Tiger Global buys more Nvidia, Amazon, exits surging tech stocks originally appeared on TheStreet.
Billionaire investor Chase Coleman started his career at Julian Robertson’s legendary Tiger Management, and when the fund closed in 2000, he started his own firm, Tiger Global Management.
Now, Coleman is well known for chasing hot tech names worldwide, investing in both public stocks and private startups, keeping the aggressive style Robertson was famous for. Now the best-known “Tiger Cubs,” Tiger Global has a 1-year performance of 41.38% and a 3-year gain of 105.17%, according to data from Stockcircle.
Coleman’s famous investments include early bets on Google (GOOGL) and Amazon (AMZN) , as well as building positions in private companies like Facebook (now Meta (META) ) and LinkedIn before their IPOs.
That same eye now guides his latest moves, blending bold new bets with timely exits.
During the second quarter of 2025, Coleman significantly increased his portfolio value and shuffled key holdings. Here are some of his most notable moves.
According to a latest 13F filing, Coleman’s Tiger Global ramped up its Big Tech bets in Q2, driving a 28% jump in the value of its public holdings from $26.6 billion at the end of Q1 to $34.1 billion as of June 30.
That includes adding shares of several mega-cap tech names and starting a new position in a recently listed stock.
Related: Warren Buffett buys battered stock, sells more Apple
Amazon was the top buy. Tiger Global added its Amazon holdings by over 4.1 million shares, or roughly 62.2%, bringing its total to about 10.7 million shares by quarter’s end.
This major purchase vaulted the e-commerce giant’s value in the portfolio from $1.25 billion to $2.34 billion, making it Tiger Global’s fourth-largest holding, accounting for 6.9%.
In Q2 2025, Amazon delivered a 13 % revenue increase to $167.7 billion. Still, Amazon shares slid after the Q2 earnings report as it gave lighter-than-expected income guidance for the current period.
The fund also expanded its Reddit (RDDT) stake by 89.2%, bringing it to about 6.1 million shares.
It also increased its exposure to the semiconductor leaders, adding shares of Nvidia (NVDA) by 6.8% to about 11.7 million shares.
The move reflects confidence in Nvidia’s position at the center of AI hardware demand. The stock is up 34% this year and is trading near a record, closing at $180.45 on August 15.
The recent bullish narrative was partly driven by renewed access to China’s market, after the U.S. approved AI chip exports under a deal requiring a 15% fee on China sales.

