Billionaire Stanley Druckenmiller Sold Palantir and Amazon and Is Piling Into This Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Instead

Key Points

Back in 2022, billionaire Stanley Druckenmiller made a sizable bet on chipmaker Nvidia . The company has gone on to become one of the biggest winners of advancements in generative AI , for which its graphics processing units (GPUs) are well suited. Druckenmiller has also been an investor in Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) , which has used AI to improve its software and expand its market. Druckenmiller has also made a lot of money by investing in Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) throughout his career, taking advantage of the cloud computing leader's growth.

But Druckenmiller is shifting his attention and his money away from these AI giants. He sold out of Nvidia about a year ago (although he says he regrets that decision). In the first quarter, he got rid of his remaining shares of Palantir and trimmed his Amazon investment by more than half. In their place, he's buying a different company that stands to benefit from continued spending on AI development but whose stock looks undervalued.

Billionaire Stanley Druckenmiller Sold Palantir and Amazon and Is Piling Into This Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Instead

Why Druckenmiller is selling Palantir and Amazon

Both Amazon and Palantir are producing strong results as enterprise customers spend heavily on AI software and development.

Palantir has seen its U.S. commercial business take off thanks to its Artificial Intelligence Platform (AIP). Businesses are expanding their use cases for AIP, and the service is reducing the need for clients to hire new workers. That has helped Palantir grow revenue extremely quickly without much overhead, resulting in strong earnings growth.

Amazon remains the largest public cloud platform in the world with Amazon Web Services (AWS). The company is seeing strong demand for AI services on AWS, and it's spending as quickly as it can to meet that demand, including plans to pour over $100 billion into capital expenditures (mostly for AWS) in 2025. The operating margin for AWS has soared to nearly 40%, pushing Amazon's operating profits considerably higher.

But Druckenmiller's decision to reduce his stake in these companies seems to be based purely on valuation. Indeed, Palantir is one of the most expensive stocks on the market trading at over 75 times management's 2025 revenue outlook.

Druckenmiller has also traded in and out of Amazon stock based on price, and shares reached an all-time high of more than $240 per share last quarter.

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