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Steve Cohen’s Point72 Is Aggressively Buying These 3 Stocks. Here’s Why They’re Worth a Closer Look
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The above button links to Coinbase. Yahoo Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser and does not offer securities or cryptocurrencies for sale or facilitate trading. Coinbase pays us for certain activity generated through this link. Prices displayed are informational. TransDigm (TDG) beat Q1 estimates with $2.285B revenue and raised FY2026 guidance to $9.85B-$10.03B net sales, while Point72 increased its stake by over 50,000%. PepsiCo (PEP) reported $19.44B Q1 revenue, beating estimates by $520M, with EMEA core operating profit up 29% and the company raising its annualized dividend to $5.92 per share for its 54th consecutive increase after Point72 boosted its position by over 1,500%. Equinix (EQIX) logged record Q4 2025 annualized gross bookings of $474M, up 42% year over year with 60% tied to AI workloads, and guided for $10.123B-$10.223B FY2026 revenue while Point72 expanded its position by roughly 467% to 0.96% of the portfolio. The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE. Steve Cohen isn’t known for making slow, passive bets. Through Point72 Asset Management, he runs one of the most aggressive multi-strategy hedge funds in the world, constantly reallocating capital toward where his team sees the best risk-reward. Last quarter, that meant leaning hard into three very different names: TransDigm Group (NYSE:TDG), PepsiCo (NASDAQ:PEP), and Equinix (NASDAQ:EQIX). On the surface, the picks look unrelated, but each business has strong pricing power, recurring revenue, and demand that holds up across cycles. Point72 manages tens of billions in capital, and its moves are disclosed through 13F filings that track exactly where that money is going. When a fund of this size builds positions aggressively across multiple names at once, it usually signals more than just routine portfolio rebalancing. Here’s a closer look at why smart money is piling into these three stocks. READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks TransDigm's business model is built around proprietary aerospace components where it holds sole-source positions, giving it exceptional pricing leverage. The company reported Q1 FY2026 revenue of $2.285 billion, beating the $2.280 billion estimate, with adjusted EPS of $8.23 against an $8.18 estimate. Commercial OEM revenue grew double digits, and the company raised full-year FY2026 guidance to net sales of $9.85 billion to $10.03 billion, with adjusted EPS of $37.42 to $39.34. Point72 added to its position aggressively, increasing its stake by over 50,000% and bringing TransDigm to about 0.55% of the portfolio, which signals a fresh, high-conviction entry rather than a legacy hold. TransDigm shares are currently trading at $1,265.88, down 4.81% year to date, which means Point72's recent additions were made near or above current market prices. Analyst consensus carries a price target of $1,537.95, with 16 buy ratings, 7 holds, and no sell ratings. PepsiCo's appeal to Point72 is straightforward: it is one of the most reliable dividend compounders in the S&P 500. The company reported Q1 FY2026 core EPS of $1.61, beating the $1.54 consensus estimate, with revenue of $19.44 billion against an $18.92 billion estimate. Operating margin expanded 210 basis points to 16.5% in the quarter. The fund increased its position by over 1,500%, bringing PepsiCo to roughly 0.55% of the portfolio. That kind of move into a defensive name suggests confidence in both downside protection and steady long-term compounding. PepsiCo shares have gained 10.84% year to date and 14.79% over the past year, currently trading at $157.67. Analyst consensus targets $171.57, with 7 buy ratings, 15 holds, and 1 sell. International growth is an underappreciated driver. EMEA core operating profit rose 29%, and Asia Pacific Foods revenue grew 35% in Q1 FY2026. CEO Ramon Laguarta noted: "We are pleased with our first-quarter results, which featured an acceleration in both net revenue and organic revenue growth, with a notable improvement in convenient foods organic volume." PepsiCo reaffirmed FY2026 guidance for organic revenue growth of 2% to 4% and core constant currency EPS growth of 4% to 6%, with total cash returns to shareholders of approximately $8.9 billion, comprising $7.9 billion in dividends and $1.0 billion in buybacks. The company will raise its annualized dividend to $5.92 per share beginning with the June 2026 payment, marking its 54th consecutive annual increase. Equinix represents Point72's bet on the physical backbone of the AI economy. As a REIT operating neutral colocation data centers across 70-plus markets globally, it sits at the intersection of cloud computing, enterprise networking, and AI workload deployment. Q4 2025 annualized gross bookings hit a record $474 million, up 42% year over year, with approximately 60% of the largest deals tied to AI workloads. Point72 increased its position by roughly 467%, bringing Equinix to about 0.96% of the portfolio and making it one of the larger allocations among these newer additions. The fund is scaling into the position even as the stock has already moved significantly higher. Equinix shares have risen 42.85% year to date and 40.97% over the past year, currently trading at $1,088.62. Morgan Stanley raised its price target to $1,075, and the analyst consensus target sits at $1,073.68, with 25 buy ratings, 6 holds, and no sell ratings. Full-year 2026 guidance calls for revenue of $10.123 billion to $10.223 billion, representing 10% to 11% as-reported growth, with AFFO per share of $41.93 to $42.74 and a 10% dividend increase to $5.16 per quarter, marking the 11th consecutive year of dividend growth. CEO Adaire Fox-Martin stated: "Equinix plays an essential role helping businesses connect and manage increasingly distributed AI, cloud and networking infrastructure. This is a source of long-term competitive advantage that positions us well to meet our customers' greatest needs and create shareholder value." Wall Street is pouring billions into AI, but most investors are buying the wrong stocks. The analyst who first identified NVIDIA as a buy back in 2010 — before its 28,000% run — has just pinpointed 10 new AI companies he believes could deliver outsized returns from here. One dominates a $100 billion equipment market. Another is solving the single biggest bottleneck holding back AI data centers. A third is a pure-play on an optical networking market set to quadruple. Most investors haven't heard of half these names. Get the free list of all 10 stocks here.
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