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   Technology StocksSoftbank Group Corp


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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (5901)9/13/2020 11:48:15 PM
From: Madharry
   of 6018
 
share price is up around 10% in japan.

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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (5902)10/7/2020 3:08:54 PM
From: Madharry
   of 6018
 
thanks for the great article. He certainly has his fingers in a lot of pies. I think Ive given up trying to value it. Just gonna hold on now.

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From: Glenn Petersen10/12/2020 11:19:08 PM
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Softbank may launch a SPAC:

Message 32979178

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From: Julius Wong10/19/2020 10:38:57 PM
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"Nasdaq Whale" Doubles Down: SoftBank Ups Tech Stock Holdings To $20 Billion


One month ago, when we first reported that SoftBank was the "Nasdaq Whale" responsible for the gamma meltup across some of the largest tech names which quickly led to marketwide levitation across the entire stock market - as the Japanese conglomerate was furiously buying call spreads in a generally illiquid market and forcing dealers who were short gamma to delta hedge at ever higher prices creating a upward price feedback loop - we observed that according to Bloomberg's previous reporting, SoftBank had been targeting investments of approximately $10 billion in public stocks as part of a new asset management arm, far exceeding the initial holdings that founder Masayoshi Son outlined to shareholders in the company's latest earnings call, and a break from the company's strategy of investing in private names.

Then, two weeks ago, the Nasdaq Whale made a repeat appearance, when we reported that SoftBank was back for round two: as SpotGamma wrote, highlighting the strong rally in many tech names "there are notes out detailing large options positions building in tech. Looking at FB as an example you can see how call activity has picked up over the last two weeks" and "this chasm between call & put gamma is starting to look similar to that of early August."

This was confirmed that same day by CNBC's David Faber who said that on Oct 1, SoftBank had bought $200M worth of calls in NFLX, AMZN, FB and GOOGL.



But if SoftBank had built up a $10 billion stake in public tech stocks by mid-August, how big was its position now that it appeared to be doubling down? Well, there's your hint right there: according to a new Bloomberg report, SoftBank has doubled its equity positions to more than $20 billion despite what was initially a skeptical response from shareholders, one which prompted the bank to announce it would not act as a Robinhood-esque hedge fund chasing momentum stocks, and would consider tempering its trading plans in early September after reports that SoftBank’s spending spree was stirring froth in tech stocks.

Yet despite the news costing SoftBank about $9 billion in market value at the time, with the stock rebounding Masa Son has re-reconsidered and is now literally doubling down. Ironically, all this is happened just days after SoftBank's Rajeev Misra disputed reports SoftBank had pumped up tech stocks through its options trading, saying no single investor has that kind of influence on the markets.

"Nobody buying $10 billion of Nasdaq over a few weeks is going to move the Nasdaq,” Misra said in an interview with Bloomberg at the Milken Institute’s virtual conference. “We’re not even a dolphin, forget being a whale.”

That's some dolphin. In its public filings, SoftBank disclosed holdings of "only" $3.9 billion in stocks such high beta tech names as Amazon, Alphabet NVidia and Netflix...



... however, it has since bought a lot more stocks. Curiously, according to Bloomberg, while focusing on major tech stocks, SoftBank has also been expanding to smaller companies. Last week, it invested $215 million in Norway-based Kahoot, which makes education software.

So what is SoftBank's thinking this time behind its "renewed commitment" to the public equities trading arm? According to Bloomberg sources, the strategy - which consists of buying out-of-the-money call options funded by selling calls at even higher prices - is "built around expectations of a volatile third-quarter earnings season." That, however, makes no sense because SoftBank's strategy is fundamentally a bullish bet, and anything but a vol hedge. In fact, as August demonstrated, if done in size and if it triggers another gamma melt-up, such call spread buying itself can become the catalyst the pushes stocks higher. And that's precisely the strategy adopted by Masa Son and implemented by former Deutsche Bank trader Akshay Naheta, first identified here and whom we called the "gamma whale."

