Billionaire Bill Gates Has 69% of His Foundation's $48 Billion Portfolio Invested in Just 3 Phenomenal Stocks

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When Bill Gates became a billionaire in 1987, he was the youngest person to reach that milestone. He reached billionaire status at 23, and 12 years later became the first centibillionaire, achieving a $100 billion net worth well ahead of anyone else.

Gates and his then-wife Melinda established a charitable foundation in 2000 to enhance healthcare and reduce poverty around the world, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Over the past 25 years, Gates has donated much of his wealth to the foundation, and he plans to donate the entirety of his assets to charity throughout his lifetime.

Gates' fellow centibillionaire Warren Buffett has also pledged donations to the Gates Foundation since 2006, but those contributions will end after his death. Buffett also served as a trustee for the foundation until 2021, and likely influenced how the trust invests its funds.

The trust's equity portfolio is currently valued around $48 billion, but more than two-thirds of that amount, about 69%, is invested in just three stocks.

1. Microsoft (31%)

Gates donated $20 billion to his foundation in 2022, and it appears a large chunk of the donation came in the form of Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) stock. Gates is still one of the largest shareholders in the company he founded, and the company's stock still accounts for a large portion of his wealth. The trust added about 38 million shares to its portfolio in 2022, worth about $8.9 billion at the time.

The trust fund still has almost 35 million shares of the stock left in its portfolio, and the value has climbed to $14.8 billion. Holding on to those Microsoft shares has worked out well for the foundation (and Gates). The stock is up more than 60% since July of 2022, when Gates made his donation.

Microsoft's strong performance over the last two years can be attributed to its role in the growth of generative artificial intelligence. The company increased its investment in generative AI leader OpenAI in early 2023, and it became a top cloud computing platform for AI developers as a result of its close ties with company. Microsoft's cloud platform, Azure, saw AI customers grow nearly 60% year over year in its most recent quarter, surpassing 60,000 total.

Meanwhile, Microsoft is injecting AI capabilities into its industry leading enterprise software — 77,000 organizations use its Copilot software to improve productivity and creativity across Github, Office, and their own native applications. And the number of customers continues to grow quickly, up 60% sequentially in the most recent quarter.