HomeBusinessBillionaire Jeff Yass sold 61% of Susquehanna's stake in Palantir and is...

Billionaire Jeff Yass sold 61% of Susquehanna’s stake in Palantir and is piling in for a new stock turning heads in artificial intelligence (AI)

Over the past two years, there has been no better trend on Wall Street than the rise of artificial intelligence (AI). In Determine the pricePwC analysts predict that AI will increase global gross domestic product by $15.7 trillion by 2030.

Artificial Intelligence’s overwhelming potential to infiltrate nearly every sector and industry of the global economy is not lost on Wall Street analysts or are best money managers. Quarterly filed Form 13Fs give investors the opportunity to track the buying and selling activities of Wall Street’s leading money managers.

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Although Berkshire HathawayWhile Warren Buffett is the most followed of all billionaire investors, there are plenty of other billionaire asset managers known for making waves on Wall Street. Jeff Yass of Susquehanna International is the perfect example. Yass made a name for himself in the 1980s as a highly successful options trader, a strategy that Susquehanna employs today through its market-making business.

Granted, 13Fs don’t tell the full story about billionaire money managers. For example, Susquehanna’s 13F will not show short positions or options where the company has a short position. Nevertheless, these documents can still be useful in deciphering which stocks, industries, sectors and trends are capturing the interest of the big investors on Wall Street.

Susquehanna’s 13F shows that Yass and his team have been decisive sellers Palantir Technologies(NYSE:PLTR) shares since the start of 2024, and have piled into another AI stock that has been consistently in the news lately (albeit for the wrong reasons).

With the exception of the company’s AI graphics processing unit (GPU). Nvidiathere’s probably not a hotter AI stock on the planet than Palantir. The company’s shares are up 546% in the past two years, as of the closing bell on November 5.

Despite this outperformance, Susquehanna’s 13Fs show that 1,539,566 Palantir shares were sold in the first half of 2024, representing a 61% reduction. I repeat: Yass and his team rely on put and call options, as well as potential short options not listed in a 13F, to hedge their common stock positions.

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The logical reason for investors to take Palantir to the exit is its valuation. Even as the company comfortably beats Wall Street’s third-quarter revenue and earnings expectations and raises expectations in both areas for the remainder of the current year, its shares are valued at 39 times annual revenue and roughly 116 times expected earnings . These are nosebleeds for a tech stock whose growth rate has slowed significantly in recent years.

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