Billionaire Bill Gates Has 65% of His Foundation's $45 Billion Portfolio Invested in 3 Outstanding Stocks

Key Points

Bill Gates is one of the best-known billionaires in the world. He reached an unforeseen level of wealth in the late 1990s as Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) soared to become the most valuable company in the world. Gates' net worth topped $100 billion in 1999, 18 years before anyone else would reach that level. By 2000, Gates stepped down as CEO of the company he founded to focus more on philanthropy and the newly created Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (a combination of three previous family foundations).

Today, the Gates Foundation manages a trust with a publicly traded portfolio valued at $45 billion, as of this writing. While it contains holdings in 25 stocks, including several stocks donated directly from Gates' personal portfolio, nearly two-thirds of that portfolio is held in just three outstanding stocks.

Billionaire Bill Gates Has 65% of His Foundation's $45 Billion Portfolio Invested in 3 Outstanding Stocks

1. Microsoft (29% of assets)

It's probably not a huge surprise that the largest holding in the Microsoft founders' foundation's portfolio is the software company itself. Gates seeded the foundation with $5 billion worth of Microsoft stock in 2000, and he's donated even more since then. Most recently, he added $5 billion worth of shares in 2022. That pushed the foundation's total share count to about 39 million.

As of the end of the first quarter, the Gates Foundation continued to hold about 28.5 million shares. Those are worth about $13 billion as of this writing.

Microsoft has been one of the biggest beneficiaries of growing artificial intelligence (AI) spending. Its early investment in OpenAI put it in a position to make Azure, its cloud computing platform, the top destination for developers looking to build on the models advanced by OpenAI and others.

That's spurred a ton of growth in the cloud computing business over the last two years, and there's no sign of slowing down anytime soon. In fact, Microsoft says it remains capacity-constrained on its AI compute, despite spending heavily to meet demand.

Azure's fiscal 2025 Q3 revenue climbed 33% year over year, according to Microsoft's most recent quarterly earnings release. Roughly half of that growth was driven by AI services.

Microsoft's enterprise software business also benefits from AI, as Microsoft continues to improve its Copilot software. It offers specific AI-powered Copilot assistants for software development, healthcare, cybersecurity, and even gaming. Copilot in Microsoft 365 gives the company another way to sell its subscription software while increasing prices. Meanwhile, its Copilot Studio allows enterprises to develop their own AI agents using Microsoft's foundation. That's spurred renewed growth in its enterprise software sales.

OK