These 2 Billionaires Just Bought My Favorite Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock

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Watching the moves of billionaire hedge fund managers is a wise investment strategy because these investors didn’t get to their status without making some smart decisions.

Funds that have more than $100 million in assets must disclose their end-of-quarter holdings to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) within 45 days after that quarter ends, and those disclosures are then made available to the public. This gives us an idea of what sorts of moves these Wall Street pros are making, albeit in a delayed manner.

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One stock that two billionaires I follow both bought in the third quarter is Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM), which is one of my favorite ways to invest in the artificial intelligence (AI) arms race. Chase Coleman at Tiger Global Management and Steve Cohen at Point72 made the move, although others no doubt scooped up TSMC (as it’s commonly known) in the quarter as well.

Taiwan Semiconductor is the world’s largest third-party chip foundry, and produces cutting-edge chips for nearly every company that’s at the forefront of digital technology. Apple and Nvidia are notable clients, but there are many others, too.

Part of the reason TSMC has risen to the top in its part of the chip industry is its culture of continuous innovation. In the world of chips, advances come with new and ever-smaller “process nodes” — defined by the ability of the manufacturers to reduce the size of transistors and other elements on the chips, as well as the spaces between them. The more tightly TSMC and its peers can pack these elements into a chip, the more powerful, faster, and energy-efficient the chip will be.

The cutting-edge generation in chip technology today is the 3-nanometer (3nm) process node — although that “nm” doesn’t actually refer to a specific component size or gap anymore. In recent years, node names have evolved into marketing terms, and various manufacturers use their own standards to define precisely what they mean in terms of upgraded chip density. Nonetheless, a 3nm chip is an impressive technological achievement that only a few companies can produce.

Demand for 3nm chips has been significant. They first contributed to TSMC’s revenue during Q3 2023, accounting for just 6% of its top line. In the most recently reported quarter, 3nm chips accounted for 20% of revenue — only 5nm chips contributed a higher share.

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