Thirty years ago, the advent of the internet forever changed the growth trajectory of American companies. Since then, investors have been waiting for the next game-changing innovation, technology, or trend to rival what the internet did for businesses. After decades of patience, artificial intelligence (AI) seems to have been chosen as the next leap in innovation.
The rise of AI hinges on the use of software and systems to perform tasks typically performed by humans. What gives AI such far-reaching potential is the ability of software and systems to learn and evolve without human intervention. As they become proficient at assigned tasks and acquire new skills, this technology has unlimited potential in the long term.
But despite the staggering growth projections surrounding AI — analysts at PwC expect it to add $15.7 trillion to the global economy by 2030 — not everyone on Wall Street is convinced of the technology’s upside.
According to Form 13F filings detailing the trading activity of Wall Street’s smartest money managers, the well-known billionaire investor NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) shares rose during the March-ending quarter.
Six more prominent billionaires have reduced their Nvidia stakes
While the artificial intelligence craze is widely believed to have driven Wall Street’s major stock indexes to all-time highs, eight successful billionaire money managers chose to sell Nvidia shares during the March quarter. (The number in brackets is the total number of shares sold, adjusted to account for Nvidia’s 1-for-10 stock split in June.)
-
Philippe Lafon of Coatue Management (29,370,600 shares);
-
Ken Griffin of Citadel Advisors (24,627,160 shares)
-
Millennium Management Israel Englander (7,200,040 shares)
-
Stanley Druckenmiller of Duquesne Family Office (4,415,510 shares)
-
David Siegel and John Overdeck of Two Sigma Investments (4,208,010 shares)
-
David Tepper of Appaloosa (3,480,000 shares)
-
Steven Cohen of Point72 Asset Management (3,045,050 shares)
While simple profit-taking following Nvidia’s impressive stock price rally may explain some of this selling, history and valuation are the more likely catalysts.
As we noted earlier, it has been nearly 30 years since the Internet began to change the growth trajectory of businesses and the U.S. economy. Since then, many of the next big innovations and trends have come and gone. Some of these technologies and trends have been hugely successful in the long term, but all of them endured early bubbles. All new technologies and trends need time to mature, and artificial intelligence is no exception. If the AI bubble does burst, as history suggests, no company will be hit harder than Nvidia.
Nvidia will also face increasing competition for GPU space in high-computing data centers. What the optimists seem to overlook is that even if Nvidia maintains its computing dominance, it will not be able to meet overwhelming demand and competitors will grab market share.
Additionally, four of the company’s major customers (all members of the “Magnificent Seven”) are developing AI-GPUs for their own data centers. These in-house developed chips don’t offer the same compute advantage as Nvidia’s H100 GPUs, but they’re cheaper and take up valuable data center space.
Crucially, Nvidia’s trailing-twelve-month (TTM) price-to-sales (P/S) ratio is on par with the peak TTM P/S ratios of market leaders such as: Cisco Systems and Amazon Before the dot-com bubble burst.
What’s really interesting is that while these prominent billionaire money managers were selling off Nvidia shares, they were buying into two fast-growing stocks that have little to nothing to do with AI.
Plug power
The hydrogen fuel cell solutions company is the first hypergrowth stock to catch the attention of billionaire asset managers who have been selling Nvidia shares. Plug power (NASDAQ: PLUG). All three billionaires who sold Nvidia shares were also buyers of Plug Power stock in the first quarter (total number of shares purchased is in parentheses).
-
Ken Griffin of Citadel Advisors (3,800,039 shares)
-
Philippe Laffont of Coatue Management (3,439,975 shares);
-
Millennium Management’s Israel Englander (546,925 shares)
Plug Power’s appeal as an investment is its strong potential for renewable energy tied to transportation and infrastructure. Management believes the company can achieve $20 billion in sales by 2030, which is an impressive growth rate considering the company is expected to report full-year 2023 sales of $891 million.
Plug Power is currently working to expand its green hydrogen network, which includes improving supply chain efficiencies, increasing prices across its product and services portfolio and significantly improving profit margins.
But despite the prospects for rapid growth, Plug Power’s future is uncertain. very There’s uncertainty. The company has been burning cash since it was founded and has periodically turned to stock offerings to stay afloat. Last week, Plug announced a $200 million initial public offering at a price well below the previous day’s closing price. With operating losses expected to continue for the next few years, further stock offerings seem likely.
Plug Power also has to overcome changing sentiment toward clean-energy vehicles. Infrastructure constraints are one reason demand for electric vehicles (EVs) has weakened in recent quarters. EV demand is a proxy for hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle demand, and Plug Power may find the market for its product to be, at best, middling.
Sea Limited
Another fast-growing stock that Nvidia’s billionaire seller hit the buy button on is Singapore-based Sea Limited (NYSE: SE). Despite Sea having little to do with artificial intelligence, five of Nvidia’s billionaire sellers became crucial buyers in the quarter that ended in March, including (total number of shares purchased is in parentheses).
-
Steven Cohen of Point72 Asset Management (1,527,446 shares)
-
Philippe Laffont of Coatue Management (678,308 shares);
-
David Siegel and John Overdeck of Two Sigma Investments (338,720 shares)
-
Ken Griffin of Citadel Advisors (190,432 shares)
What makes Sea such an attractive investment is the rapid growth of its three business segments.
The division that has consistently generated positive EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) is Sea’s digital entertainment division, Garena. Garena’s biggest driving force is Free Fireis one of the most popular mobile games in the world. In Q1, Garena had approximately 595 million quarterly active users, of which 8.2% paid to play games, a rate significantly higher than the industry average for mobile games.
Sea’s second fastest growing segment is its digital financial services business, SeaMoney. Many of the countries in which Sea operates are chronically underbanked, meaning businesses and consumers lack access to basic financial services. SeaMoney provides a solution to this problem – loans – which is prevalent in Southeast Asia.
But the most promising of all business segments is Shopee, an e-commerce platform that operates in Southeast Asia and Brazil. The platform saw $23.6 billion in gross merchandise volume (GMV) in the first quarter, equating to $94.4 billion on an annualized run-rate basis. To get an idea of how fast Shopee is growing, remember that its GMV for all of 2018 was $10 billion.
If these three business segments continue to perform well, Sea Limited could sustain annual sales growth of 15% (or higher) and achieve triple-digit annual earnings growth through 2028, according to Wall Street consensus forecasts.
Should I invest $1,000 in Nvidia right now?
Before you buy Nvidia stock, consider the following:
of Motley Fool Stock Advisor The analyst team Top 10 Stocks Here are the stocks investors should buy now… and Nvidia wasn’t among them. The 10 stocks selected have the potential to generate big gains over the next few years.
Things to consider NVIDIA This list was created on April 15, 2005…If you invested $1,000 at the time of recommendation, $722,626!*
Stock Advisor With portfolio construction guidance, regular updates from our analysts, and two new stock picks every month, we provide investors with an easy-to-follow blueprint for success. Stock Advisor The service has more than quadrupled S&P 500 returns since 2002*.
View 10 stocks »
*Stock Advisor returns as of July 22, 2024
John Mackey, former CEO of Amazon subsidiary Whole Foods Market, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. Shawn Williams The Motley Fool has invested in and recommends Amazon, Cisco Systems, NVIDIA, and Sea Limited. The Motley Fool Disclosure Policy.
Forget NVIDIA: High-profile billionaires are selling it and investing in two fast-growing stocks that have little to do with artificial intelligence (AI). This article was originally published by The Motley Fool.