What's Happening to the AI Rally? Billionaire Investor Stanley Druckenmiller Just Exited Nvidia and Is Now Piling Into Bank Stocks.

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Artificial intelligence (AI) stocks have been all the rage this year, climbing the charts in hockey-stick-like fashion and reaching meteoric valuations. Some expect the rally to continue as interest rates decline and the Federal Reserve engineers a soft landing for the U.S. economy, in which inflation falls and a major recession is avoided.

Others, however, are concerned that scenario won't happen and that the AI market has gotten too frothy. One of these investors appears to be the billionaire hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller, who now invests through his Duquesne Family Office. Duquesne recently filed its 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), detailing Druckenmiller's holdings at the end of the third quarter.

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Here's what it shows. The George Soros protege exited his position in the chipmaker Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) and is now piling into bank stocks. Let's see what might be the reasons.

Nvidia is trading rich for Druckenmiller

It's no secret that Druckenmiller has soured on Nvidia. Duquesne in the second quarter of the year cut its stake by 83%. Druckenmiller is undoubtedly a bull on artificial intelligence and believes in its potential. But he grew concerned about the valuation: "What changed is it tripled in a year, and I thought the valuation was rich," he said in an interview with Bloomberg. Still, Druckenmiller said he made a mistake in selling Nvidia too early and would consider buying the stock again on weakness.

NVDA PE Ratio (Forward) Chart
NVDA PE Ratio (Forward) data by YCharts

It's tough to sell businesses you truly believe in, but valuation is important. Bad companies can sometimes trade at attractive valuations worthy of potential investment, while great businesses can do the opposite.

Piling into boring old banks

Banks are not the most exciting investments. I personally find them interesting and invest in them, but I understand why companies like Nvidia are more attractive. Banks operate many seemingly commoditized businesses and there is a lot of competition with over 4,500 banks in the country. But again, any stock can become interesting at the right price -- and that's what happened to banks.

Investors left the sector for dead after a banking crisis in early 2023, a tough regulatory regime, an inverted yield curve, and the threat of much higher regulatory capital requirements. However, with interest rate cuts, a steepening yield curve, and a friendlier incoming Trump administration, bank stocks have soared and have been one of the biggest beneficiaries since Election Day.