Billionaire Bill Gates Has 80% of His $45 Billion Portfolio in Just 4 Stocks

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Bill Gates is among the most recognizable names in technology. The billionaire turned philanthropist is best known as the co-founder and longtime CEO of Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), the company he helmed for more than 25 years, though he now spends much of his time focusing on charitable work.

Gates is currently worth $104.8 billion (as of this writing), according to Forbes, making him the world’s 13th richest person. It’s important to note that Gates has pledged that “the vast majority of my wealth would go toward helping as many people as possible.”

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To that end, he set up the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Trust. “Our mission is to create a world where every person has the opportunity to live a healthy, productive life,” the Gates Foundation website says. By the end of 2023, the foundation had dispersed $77.6 billion since its inception, with a focus on “taking on the toughest, most important problems.”

While the Trust continues to own stakes in 24 stocks in all, at the end of the third quarter, 80% of its holdings were represented by just four stocks.

Image source: Getty Images.

Given his deep ties to the company, it shouldn’t be any surprise that Microsoft is Gates’ largest holding by far. The Trust owns roughly 39 million shares of Microsoft stock worth about $12.4 billion (as of this writing).

There are a number of reasons Microsoft holds such a prominent place in the portfolio. In addition to the company’s lucrative browser, software, and operating systems, Microsoft is the world’s second-largest cloud infrastructure provider, with 20% of the market. It’s also a key player in the field of artificial intelligence (AI). The two are inexorably linked, giving Microsoft a pole position in these important growth industries.

Management revealed that its Azure Cloud growth included “12 points from AI services,” which is now a strong contributor to its growth. In fact, according to analysts at Evercore ISI, Microsoft’s AI offerings could generate incremental revenue of $143 billion by 2027.

Microsoft has also been paying a dividend since 2004, which has increased every year since 2011. While the yield of 0.8% might seem paltry, it’s supplemented a stock price that has soared 190% over the past five years (as of this writing). Given its payout ratio of just 25%, there are likely plenty more dividend increases to come.

With all that working in its favor, it isn’t surprising that Microsoft represents such a large part of the Trust’s holdings.

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