Dan Niles says he's backing away from hyperscalers, trimming chip stocks
CNBC Top News ·
Tech investor Dan Niles is trimming his exposure to "Magnificent Seven" companies, saying the high cost of artificial intelligence is about to present a near-term setback for the hyperscalers — as …
Tech investor Dan Niles is trimming his exposure to "Magnificent Seven" companies, saying the high cost of artificial intelligence is about to present a near-term setback for the hyperscalers — as well as for chip stocks. "What I'm doing right now is I'm backing away from a lot of the hyperscaler type names that we talked about, and saying, 'okay, the chip stuff, that's where they're spending all this money,'" the founder of Niles Investment Management told CNBC's " Squawk on the Street " on Monday. "But even there, with the stocks doubling, I'm just going ahead and trimming back some of that exposure." The recent bifurcation within tech stocks have troubled investors. Just on Monday, practically all Magnificent Seven companies were under pressure, even as semiconductors continued to rally. Google-parent Alphabet was a prominent decliner, falling more than 6%, while Micron Technology popped 4%. Part of that difference can be explained by the concerns around capital expenditures. Investors are worried that the hyperscalers, which are spending massively on AI infrastructure, won't be able to get a return on their investment. More recently, those fears have been compounded by a perceived shift to token minimization from token token maximization. Companies initially encouraged employees to use tokens — the small pieces of data that AI models process and bill for — in a bid for greater productivity. …
Original source: CNBC Top News
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AI · CNBC · Alphabet · Micron Technology · Squawk on the Street