Stanley Druckenmiller doesn’t make quiet moves. The billionaire investor, who ran Duquesne Capital Management with a 30% annual return from 1981 to 2010 without a single losing year, made a sharp portfolio shift in Q4.
Alphabet Inc., GOOGL
He sold every Sandisk (SNDK) share he owned and more than tripled his position in Alphabet (GOOGL).
Sandisk had been a strong performer — up over 1,200% in the past year. The stock was trading at a 10x price-to-sales ratio and 95x adjusted earnings. By the time Druckenmiller exited, the cyclical upside appeared fully priced in.
Meanwhile, Alphabet had dropped more than 20% from its February peak. That dip appears to be exactly what caught Druckenmiller’s eye.
Wall Street agrees with the move. Analysts have a median price target of $385 for GOOGL, roughly 30% above its current price of $295, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Sandisk is a solid business. It’s the fifth-largest NAND flash memory supplier and gained 2 percentage points of market share in the past year. Adjusted earnings grew 404% last quarter, and Wall Street expects 73% annual earnings growth through fiscal 2029.
But the semiconductor cycle is a risk. The current NAND supply shortage — which has driven that earnings surge — is expected to normalize around 2028. Sandisk’s 10.3% daily volatility tells a story on its own.
Alphabet’s Q4 results made a strong case. Google Cloud revenue rose 48% year-over-year, reaching a $17.7 billion annualized run rate. Cloud backlog jumped 55% sequentially.
Alphabet is also monetizing its custom AI chips, called tensor processing units (TPUs), to outside customers. Meta Platforms, Anthropic, and OpenAI have all signed deals to rent TPUs. Meta may even deploy them in its own data centers by 2027.
Forrester Research recently ranked Google Cloud as the top AI infrastructure solution on the market — ahead of Amazon and Microsoft.
On the search side, Alphabet has adapted to the generative AI shift through AI Mode and AI Overviews, both built on its Gemini models. CEO Sundar Pichai says these features are “driving greater usage.”
Alphabet plans to spend $175–185 billion in capital expenditure this year to build out its AI capabilities.
The company’s forward P/E sits at 27x — above the broader market but below its own historical average. Alphabet beat the consensus earnings estimate by an average of 15% in the last six quarters.
Druckenmiller now manages money through Duquesne Family Office, and this trade reflects a clear preference: durable, cash-generating infrastructure over a high-multiple cyclical play.
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