Billionaire Philippe Laffont Has Cumulatively Sold 83% of Coatue's Nvidia Stake and Is Piling Into Wall Street's Hottest Artificial Intelligence (AI) IPO

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Key Points

  • The quarterly filing of Form 13Fs offers a way for everyday investors to track the buying and selling activity of Wall Street's leading money managers.

  • Philippe Laffont has been a persistent seller of Nvidia stock for the last two years.

  • Coatue's billionaire chief was an aggressive buyer of another artificial intelligence (AI) stock that's expected to 10X its sales by 2028.

  • These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires ›

May has been a data-packed month for investors. Between earnings season, a steady flow of economic data releases from the government, and the Federal Open Market Committee's federal funds rate decision, there's been a lot to unpack.

But arguably the most important data release of the quarter occurred one week ago, on May 15. This was the deadline for institutional investors with at least $100 million in assets under management (AUM) to file Form 13F with the Securities and Exchange Commission. A 13F provides investors with a way to track which stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) Wall Street's most prominent money managers have been buying and selling.

Though Berkshire Hathaway's Warren Buffett is the most followed of all asset managers, he's far from the only billionaire investor known to deliver outsized returns and move markets. For instance, billionaire fund manager Philippe Laffont of Coatue Management, who's overseeing $22.7 billion in AUM, has a rich track record of outperformance.

Person using a pen and calculator to analyze a stock chart displayed on a computer monitor.
Image source: Getty Images.

Laffont is also known for his love of high-growth stocks -- especially those in the tech sector.

Based on Coatue's first-quarter 13F, its billionaire chief continued to be a seller of the world's leading artificial intelligence (AI) stock, Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), but absolutely piled into Wall Street's hottest AI-initial public offering (IPO) of the year.

Philippe Laffont has been a persistent seller of Nvidia stock for two years

Taking into account that Nvidia completed a 10-for-1 forward split in June 2024, Coatue's position in Wall Street's AI darling peaked at 49,802,020 shares in the March-ended quarter of 2023. Over the last two years, Laffont has been paring down this position with regularity.

During the first quarter of 2025, Laffont's fund dumped 1,460,653 shares of Nvidia stock, which represents a sequential quarterly decline of about 15%. But over the last eight quarters, Coatue's billionaire boss has overseen the sale of 41,256,185 cumulative shares of Nvidia, representing 83% of the fund's original stake.

To be objective, Nvidia has done a lot of things right to get to where it is now. Its Hopper (H100) graphics processing unit (GPU) and successor Blackwell GPU architecture have run circles around the competition, in terms of compute ability. Nvidia's hardware maintains a near-monopoly-like share in enterprise AI data centers.