Billionaire investor regrets dumping Nvidia shares that are now worth $1.19 billion — pulled the trigger before 10-to-1 split, missing out on hundreds of millions of dollars

17 hours ago 2
Nvidia
(Image credit: Nvidia)

In mid-June, Nvidia was the world's most valuable company, with a market capitalization of $3.34 trillion. Today, it is the No. 2 company in the world by market capitalization, with a market cap of $3.329 trillion. However, some investors sold Nvidia stock just before the 10-to-1 split in May because they thought it was too expensive. One of them is Stanley Druckenmiller, who now deeply regrets his actions, he told Bloomberg.

Stanley Druckenmiller, who used to be the head of Duquesne Capital and is now a top-down investor running Duquesne Family Office LLC, regrets the decision he now considers a mistake. Initially, he planned to hold his Nvidia stock for years but sold it when it was priced between $800 and $950, missing its rise to $1,300. At a conference 18 months earlier, he was confident in maintaining the investment long-term. However, when Nvidia's value tripled in just a year, he felt the valuation was too high and decided to sell as he was not the kind of investor to hold through such rapid gains. 

According to CNBC, in the third quarter of 2023, Nvidia was Duquesne's largest position, with 8.75 million shares valued at about $400 million. Then he started selling. At the start of the year, Duquesne held 6.18 million Nvidia shares, which dropped to 1.76 million by Q1's end and 214,000 by Q2's close. Had the fund kept that stake, it would now be worth roughly $1.19 billion. The firm has not yet shared its Q3 holdings this year, so we do not know how much it lost in missed opportunities. Still, with a net worth of $9.98 billion, Druckenmiller is rich anyway.

Despite regretting missing opportunities, the investor remains optimistic about Nvidia's future, especially its role in AI infrastructure. The most exciting part is that while the company's stock is still attractive, he is waiting for its price to drop before repurchasing it. However, as the stock remains expensive, Druckenmiller can only 'lick their wounds' from the missed opportunity, according to himself.

While Stanley Druckenmiller admits that he is a big believer in AI and sees enormous opportunities for Nvidia in this market segment, he still believes that the green company's stock could plunge, which is when it is time for him to buy. 

The question is, when Nvidia's stock price drops from $136 per share to, say, $80 - $95 per share, it means that over a trillion dollars will be erased from the company's market capitalization, and that will be a shock for the whole market. Such changes probably do not happen overnight, so Nvidia or the AI sector should underperform for a while. There are doubts whether Stanley Druckenmiller and other investors will be interested in stocks and market segments that underperform.

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Anton Shilov is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.

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