And now that this information is public amid renewed chatter of yet another gamma squeeze, will SoftBank fade away as it did in early September when it was first identified? Hardly: if anything Masa Son will triple down. After all, for the Japanese billionaire, the only thing that matters is SoftBank's stock price, and that just happened to hit a 20 year high on monday, the highest since the March 2000 dot com boom.



In fact, looking at the chart above, it is very likely that Masa Son will aggressively continue to expand this strategy until softbank's stock price regains it all time bubble highs.

zerohedge.com

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To: Julius Wong who wrote (5906)11/9/2020 5:47:40 AM
From: Madharry
   of 6018
 
shares in softbank up over 5% in tokyo after announcing earnings. they also announced that they bought back $1.35 billion of stock in october and that they owned $6 billion of amazon, $2billion of facebook, $1 billion of zoom.

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To: Madharry who wrote (5907)11/9/2020 6:11:39 AM
From: Julius Wong
1 Recommendation   of 6018
 
Good for Softbank.

Also of interest,
Message 33029971

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From: Julius Wong11/10/2020 8:44:25 AM
   of 6018
 
SoftBank has $50bn to invest -- now it needs targets


Japanese tech group is under pressure to find its next Alibaba to back



TOKYO -- Masayoshi Son has always liked to think he can "feel" when he is talking to a promising entrepreneur. For the Japanese technology investor, even a brief face-to-face encounter can be enough to convince him to invest billions in a startup.

Capturing that same magic over a video conference call is not so easy. But that is what Son is under pressure to do now that a series of asset sales has left SoftBank Group with only one dominant asset: Alibaba.

Known for his instinctive and risk-taking investment style, Son has focused on defense this year after the pandemic cast uncertainty over SoftBank's financial stability. He is still meeting founders of new investment candidates, mostly through video conferencing, say people with knowledge of the matter.

SoftBank has raised about $50 billion in cash since April, exceeding its target of $41 billion. In addition, it also plans to sell the U.K. chip designer Arm. If the deal clears regulatory approval, SoftBank will be left with a 25% stake in Alibaba, a 40% stake in its Japanese mobile subsidiary, an 8.6% stake in U.S. telecoms company T-Mobile, and the Vision Fund, in addition to smaller holdings like U.S. office space provider WeWork.

The Alibaba stake, worth about $190 billion based on its stock price on Friday, dwarfs all of its other major investments combined. In fact it is bigger than SoftBank's entire market capitalization of 14 trillion yen ($135 billion).

Son famously said his $20 million bet on Jack Ma's Chinese e-commerce startup in 2000 was driven by instinct. During a trip to China he met about 20 startup founders, and one of them was Ma. "I could smell him. We are the same animal," Son said during a public talk with Ma last year.

Alibaba has since been a major tailwind for SoftBank's stock price and Son's reputation as an investor. But the risk of its large exposure to the Chinese company was highlighted last week, when Alibaba shares tumbled after the IPO of its financial technology affiliate Ant Group was dramatically suspended at the last minute. SoftBank's shares fell 1% last week, while U.S. tech stocks rallied and Japan's benchmark Nikkei index hit a 29-year high.

Meanwhile, Son's other big bets have not been nearly as lucrative. The $40 billion sale of Arm, for example, includes a $2 billion breakup fee, $1.5 billion in stock compensation to Arm employees, and a $5 billion payout for SoftBank if Arm meets certain financial targets. If those items are excluded, the price tag is closer to the $31 billion SoftBank paid for Arm in 2016.

The $20 billion sale of its shares in T-Mobile, which it obtained through a merger with its U.S. carrier Sprint, came seven years after it bought Sprint for $21.6 billion. Among the buyers were SoftBank executives Marcelo Claure, Rajeev Misra and Ronald Fisher, who funded their purchases with a loan from SoftBank, according to filings by SoftBank and T-Mobile. SoftBank's remaining ownership of T-Mobile shares is worth $12.5 billion -- as part of the sale, SoftBank gave options to Deutsche Telekom to buy most of these shares.

