Just caught something interesting about Peter Thiel's recent moves in the market. His hedge fund Thiel Macro completely exited Nvidia in Q3 and pivoted into Microsoft instead. Pretty bold timing given how dominant Nvidia has been in the AI chip space.



Let me break down the logic here. Nvidia still controls over 80% of the AI accelerator market, which is honestly wild. Their CUDA ecosystem is basically unmatched—they've spent nearly two decades building out this massive network of tools, libraries, and frameworks that developers rely on. When you factor in all the software costs competitors would need to rebuild from scratch, custom chips often end up more expensive than just buying Nvidia GPUs. That's a serious moat.

But here's where things get interesting. AMD's MI350 chips showed decent performance at MLPerf benchmarks, and they're launching MI400 next year. More importantly, the big hyperscalers—Google, Amazon, Meta, OpenAI—are all designing their own custom accelerators now. They're trying to reduce dependency on Nvidia. That pressure probably influenced Peter Thiel's decision to move on from Nvidia, even though most analysts still expect the company to hold 70-90% market share through 2033.

So where did Peter Thiel put the money? Microsoft. And honestly, the bet makes sense from an AI monetization angle. Microsoft is embedding AI copilots directly into its software products—90% of Fortune 500 companies are already using these tools according to their latest earnings call. The cloud business is growing at 28%, and they're about to double their data center capacity over the next two years. That's real infrastructure backing up the AI narrative, not just hype.

What's worth noting is the valuation picture. Nvidia trades at 44x earnings with 37% expected annual earnings growth over three years. Microsoft is at 34x earnings with 14% expected growth. On paper, Microsoft looks more reasonable, especially since enterprise software and cloud spending are projected to grow at 12% and 20% annually respectively through 2030. The PEG ratio of 2.4 is actually below Microsoft's three-year average, so there's some value here.

Peter Thiel's AI positioning through Microsoft is basically a bet that the real money in artificial intelligence flows through existing software and cloud infrastructure rather than pure chip dominance. Whether that timing is right or not, it's a different angle than just chasing Nvidia's continued dominance. Worth watching how this plays out.
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