---
title: "Axiom Q1 2026: A Growth Book Tilts to AI and Industrials"
type: research
slug: axiom-investors-q1-2026-ai-industrials-growth-rotation
canonical_url: https://13finsight.com/research/axiom-investors-q1-2026-ai-industrials-growth-rotation
published_at: 2026-05-23T11:47:58.343Z
updated_at: 2026-05-23T11:48:02.368Z
author: Marcus Chen
author_title: Senior Market Analyst
author_url: https://13finsight.com/authors/marcus-chen
word_count: 686
locale: en
source: 13F Insight
---

# Axiom Q1 2026: A Growth Book Tilts to AI and Industrials

> Axiom Investors raised Nvidia 21%, GE Aerospace 19%, and JPMorgan 9% in Q1 2026 while cutting Amazon and Morgan Stanley - a global-growth rotation toward AI and industrials.

Axiom Investors runs a concentrated global-growth book, and its first-quarter 2026 filing shows a manager leaning into the AI-and-industrials theme while paring back consumer and financial exposure. The firm raised Nvidia by 21% to its largest position, added to JPMorgan and General Electric, and opened a sizable new foreign-listed position — while trimming Amazon by 23% and Morgan Stanley by 13%. The reported value fell 21.1% to $8.99 billion, a steep move that reflects both the trims and price action across a book where the top names carry a lot of weight. The rotation has a clear shape: toward AI infrastructure and capital-goods cyclicals, and away from one megacap-consumer name and a capital-markets bank. For a growth manager, that mix suggests a bet that the AI buildout and an industrial upcycle have more room to run than the e-commerce and brokerage stories. Nvidia leads, industrials build Nvidia is the largest holding at $1.25 billion (13.87%) after a 21% increase — the clearest statement of conviction in the filing, and a sizable bet for a concentrated book. Alphabet sits second at $1.02 billion (11.30%), held roughly flat, with the two together making up a quarter of the portfolio. The industrial tilt is the quieter theme. GE Aerospace was raised 19% to $429.5 million, and Amphenol, the connector and sensor maker that benefits from data-center and electrification demand, was added 7%. Together with the Nvidia add, these point to a manager positioning for both the AI-compute and the physical-infrastructure sides of the same buildout. Trimming consumer and capital markets The reductions are concentrated in two areas. Amazon was cut 23% to $495.3 million, and Morgan Stanley was trimmed 13% — even as the firm kept JPMorgan and added to it, raising the bank 9% to $840.1 million. The split within financials is telling: adding to a diversified money-center bank while trimming a capital-markets-heavy peer suggests a preference for lending and deposit franchises over trading and investment-banking exposure. The Amazon cut, paired with the Nvidia and industrials adds, reinforces the rotation away from megacap consumer-platform names toward the AI-and-capital-goods complex. A large new foreign-listed position rounds out the quarter's additions. A volatile reported book Axiom's reported value has swung within a wide band. The book has ranged between roughly $8.99 billion and $13.58 billion over the past two years, ending the latest quarter at the low end after the 21.1% decline. With about 121 positions but the top five making up nearly half the book, the reported total is sensitive to moves in a handful of large holdings. The decline reflects a combination of the trims and price action in those concentrated positions rather than a wholesale change in approach. What it signals For investors who track institutional positioning, Axiom's first-quarter filing is a clean read on a global-growth manager's current tilt: toward AI compute (Nvidia), the physical infrastructure behind it (GE Aerospace, Amphenol), and lending-focused financials (JPMorgan), and away from megacap consumer (Amazon) and capital-markets exposure (Morgan Stanley). The actionable signal is the coherence of the rotation — the adds and trims point the same direction, toward the AI-and-industrials buildout and away from the more consumer- and trading-sensitive names. FAQ What did Axiom Investors change in Q1 2026?It raised Nvidia by 21%, GE Aerospace by 19%, JPMorgan by 9%, and Amphenol by 7%, opened a new foreign-listed position, and trimmed Amazon by 23% and Morgan Stanley by 13%. Reported value fell 21.1% to $8.99 billion. What is Axiom's largest holding?Nvidia, at $1.25 billion or 13.87% of the portfolio after a 21% increase, followed by Alphabet at $1.02 billion (11.30%). The top two make up about a quarter of the book. What is the theme of Axiom's rotation?Toward AI compute and the physical infrastructure behind it — Nvidia, GE Aerospace, and Amphenol — and lending-focused financials like JPMorgan, while trimming megacap consumer (Amazon) and capital-markets-heavy Morgan Stanley. Why did Axiom's reported value fall 21%?The decline reflects both the trims and price action in a concentrated book where the top five holdings make up nearly half the portfolio, so moves in a few large names swing the reported total significantly.

## FAQ

### What did Axiom Investors change in Q1 2026?

It raised Nvidia by 21%, GE Aerospace by 19%, JPMorgan by 9%, and Amphenol by 7%, opened a new foreign-listed position, and trimmed Amazon by 23% and Morgan Stanley by 13%. Reported value fell 21.1% to $8.99 billion.

### What is Axiom's largest holding?

Nvidia, at $1.25 billion or 13.87% of the portfolio after a 21% increase, followed by Alphabet at $1.02 billion (11.30%). The top two make up about a quarter of the book.

### What is the theme of Axiom's rotation?

Toward AI compute and the physical infrastructure behind it - Nvidia, GE Aerospace, and Amphenol - and lending-focused financials like JPMorgan, while trimming megacap consumer (Amazon) and capital-markets-heavy Morgan Stanley.

### Why did Axiom's reported value fall 21%?

The decline reflects both the trims and price action in a concentrated book where the top five holdings make up nearly half the portfolio, so moves in a few large names swing the reported total significantly.

---

Source: 13F Insight — https://13finsight.com/research/axiom-investors-q1-2026-ai-industrials-growth-rotation
Author: Marcus Chen — https://13finsight.com/authors/marcus-chen
Last updated: 2026-05-23T11:48:02.368Z