Billionaire Ken Fisher Is Piling Into Artificial Intelligence (AI) Colossus Nvidia and Dumping Shares of Its Primary Rival

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In the mid-1990s, the proliferation of the internet began charting a new course for corporate America. The ability to meet customers in virtual storefronts opened never-before-seen sales channels for businesses and positively altered the growth trajectory of the U.S. economy.

Since then, investors have been waiting decades for the next big technology or innovation to drive businesses forward. The rise of artificial intelligence (AI) might just be this next step.

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A stock chart displayed on a computer monitor reflecting on the eyeglasses of a money manager.
Image source: Getty Images.

The lure of AI has to do with its broad-reaching scope. AI-driven software and systems have the capacity to become more proficient at their assigned tasks over time, as well as learn new tasks, all without human intervention. The analysts at PwC foresee productivity improvements and consumption-side effects from the AI revolution adding $15.7 trillion to the global economy come 2030.

While a $15.7 trillion addressable market leaves room for plenty of winners, no company has more directly benefited from the rise of AI than Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA). Nvidia's valuation has increased by north of $3 trillion since the start of 2023 -- and billionaire investors have taken notice.

Interestingly, more than a half-dozen billionaire money managers were sellers of Nvidia stock during the June-ended quarter. But as required Form 13F filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission show, at least one billionaire asset manager has remained an avid buyer.

Billionaire Ken Fisher has been adding to his fund's Nvidia stake for years

Nvidia's biggest billionaire supporter looks to be Ken Fisher of Fisher Asset Management. Fisher's hedge fund closed out the midpoint of 2024 with close to $230 billion in assets under management, which was spread across almost 1,000 securities.

Nvidia clocked in as Fisher Asset Management's third-largest holding by market value, as of the closing bell on June 30. During the second quarter, Fisher oversaw the addition of 2,103,107 shares, which increased his fund's position to more than 93.4 million shares. Adjusting for Nvidia's 4-for-1 stock split conducted in July 2021, as well as its historic 10-for-1 split in June 2024, Fisher's stake has nearly doubled from approximately 48.6 million shares in June 2021 to 93.4 million shares.

The plain-as-day attraction to Nvidia has to do with its absolute dominance in the AI-graphics processing unit (GPU) arena. According to estimates from the semiconductor analysts at TechInsights, Nvidia shipped approximately 98% of all GPUs to data centers in 2022 and 2023. With orders backlogged for its ultra-popular H100 GPU (commonly known as the "Hopper") and successor GPU architecture (Blackwell), it doesn't appear as if it'll be ceding much of its monopoly like market share in 2024.