The near $100 billion Vision Fund has yet to deliver the returns that Son had expected when it began investing in 2017. SoftBank committed $33 billion to the fund, which was also backed by Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi. Most of the money has been spent. As of June, the fund had sold some of its holdings and distributed $1.6 billion back to SoftBank. As a rally in tech stocks pulled up valuations of mature private tech companies which were the original target of the Vision Fund, it is now making smaller investments in early-stage startups.

Without a clear replacement, SoftBank has been careful about offloading its Alibaba stake. As part of its recent cash-raising activity, it raised $14.7 billion through "prepaid forward contracts" using Alibaba shares. But SoftBank will not start handing over the shares until January 2022, and says it can ultimately choose to repay investors with cash.

The company has begun investing some of its excess cash in U.S. listed tech stocks, a move partly designed to reduce its Alibaba exposure, according to people familiar with the strategy. But it has drawn criticism by some analysts for a lack of transparency, especially after reports emerged that it was buying up billions of dollars worth of options.

On the other hand, investors have cheered its commitment to buy back 2 trillion yen worth of shares and cut debt. Once that ends, investors will need another reason to buy SoftBank shares instead of Alibaba.

asia.nikkei.com

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To: Julius Wong who wrote (5909)11/10/2020 2:37:29 PM
From: Madharry
   of 6018
 
It seems funny to me that the media keep talking about son like he has had no success except for baba. he has had several multibaggers and his investment in uber is at the moment turning out quite well. if the arm deal goes though he will end up with a large ownership of nvidia that he could not possibly have purchased in the open market without send the share price sky high. I would be happy if he took most of that cash and bought back shares of softbank. his one massive failure has been we work.

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From: Glenn Petersen11/11/2020 1:07:11 PM
   of 6018
 
Some interesting charts and graphs at the link: wsj.com

Masayoshi Son Again Pulled Softbank From the Brink. This Time He Had Help.

The world’s most unpredictable technology investor was coached out of the crisis by hedge fund Elliott Management, a major shareholder

By Phred Dvorak, Corrie Driebusch and Juliet Chung
Wall Street Journal
Nov. 11, 2020 8:30 am ET

Japanese tech billionaire Masayoshi Son late this spring said he had “peered over the cliff edge” of financial ruin. Now, the SoftBank Group Corp. 9984 -2.47% founder is sitting on one of the largest cash piles in the investing world.

Mr. Son pulled his conglomerate back from the void with a sharp and surprising strategy shift, selling off holdings that have been central to his investment and operating blueprint, and buying back shares. The world’s biggest tech investor relinquished majority control over its last major operating businesses, sealing SoftBank’s transformation into an investment firm—and Mr. Son’s reputation for not doing anything by halves.

Mr. Son had survived previous corporate near-death episodes. This time, there was a new force urging on the metamorphosis.

When SoftBank’s shares lost nearly half their value—almost $50 billion—in two weeks this spring, Mr. Son and his senior team held daily calls with executives at hedge-fund firm Elliott Management Corp., said people familiar with the discussions. Elliott since last fall has built a SoftBank stake that likely makes it the company’s No. 2 shareholder after Mr. Son, they said.

Among Elliott executives counseling the Japanese firm was Gordon Singer, the founder’s 46-year-old son and head of Elliott’s London office. Mr. Singer and his team pressed Mr. Son to improve corporate governance and buy back shares.

In the end, SoftBank bought back more stock than Elliott had pressed for—surprising executives at the hedge fund—and sold enough assets to leave the company as much as $60 billion in available cash, said a person with knowledge of SoftBank’s finances.

SoftBank shares closed at 6,581 yen on Wednesday, up 144% from their March 19 nadir.

Now there is a nagging question within Elliott: Might Mr. Son go back to his old ways?

Some inside the hedge-fund firm are wary Mr. Son could spend the cash on risky investments, as he has done before, said people familiar with Elliott. He has often paid a major premium that has baffled the investment and tech worlds, including a large investment in office-share firm WeWork that he later called “really bad” judgment and another on a dog-walking startup.

Those worries have been fanned recently by Mr. Son’s surprise move to become essentially a day-trader, personally directing a team of traders using some of the cash pile to bet on daily moves in tech stocks.

