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Druckenmiller was quick to see the growth opportunities for Nvidia and Palantir.
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Valuation concerns ultimately led him to shed both stocks from his portfolio.
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This trillion-dollar company offers a more compelling value with multiple avenues for AI growth.
Stanley Druckenmiller was early to see the potential of the artificial intelligence (AI) trend that’s powered the bull market for the last three years.
He acquired a small amount of Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) in the third quarter of 2022 before massively increasing his stake in the chipmaker in the fourth quarter that year. At one point, it was his family office, Duquesne’s, largest holding, but he fully disposed of the stock last year.
He was also early to buy into Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR). He first bought shares at the start of 2021, making it one of his fund’s largest holdings. But as the stock price has appreciated substantially since, the billionaire has completely shed the stock from his portfolio as of the end of 2024.
Just because Druckenmiller takes profits on a stock doesn’t mean he won’t find his way back to it eventually. In fact, the billionaire investor piled into a longtime favorite he keeps coming back to during the second quarter. It was once the largest position in Duquesne’s portfolio, and it was one of his biggest purchases in the previous quarter.
Druckenmiller was early to recognize the potential for a company like Nvidia amid the growing demand for AI services like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, but by mid-2024 he felt the market had caught up with him. “A lot of what we recognized has become recognized by the marketplace now,” he said in an interview with CNBC.
With the rapid rise in Nvidia stock, Druckenmiller felt it had become relatively expensive compared to the growth opportunity ahead. Since that interview, share prices of Nvidia have doubled, and its forward P/E ratio has climbed above 40. It’s unlikely he’s about to jump back into the stock.
The same could be said about Palantir. Its P/E ratio went from expensive to astronomical since Druckenmiller decided shares were priced above fair value. Palantir now trades for 287 times forward earnings, up from about 118 times earnings expectations at the end of 2024.
While both Nvidia and Palantir are huge beneficiaries of the AI trend, which doesn’t seem to be slowing down anytime soon, valuation is still a contributing factor to whether or not to hold those stocks. Druckenmiller has decided they’re too expensive right now relative to other opportunities.




