By Svea Herbst-Bayliss
NEW YORK, May 15 (Reuters) – Two of Wall Street’s most closely watched billionaire stock pickers, both once voluble activist investors, took โopposite tacks this year when Bill Ackman bet on Microsoft and exited โGoogle parent Alphabet and Daniel Loeb did the opposite.
Ackman said on X his firm Pershing Square โbegan building a new position in software giant Microsoft in February after shares dropped, saying investors weren’t giving it enough credit for its Microsoft 365 office suite and artificial intelligence investments.
Loeb’s hedge fund Third Point, on the other hand, sold 925,000 shares โof Microsoft during the first โ quarter, liquidating a position the firm had held since late 2022, according to a new regulatory filing.
Ackman and Loeb once ranked โ among Wall Street’s loudest activist investors, pushing companies to perform better with suggestions ranging from selling off divisions to firing CEOs.
In recent years, both have adopted a quieter tone, โsidestepping โpublic fights that generated headlines, and instead โmaking stock picks and riding along. โPicks by the two are closely followed by investors parsing their quarterly filings.
Loeb’s Third Point reported it bought 175,000 shares in Google parent Alphabet in the first quarter, while Ackman sold down most of his position in the company, according to a regulatory filing. A source said Ackman exited the rest of his Alphabet โholding in the second quarter.
Also during the โfirst quarter, both Pershing Square and Third Point โestablished new positions in Meta Platforms, โtheir filings show. Reuters first reported the position in February โwhen Ackman told clients the technology and โsocial media heavyweight โwill benefit from artificial intelligence.
The regulatory filings showed Loeb and Ackman and other big investors who filed their quarterly 13F holding data with the Securities โand Exchange Commission are โbeing more selective in investing in the “Magnificent Seven” AI giants, a group โthat includes Meta, Microsoft and Alphabet.
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Additional reporting โby Suzanne McGee; Editing by Tom Hogue)