Elliott executives are concerned enough about Mr. Son’s new activity that they have hedged against some of his trades by buying put options on an index of tech stocks, said the people familiar with Elliott. SoftBank is keeping all options open for spending the cash, Mr. Son said at an earnings press conference on Monday.



SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son said he had ‘peered over the cliff edge’ of financial ruin; Mr. Son in February.PHOTO: KIYOSHI OTA/BLOOMBERG NEWS
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The year 2020 has further cemented Mr. Son’s reputation as one of the world’s most unpredictable entrepreneurs, one whose every move is scrutinized, given how his cash sways industries and markets.

That Elliott, one of the world’s most tenacious activist investors, is wary SoftBank could head in an unanticipated direction is testament to Mr. Son’s record. He is known for strokes of investing genius, for huge flops and for running his own show, sometimes arguing against his own board and advisers.

In a written statement, SoftBank said that while its “vision hasn’t changed, our business model is always evolving,” adding that it is focused on pursuing an artificial-intelligence revolution and “creating value for shareholders—and no one is more determined to deliver than Mr. Son.”

SoftBank’s strategy shift and its asset sales were based solely on its own judgment, the company said. Investment decisions at SoftBank or the Vision Fund are made by their boards or investment committees, not by Mr. Son on his own, it said, declining to make Mr. Son available for an interview. Elliott declined to make Mr. Singer available for an interview.

Odd match

Elliott’s deepening foray into SoftBank harks back to last summer, according to people with firsthand knowledge of the companies, investors in the firms, and traders and bankers who work with them.

SoftBank is Elliott’s largest-ever bet on a single stock, said people familiar with the investment. Since it began building its stake last fall, Elliott’s SoftBank position has grown in recent months to at least $5 billion, much of it via so-called swaps that let Elliott avoid disclosing the full extent of its SoftBank position, they said. At today’s prices, that would be the equivalent of a 3.8% stake. It has since sold some shares, the people said.

Elliott is an odd match for Mr. Son. Founded by billionaire Paul Singer in 1977, the $41 billion fund is famous for taking stakes in companies and engaging in pitched battles with management. Chief executives who go head-to-head with Elliott frequently lose. It is known for its disciplined focus on not losing money—the founder has described that as the firm’s No. 1 rule.



Among Elliott Management executives counseling SoftBank was Gordon Singer, here at a 2018 soccer match.PHOTO: SPADA/LAPRESSE/ZUMA PRESS
-------------------------
In 2008, when hedge funds on average lost 19%, Elliott lost 3%. It was up 8.7% this year through September.

Mr. Son has become the world’s biggest technology investor by relying on his gut. He has directed SoftBank into dozens of companies often based, he has said, on instinct and a vision of how technology will change the future. He expects to lose money on some investments. Like most venture capitalists, his hope is that a handful will eventually be hits. He has said he invests with the aim to make SoftBank last 300 years.

SoftBank is known for its chaotic culture, reflecting its founder’s personality. Mr. Son often calls hourslong discussion sessions over strategy or investments, company veterans say, and sometimes pushes through investments despite skepticism from banks, his executives or his own board. He has said he can quickly sense whether he wants to invest in an entrepreneur, famously saying he decided to offer funding to Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. co-founder Jack Ma because of the twinkle in his eyes
Over the nearly 40 years since founding SoftBank, Mr. Son has steered it through a bewildering number of businesses, from software distribution to mobile phones to satellites and solar arrays. During the dot-com boom and bust, he gained and lost the status of world’s richest man and made one of the world’s great venture-capital bets, a $100 million Alibaba investment that is still valued at more than $170 billion even after selling portions of it.

He hasn’t replicated that success with his most recent venture, the $100 billion Vision Fund. It logged an investment loss of $17 billion in the year ended March 31, and efforts to find investors for a sequel fund flopped. Those two funds posted a $13 billion investment gain for the six months through September, SoftBank said Monday.

