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So I've been looking at Chase Coleman's latest 13F filing and honestly, the concentration here is wild. This guy's net worth sits around $6 billion, but through Tiger Global Management he's actually overseeing $46 billion in assets. What caught my attention though is that 68% of his $24.5 billion hedge fund portfolio is locked into just 10 stocks. That's a pretty bold bet for someone managing that much capital.
Meta and Microsoft are his top two positions - 16.52% and 8.51% respectively. If you know anything about Chase Coleman's track record, he's never been shy about making concentrated bets on mega-cap tech. Apollo Global Management, Alphabet, and Sea Limited round out the next tier. The interesting thing here is how much overlap exists with the Magnificent Seven narrative. You've got Meta, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, and Nvidia all sitting in his top 10. That's basically the market telling you where institutional money is flowing.
What's worth noting is the smaller positions still carry real weight. Amazon sits at 5.32% - roughly $1.4 billion worth of stock by end of 2024. Nvidia at 4.91%, then Take-Two Interactive, Eli Lilly, and Flutter Entertainment rounding things out. All large-cap names, nothing speculative.
Looking at the individual stories here, Meta's daily active user base across Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger hit 3.43 billion in Q1 2025. That's an advertising moat most companies would kill for. Then there's the AI glasses angle Zuckerberg keeps pushing - he's betting that smart glasses become the dominant AI interface over the next five to ten years.
Alphabet's been taking heat with antitrust losses and AI search disruption concerns, but I think that's priced in more than people realize. Similar story with Nvidia - China trade restrictions have created real headwinds, yet the GPU demand picture remains fundamentally strong. Eli Lilly deserves more attention than it gets. Sure, earnings missed twice in three quarters, but their GLP-1 market share is over 50% now. Mounjaro and Zepbound are printing money, and they're filing for an oral weight-loss drug later this year.
But if I'm being honest? Amazon is the pick from Coleman's top 10 that actually excites me most. Every major pullback in Amazon's history has been a buying opportunity, and I don't think this one's different. AWS remains a cloud growth engine for the next decade. Their healthcare, satellite internet, and autonomous vehicle bets are long-term optionality that most investors undervalue. The fact that Chase Coleman himself is holding $1.4 billion worth says something.
The broader point here is that Chase Coleman's net worth and track record suggest he's not chasing memes or micro-caps. He's building a concentrated portfolio of names with real competitive advantages and secular tailwinds. Whether you agree with the concentration or not, there's something to learn from where serious institutional capital is actually going.