Many billionaire investors, such as Warren Buffett, have incredible track records that have made them well known in the stock market.
While it's OK to follow the moves of billionaires, retail investors shouldn't necessarily follow them blindly.
That said, if multiple billionaires are buying a stock around the same time, it can be a good idea to investigate that stock.
Billionaire investors who manage large hedge funds are among the most successful investors in the world. That's why it can be tempting for retail investors to follow their every move.
However, retail investors need to conduct their own due diligence because billionaires and hedge funds often trade on short-term time horizons and use very different rationales for their choices. Many of them also run large funds, so they aren't necessarily making every buy-and-sell decision that is attributed to them.
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Still, investors can use the investment moves made by billionaires to gain new ideas, and if many billionaires are buying a particular stock, it can certainly be a bullish indicator worthy of further investigation. Here's one stock billionaires are buying like there's no tomorrow.
In the third quarter of the year, multiple notable billionaire investors piled into the large tech conglomerate and search giant Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG)(NASDAQ: GOOGL), which is now up 65% this year (as of Dec. 2):
Alphabet has had a fairly volatile year. The company overcame a U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) lawsuit that sought to force Alphabet to divest its Chrome browser. While a federal judge agreed with the DOJ that Alphabet had employed monopolistic practices in the broader search and digital advertising ecosystem, the judge stopped short of forcing Alphabet to divest Chrome.
Additionally, many investors were concerned earlier this year about Google's ability to continue to dominate the search market with the emergence of OpenAI's ChatGPT. But Google has shown strong innovation, with its artificial intelligence overviews at the top of most of its search queries; its new AI mode, which provides a ChatGPT-like experience; and a new AI model expected to further enhance Google's search experience.
While I'm not sure if you can call any "Magnificent Seven" stock cheap per se, Alphabet trades at less than 30 times forward earnings, far cheaper than some of the nosebleed AI valuations seen in stocks like Palantir and Tesla.
Alphabet also has a certain degree of safety baked in, because if AI doesn't work out as well as some hope, the company still has many strong businesses with long growth runways ahead, such as Google Cloud, YouTube, Waymo, and an emerging semiconductor business that is starting to make waves.
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Bram Berkowitz has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Berkshire Hathaway, Palantir Technologies, and Tesla. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.