SoftBank said its “culture is one where importance is placed on maintaining momentum to always stay ahead of the times. It is not ‘chaotic.’ ”

Elliott’s stake

Elliott had traded modestly in SoftBank stock for more than a decade, but never felt comfortable making a big activist bet, said people familiar with its strategy. They were worried Mr. Son, who holds nearly 30% of the company, wouldn’t agree to take steps Elliott could normally demand of its targets, such as selling assets or making substantial share buybacks.

Last year, the idea of taking a larger SoftBank stake attracted Elliott’s Mr. Singer, the founder’s son, who saw it was trading far below the value of assets it was holding. He thought aggressive share buybacks could help close that gap, and figured the WeWork debacle—it scrapped its initial public offering plan, pushed out its founder and was bailed out by SoftBank—might have humbled Mr. Son enough to be willing to hear them out.

SoftBank’s stock has long traded for less than the sum of its parts because investors are wary about Mr. Son’s unorthodox investment style. In addition to its stake in Alibaba and the Vision Fund, last year SoftBank owned controlling interests in U.S. telecom operator Sprint, a Japanese mobile operator and Arm Holdings, a microchip design company. At year’s end, SoftBank shares were trading at less than 50% of the value of its assets.

Elliott took a small position in SoftBank in the fall and began adding to it. By February 2020, Elliott had amassed a more than $2.5 billion stake in SoftBank, equivalent at the time to about 3% of SoftBank’s market value.

Instead of launching a public campaign and surprising SoftBank with its demands, as Elliott has done with past large targets, the firm decided on a softer approach. They worried about angering Mr. Son, over whom they had little leverage, given his No. 1 stake. The best bet, they decided, was to make an appeal based on logic and the math behind the stock’s poor performance.

To their surprise, Mr. Son was receptive. When he met Mr. Singer and his team in January in Tokyo, he agreed SoftBank’s stock was undervalued and openly wondered why he wasn’t as revered as legendary value investor Warren Buffett, said one person in attendance.

Mr. Singer told him one way to help boost the stock price was to improve corporate governance, including adding women to its all-male board and implementing more checks and balances for Mr. Son, measures SoftBank has since implemented. Elliott also suggested SoftBank commit to buying back $10 billion to $20 billion of stock—up to a quarter of shares outstanding at the time.

Mr. Son didn’t commit to Elliott’s suggestions, appearing to signal he favored a more gradualist approach, including buying back less stock. Elliott decided to take a wait-and-see approach.

Then in March, the market panic over Covid-19 and tightening social restrictions pummeled his empire. While some of the Vision Fund’s companies benefited—including e-commerce and medical firms—many of its biggest investments were in businesses getting hammered, including WeWork, Uber Technologies Inc., Didi Chuxing Technology Co. and Oyo Hotels & Homes. SoftBank’s share price fell 25% during the first two weeks of March.

On March 13, SoftBank announced it would buy back as much as 7% of its shares, roughly $4.8 billion at the time, an amount similar to previous buybacks.

The team inside Elliott was surprised and frustrated by the buyback’s size, which they deemed lacking the urgency needed. The frequency of phone conversations between the firms increased—sometimes involving Mr. Son and Mr. Singer—until they were speaking daily.

On the calls, SoftBank executives at first said the larger buyback Elliott had requested wasn’t necessary. Elliott executives kept pressing as SoftBank’s stock price fell more than the broader market in the days following the announcement.



Mr. Son called SoftBank’s investment in WeWork ‘really bad’ judgment; signage in Beijing.PHOTO: WANG ZHAO/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
-----------------------
The price brokers were charging to insure against a SoftBank default—known as a credit-default swap—was spiking, and credit-rater Standard & Poor’s had downgraded the company’s outlook on March 17.

By Thursday, March 19, SoftBank’s shares had fallen 40% in just over a week, and its market capitalization had tumbled to around a quarter of the value of its assets. Mr. Son was personally affected when SoftBank’s falling share price depressed the value of shares he had pledged as collateral for loans, forcing him to pledge nearly three-quarters of his holdings at one point. Mr. Son has since said the situation has improved quite a bit. SoftBank said the board, not Mr. Son, made its decision to sell assets and buy back shares and that “Mr. Son’s personal circumstances had nothing to do with such decision.”

