Close Menu
    X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    CapitalAI DailyCapitalAI Daily
    X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    • Markets & Investments
    • Big Tech & AI
    • AI & Cybercrime
    • Jobs & AI
    • Banks
    • Crypto
    Saturday, April 4
    CapitalAI DailyCapitalAI Daily
    Home»Banks»JPMorgan Chase Cuts $18,570,000,000 in Big Tech Exposure Across Meta, Nvidia and Microsoft

    JPMorgan Chase Cuts $18,570,000,000 in Big Tech Exposure Across Meta, Nvidia and Microsoft

    By Henry KanapiFebruary 16, 20262 Mins Read
    Share
    Twitter LinkedIn

    Banking titan JPMorgan Chase is massively trimming its exposure in the AI trade, dumping billions of dollars worth of Mag 7 names.

    The bank’s Q4 13F filing shows that JPMorgan unloaded $7.16 billion in shares of the social media giant Meta (META), selling 10,859,259 shares to reduce its holdings by 20% in just one quarter.

    As of the end of Q4, the bank holds 43,855,509 shares in META worth about $28.948 billion.

    Aside from META, JPMorgan also sold $6.06 billion in Nvidia (NVDA), distributing 32,478,144 shares in Q4 to trim its exposure in the chipmaker by 7%. At quarter end, JPMorgan Chase owns 456,141,138 Nvidia shares valued at $85.070 billion.

    And JPMorgan unloaded $5.34 billion in Microsoft (MSFT), dumping 11,048,048 shares to cut its holdings by 7%. As of December 31st, 2025, the bank holds 147,759,850 MSFT shares, worth about $71.459 billion.

    In total, the bank sold $18.570 billion worth of shares across the three Big Tech names.

    Source: WhaleWisdom

    Looking closer at the filing, JPMorgan also cut its holdings in the other Mag 7 names last quarter. Data shows that it sold 11,236,420 Apple (AAPL) shares, bringing its holdings down to 225,419,111 shares valued at $61.282 billion.

    The bank trimmed its exposure in Amazon as well, selling 22,614,647 AMZN shares and reducing its ownership to 160,046,290 shares, worth about $36.941 billion.

    Alphabet was also caught in the portfolio shift as the bank sold 5,239,152 GOOGL shares to slash its exposure to 64,654,741 shares valued at $20.236 billion.

    And JPMorgan dumped 47,889 Tesla (TSLA) shares in Q4, trimming its holdings to 44,591,616 shares worth $20.053 billion.

    Despite the Q4 sell-off across Mag 7 names, Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple and Amazon represent JPMorgan’s largest holdings, accounting for 16% of the bank’s $1.6 trillion portfolio.

    Disclaimer: Opinions expressed at CapitalAI Daily are not investment advice. Investors should do their own due diligence before making any decisions involving securities, cryptocurrencies, or digital assets. Your transfers and trades are at your own risk, and any losses you may incur are your responsibility. CapitalAI Daily does not recommend the buying or selling of any assets, nor is CapitalAI Daily an investment advisor. See our Editorial Standards and Terms of Use.

    JPMorgan Meta Microsoft Nvidia
    Previous ArticleRay Dalio Warns World Is Entering a ‘Might Is Right’ Era, Says One Hard Asset Stands Out
    Next Article Tech Mega-Bull Reveals ‘Biggest Bear Case’ for the AI Trade – And It’s Not Valuations or CapEx

    Read More

    Investor Who Nailed 2008 Housing Collapse Warns One Market Could Have Bigger Economic Impact Than the Iran War

    April 4, 2026

    Yardeni Research President Calls Bottom for S&P 500, Says One Sector Now Looking Cheap

    April 3, 2026

    Microsoft Shifts Copilot Strategy to Paid Subscriptions, Says Firm Now in a ‘Dog Fight’ After MSFT Falls 23%: Report

    April 3, 2026

    JPMorgan Says Stimulus Checks Could Be Handed Out To Pump US Economy Before Elections

    April 3, 2026

    Goldman Sachs Says AI Power Demand Could Surge 220% – Equivalent To Adding a Major Country

    April 3, 2026

    Citi Predicts S&P 500 Surging 17% by End of 2026 – But Warns April Is ‘Maximum Risk’ Period

    April 3, 2026
    X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    • About
    • Author
    • Editorial Standards
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    • Cookie Policy
    © 2025 CapitalAI Daily. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.