By Meena Krishnamsetty
Insider Monkey tracks nearly 400 hedge fund managers and prominent investors. Thirty-nine of these fund managers are billionaires. Nowadays, readers have access to websites that track the daily changes in billionaires' wealth. We wanted to track the performance of billionaires' top stock picks. By looking at our Billionaire Hedge Fund Index , investors may be able to decide whether it makes sense to imitate billionaires' stock picks without paying them hefty fees.
Warren Buffett , George Soros , John Paulson , Jim Simons , David Einhorn , Ray Dalio , and T. Boone Pickens are among the 39 billionaires we're tracking. Billionaire fund managers' top 30 stock picks returned 16.7% in 2012 as of March 16, vs. 12.3% gain in the S&P 500 ETF SPY -0.63% .
Here are the top seven stocks they're crazy about:
1. Apple AAPL -0.37% is the most popular stock among billionaire fund managers. Nearly half of them had a large position in Apple at the end of December. Apple is also the most popular stock among "ordinary" millionaire hedge fund managers (see the 10 most popular stocks). The stock gained 45% this year as of March 16. We have been extremely bullish about Apple since we started writing here at Trading Deck at the end of September. Apple was the most popular stock among hedge funds at that point, as well. We have been telling you that technology stocks are extremely undervalued as a sector, and Apple had single digit forward P/E multiple at the time. Today, we are still very optimistic about the stock. Its 2012 forward P/E ratio is 13.5, which is still less than the market. This is a stock that is expected to increase its earnings by nearly 20% per year over the next five years. It should easily trade above $800 over the next couple of years. Ken Griffin had the largest position in Apple at the end of December.
2. Google GOOG -0.64% is the second most popular stock among billionaire hedge fund managers. The stock had a disappointing performance so far in 2012, losing 3.2% as of March 16. We are optimistic about Google, as well. The stock's 2012 forward P/E ratio is 17 which is more than 25% higher than that of Apple's. They have similar ...read more.
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