Quarterly-filed Form 13Fs provide a way for investors to track which stocks Wall Street’s leading asset managers are buying and selling.
Appaloosa’s David Tepper has been a persistent seller of AI stocks over the last year, including hardware giants Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, as well as Taiwan Semiconductor.
Only 11 public companies have ever reached the trillion-dollar valuation plateau — and one of these companies has been on Tepper’s buy list.
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For some investors, earnings season is the pinnacle of each quarter. This six-week period, where many of Wall Street’s most influential businesses lift the hood on their operating results, provides investors with invaluable information.
However, an equally strong argument can be made that the quarterly filing of Form 13Fs with the Securities and Exchange Commission is just as important as earnings season. A 13F offers investors a way to see which stocks Wall Street’s top money managers have been buying and selling. In other words, these filings clue investors in to the stocks, industries, sectors, and trends that have piqued the interest of highly successful asset managers.
Arguably no trend has been hotter than the rise of artificial intelligence (AI). Empowering software and systems with the tools to make split-second decisions without human intervention is a multitrillion-dollar global opportunity, which explains why AI stocks have soared.
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But not all of Wall Street’s prominent billionaire fund managers are along for the ride.
Based on 13Fs filed in mid-May that detail first-quarter trading activity, Appaloosa’s billionaire chief David Tepper has been a big-time seller of three red-hot AI stocks — Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD), and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM), or TSMC — over the previous year. Curiously, though, Tepper has been loading up on another AI stock that somewhat recently joined the exclusive trillion-dollar club.
Tepper and his team tend to be fairly active and are regularly building up or reducing their existing stakes. Rather than looking at changes from the prior three-month period, more wisdom can often be gained by examining year-over-year changes to Appaloosa’s more than $8 billion dollar investment portfolio.
Between April 1, 2024, and March 31, 2025, Tepper oversaw a significant reduction in, or the complete exit from, three of the AI revolution’s top companies: