Smart Money Sells Big Tech… Invests in NKE & SBUX

Something I do four times a year is pore through something known as “13Fs”. A 13F is a quarterly report that institutional investment managers with over $100 million in assets must file with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. And whilst these filings are submitted around 45 days after the quarter ends (e.g. August 15 deadline for June 30 quarter end) – they offer us insight into how the “smart money” is thinking about certain assets. Some names I follow include (not limited to) Warren Buffett, Bill Ackman, David Tepper, Howard Marks, Stan Druckenmiller and Seth Klarman. Now there was a consistent trend during Q2 – where large cap tech exposure was being reduced.

So Maybe Valuations Matter?

When I made the difficult decision to reduce my exposure to large-cap tech earlier this year – I wasn’t sure how things would pan out. In the short-term – I looked foolish. These stocks surged higher without me. However, since then, large-cap tech is trading lower than when I sold it (on average). But is this a dip you should buy? I don’t think so – not just yet. The broader index is only 6% off its all-time high. That’s nothing in the larger scheme of things. I’m choosing to remain a little more patient – where I think the index could correct somewhere in the realm to 10-12%.

Are Semi’s Set to Cool their Gen-AI Heels?

Whilst the technology sector is outperforming the benchmark index this year — semiconductor stocks have done the bulk of the heavy lifting. And it’s not difficult to explain investor FOMO. It’s entirely due to the hype around “AI” and specifically something called “Generative AI”. For example, in a report by Grand View Research, they valued Gen-AI at ~$13B last year. However, its anticipated CAGR is estimated to be ~36% – which puts the industry hitting $109B by 2030. That’s a sharp ramp higher from basically zero two years ago. And today – there a very few chipmakers who produce the GPUs required to meet the insatiable demand. However, is the demand semis are seeing today (and revenue) sustainable long-term? That’s unlikely.

Apple: Ready to Take Another Bite?

Apple is ~15% off its all time high as it lags its large cap peers. Concerns of iPhone growth and China have rattled investors. However, it’s not unusual for this stock to pull back. Since 2107, we have seen 11 retraces – offering patient investors buying opportunity. From my lens, Apple is a reasonable long-term buy around $165. And if you can get it cheaper – add to it. Over the next 3 years – I think it will be well over $200 as earnings top $8.00 per share.

For a full list of posts from 2017…