biden's comments that he did not see an imminent threat to Taiwan from China were also noteworthy...," said Chang to CNBC. Investors CNBC spoke to remain encouraged by the country's much-needed reopening but want more evidence to suggest Beijing is easing its zero-Covid policy. The latest third-quarter 13F filings ending Sept. 30 also show several reputable hedge funds reducing their exposure to Chinese tech stocks. These positions may have changed since the end of September, but the data does suggest buy-side investors remain cautious on owning Chinese tech.
D1 Capital doubled down on its tech bets in the third quarter, adding some big names to its portfolio. The quarterly hedge fund filing shows only the positions at the end of September, not any details about the trades. D1 also added a handful of smaller new positions, worth less than $100 million a piece. Sundheim is a hedge fund veteran who previously worked as the chief investment officer at Viking Global Investors. D1, which he started in 2018, managed about $40 billion at the end of the first quarter of 2022.
The hedge fund industry in the early days of a consolidation wave, according to headhunter Ilana Weinstein. The writing is on the wall for hedge funds whose performance have taken massive hits over the last few months. The S&P 500 and the average hedge fund, according to Hedge Fund Research, dropped 18% and 4% year to date, respectively. To stay competitive amid consolidation in the hedge fund industry, Tolkin said $14.1 billion Schonfeld Strategic Advisors is looking to attract talent from different backgrounds and that can provide different ideas. This will help the firm become one of the "winners" amid the industry consolidation, Tolkin said.
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