Palantir Billionaire Peter Thiel Sells Nvidia Stock -- 100% of His Portfolio Is Now Invested in 3 AI Stocks
The Motley Fool·2026-01-22 08:05

Group 1: Peter Thiel's Investment Strategy - Peter Thiel's entire portfolio is now invested in Tesla, Microsoft, and Apple after selling his stake in Nvidia [1] - Thiel Macro outperformed the S&P 500 by 16 percentage points over the past year, indicating strong performance [1] Group 2: Tesla - Tesla accounts for 39% of Thiel's portfolio and has lost about 5 percentage points of market share in electric cars over the past year, losing its market leader position to BYD [2][4] - The investment thesis for Tesla now focuses on physical AI, including autonomous driving and humanoid robots [2] - Tesla's full self-driving software relies solely on cameras, providing a cost advantage over competitors like Waymo, which uses a more expensive sensor array [3] - CEO Elon Musk claims that Tesla's humanoid robot, Optimus, could become the company's most important product, potentially accounting for 80% of its value [4] - Grand View Research estimates that robotaxi sales will grow at 99% annually through 2033, while Morgan Stanley expects humanoid robot sales to increase at 54% annually through 2035 [5] Group 3: Microsoft - Microsoft represents 34% of Thiel's portfolio and is leveraging its strengths in enterprise software and cloud computing to monetize AI [6][8] - The company has introduced generative AI copilots across its software suites, with monthly active users increasing from 100 million to 150 million in the September quarter [8] - Microsoft Azure has gained approximately 3 percentage points of market share since 2022, bolstered by new AI services and data center capacity [9] - Microsoft holds a 27% equity stake in OpenAI, granting it exclusive rights to advanced models until 2032, making Azure the only public cloud that integrates models like GPT-5 [9] - Wall Street anticipates Microsoft's earnings to grow at 14% annually over the next three years, leading to a current valuation of 32 times earnings, which is considered expensive [11] Group 4: Apple - Apple constitutes 27% of Thiel's portfolio and leads the market in smartphone sales while maintaining a strong position in other consumer electronics [12] - The company has not released a major new product since 2017 and has yet to capitalize on AI opportunities, although it plans to use Alphabet's Gemini models to enhance Siri [13] - Apple has a vast user base of over 2.3 billion active devices, providing a significant opportunity to sell AI subscription services [14] - Wall Street expects Apple's earnings to grow at 10% annually over the next three years, resulting in a current valuation of 33 times earnings, which is viewed as pricey [15]