Billionaire Izzy Englander Just Sold Apple, Amazon, and Nvidia but Bought 4 Other "Magnificent Seven" Stocks
Billionaire Izzy Englander made significant changes to his hedge fund's portfolio in Q3 2024, drastically reducing stakes in Apple (90.4%) and Amazon (86.9%), while selling 12.6% of Nvidia. He increased holdings in Microsoft (51.4%), Meta (7.6%), and Tesla (51.3%), and adjusted positions in Alphabet shares. Englander's moves reflect a strategy that may capitalize on AI growth and potential regulatory changes in the EV market.
All billionaires don't think alike. For example, Warren Buffett is buying only a few stocks for Berkshire Hathaway's portfolio but has built a massive cash stockpile for the conglomerate. Meanwhile, Millennium Management hedge fund manager Israel "Izzy" Englander continues to buy and sell stocks with gusto.
Englander either added to or reduced Millennium's positions in many of its holdings in the third quarter of 2024. Some of his most notable trades involved buying and selling "Magnificent Seven" stocks.
Not so magnificent?
Buffett trimmed Berkshire's position in Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) by 25% in Q3. Englander made an even more emphatic move, slashing Millennium's stake in the iPhone maker by a whopping 90.4%. However, the hedge fund didn't completely exit its position with Apple. It still owns 1.22 million shares worth around $285 million at the end of Q3.
Englander hasn't explained publicly his rationale for selling most of his shares of Apple. Perhaps he decided to "buy the rumor, sell the news" with the company's launch of its new generative AI functionality. Notably, though, his hedge fund increased the number of call and put options that it owns for Apple.
Millennium drastically reduced its position in Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) in Q3 as well. It sold 86.9% of its stake in the e-commerce and cloud services leader. This was perhaps a surprising move considering Amazon's marked improvement in profitability and free cash flow in recent quarters.
Englander didn't take the axe as heavily to Millennium's stake in Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA). He sold 1.6 million shares of the chipmaker, reducing his fund's position by roughly 12.6%. Nvidia still ranked as his fourth-largest holding at the end of Q3, though.
Why sell Nvidia? My hunch is that Englander was simply taking some profits off the table. However, he perhaps could have been concerned about the reported delays in Nvidia's shipments of new GPUs based on its powerful Blackwell architecture.
Buying mode
Englander loaded up on Microsoft (MSFT 0.49%) during Q3. He bought 1.56 million additional shares of the tech giant, boosting Millennium's stake by 51.4%. Microsoft ranked as the hedge fund's third-largest holding at the end of the quarter.
He also added modestly to Millennium's position in Meta Platforms (META 1.21%) in Q3. The hedge fund owned 1.34 million shares at the end of the quarter, up 7.6% from three months earlier.
Perhaps the most intriguing trades for Englander in Q3, though, involved Google parent Alphabet (GOOG 1.57%) (GOOGL 1.61%). The hedge fund manager sold roughly 19% of Millennium's position in Alphabet Class C shares trading under the GOOG ticker. However, he increased his stake in Alphabet Class A shares trading under the GOOGL ticker by 6.8%.
Microsoft, Meta, and Alphabet were among Millennium's 50 largest holdings at the end of Q3. Englander bought shares of one other Magnificant Seven stock that's a smaller position for his hedge fund -- Tesla (TSLA 2.14%). The billionaire investor increased his stake by 51.3% in the electric vehicle maker.
Should you buy Microsoft, Meta, Alphabet, and Tesla stocks, too?
I think there are good arguments to follow in Englander's footsteps with Microsoft, Meta, Alphabet, and Tesla.
Artificial intelligence (AI) should continue to provide a strong tailwind for Microsoft, Meta, and Alphabet. Microsoft's Azure and Alphabet's Google Cloud platforms will likely keep growing significantly as organizations build AI applications in the cloud. Meta is investing heavily in AI agents that could be transformative to its business.
Meanwhile, Tesla and Alphabet's Waymo unit could benefit from potential regulatory changes that could relax rules related to self-driving vehicles. Waymo is already a major player in the fast-growing robotaxi market, while Tesla hopes to enter the market in 2025.