On Saturday, March 21, SoftBank called a multi-hour meeting with large shareholders, including Elliott’s Mr. Singer to pitch the idea of taking SoftBank private. Mr. Son had floated the idea off and on through the years, and some portfolio managers and analysts at Elliott were interested. But the other shareholders were ultimately not on board with the proposal.

On Monday, March 23, SoftBank announced a plan to sell $41 billion in assets and use the money to buy back an additional $18 billion in shares—more than Elliott had asked for when including the previously announced buyback. The move surprised even the biggest supporters of the SoftBank bet within Elliott.

Transformation

Within months, SoftBank had signed deals to sell most of what it had pledged to in March, agreeing to part with chunks of prized holdings such as Alibaba, U.S. carrier T-Mobile US Inc., and the company’s Japanese mobile-phone unit. SoftBank’s share price soared.

Mr. Son kept selling, surprising Elliott and other investors. SoftBank agreed to sell Arm to Nvidia Corp. for as much as $40 billion. SoftBank sold an additional 22% piece of its Japanese mobile-phone unit for $11.6 billion and a U.S. wireless-services provider it had bought several years back.

Top brass from SoftBank and Elliott now connect multiple times a month to discuss SoftBank’s next steps. SoftBank executives have told Elliott and other shareholders that taking the company private is possible but not currently on the table, said people familiar with the matter.

SoftBank is also working on developing a “blank-check” company to raise money in a public offering, then find an acquisition target.

One recent development at SoftBank that worries some in Elliott is a new asset-management arm Mr. Son announced in mid-August as cash piled up, to which he will contribute himself. He now personally directs a team of traders using $20 billion of the cash pile to bet on daily moves in tech names including Alphabet Inc., Amazon. com Inc. and Netflix Inc., said people familiar with his trading.



SoftBank shares lost nearly half their value in two weeks this spring; Tokyo headquarters.PHOTO: KIYOSHI OTA/BLOOMBERG NEWS
------------------------------
On an investor call, Mr. Son explained he was putting his own money in the new venture because he wasn’t a “bonus and salary guy” and felt the need to take risk and make money if his bets worked out. A person familiar with the investing arm said Mr. Son has for now set aside his 300-year focus to concentrate on directing his daily trades.

Some of SoftBank’s other institutional shareholders said they were confused by the flurry of trading and wondered if Mr. Son was readying another multibillion-dollar investment.

Mr. Son’s traders bought options that at one point were tied to around $50 billion of individual tech stocks, a massive bet on Silicon Valley that caused SoftBank’s stock price to drop 7% after the trade became public in early September. SoftBank lost nearly $3 billion on some of those options trades as well as other derivatives transactions, it said Monday.

Elliott bought offsetting options to hedge against SoftBank’s options trade when it found out about them, protecting them from the trade’s fallout.

Some within Elliott worry Mr. Son might make a surprise, large investment. Recent calls between the companies, a person familiar with the calls said, have included Elliott’s stressing the need for SoftBank to employ discipline.

—Julie Steinberg contributed to this article.

Write to Phred Dvorak at phred.dvorak@wsj.com, Corrie Driebusch at corrie.driebusch@wsj.com and Juliet Chung at juliet.chung@wsj.com

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From: Julius Wong11/15/2020 7:52:27 AM
   of 6018
 
Softbank exits stake in 24 companies, exits AMZN, GOOG, TSLA
Nov. 15, 2020 6:45 AM ET|About: Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN)|By: Gaurav Batavia, SA News Editor

Masayoshi Son's Softbank Group reported Q3 total portfolio value of $12.92B sharply down from $17.52B at the end of Q2.

Softbank has reduced its holding to just 4 companies from 26 companies at the end of Q2.

Notable exits include Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG), Adobe (NASDAQ: ADBE), Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA).

Reduced stakes in NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) and T-Mobile US (NASDAQ: TMUS).

Takes new position in Line (NYSE: LN) and Lemonade (NYSE: LMND).

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