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Druckenmiller Dumps All Alphabet Shares — Piles Into Sandisk, Micron, and Seagate in Q1 2026

Stanley Druckenmiller sold all his Alphabet shares in Q1 2026 and piled into Sandisk, Micron, and Seagate. The move shifts exposure from overvalued AI software to undervalued AI hardware demand.

Justin Jeon··5 min read
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AIKey Summary
  • Druckenmiller exited all Alphabet shares in Q1 and initiated positions in Sandisk, Micron, and Seagate — pivoting from richly valued AI software to undervalued AI hardware demand

Stanley Druckenmiller, arguably the most-followed billionaire money manager on Wall Street since Warren Buffett's retirement, exited his entire Alphabet position in Q1 2026 and piled into three memory and storage stocks. The move isn't a retreat from AI — it's a bet on who captures the hardware spending.


Duquesne Family Office's Q1 2026 Form 13F, filed May 15, shows Druckenmiller sold all 385,000 shares of Alphabet Class A (GOOGL). He held the position for roughly two quarters and is estimated to have locked in a 50%+ gain during that time. Alphabet, after a 140% one-year rally, now trades at $396 per share with a $4.8 trillion market cap.


Why Druckenmiller Sold Alphabet

Three explanations cover the sale. First, simple profit-taking: Duquesne runs an active fund with an average hold time of about eight months and has a history of taking gains when presented with sizable profits. Second, valuation: Alphabet's forward P/E has expanded from under 17x a year ago to nearly 28x now. Third, structural skepticism about AI software valuations.

"AI might be a little overhyped now. AI could rhyme with the internet."

Stanley Druckenmiller, CNBC interview, May 2024

That quote doesn't mean Druckenmiller is bearish on AI as a long-term technology. He views it as a long-term winner. What he's avoiding is the software and platform layer of AI where expectations are already rich — and what he's betting on instead is the physical hardware layer where demand is overwhelming supply.


What He Bought: The Memory and Storage Trio

Along with exiting Alphabet, Druckenmiller added more than two dozen new positions. The headliners are three memory and storage names:

  • SanDisk (SNDK): 38,155 shares — up 3,370% over the past year, forward P/E just 8x
  • Micron Technology (MU): 23,400 shares — up 660% over the past year, forward P/E just 7x
  • Seagate Technology (STX): 50,700 shares — No. 1 in high-capacity hard drives for AI data centers

Despite their parabolic price moves, Sandisk and Micron trade at historically cheap valuations. The reason: AI data center expansion is generating insatiable demand for HBM, NAND flash, DRAM, and high-capacity HDDs while supply remains constrained. That imbalance is compressing multiples relative to earnings growth.


The Investment Logic

Druckenmiller's rotation has a clear internal logic. AI software and platform stocks — Alphabet, Microsoft — have already priced in AI optimism. AI infrastructure hardware — memory, storage — is still cheap relative to actual demand. The spending that flows through a hyperscaler's AI capex budget ultimately lands on HBM chips and high-capacity hard drives, not on search advertising margins.

Building one AI data center requires tens of thousands of HBM chips, petabytes of NAND flash, and exabytes of high-capacity storage. That revenue goes to SNDK, MU, and STX shareholders — not GOOGL shareholders. Druckenmiller appears to be routing his capital accordingly.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Why did Druckenmiller sell all of his Alphabet shares?

Three factors: profit-taking (held ~2 quarters, locked in 50%+ gain), valuation stretch (forward P/E expanded from 17x to 28x), and structural skepticism about AI software valuations. He remains bullish on AI long-term but wary of software/platform layer valuations.

Why are Sandisk and Micron still cheap despite 3,000%+ gains?

Their earnings have grown as fast as their stock prices. AI data center construction is driving insatiable demand for HBM, NAND flash, and DRAM while supply remains constrained. Sandisk's forward P/E is 8x; Micron's is 7x — cheap by any historical measure.

Is Druckenmiller bearish on AI?

No. He views AI as a long-term winner. His repositioning moves capital away from AI software/platform stocks where expectations are already high, toward AI infrastructure hardware (memory, storage) where demand is outpacing supply.

What is a Form 13F?

U.S. institutional investors managing over $100 million are required to file Form 13F with the SEC within 45 days of each quarter's end, disclosing all long equity positions. May 15 was the Q1 2026 filing deadline.

Why is Seagate an AI beneficiary?

AI data centers require massive amounts of high-capacity hard drives to store training data. Seagate is the world's leading producer of high-capacity HDDs, making it a direct beneficiary of AI infrastructure expansion.

Justin Jeon
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Justin Jeon

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