Kim Forrest — CIO, Bokeh Capital Partners (3 trade ideas)

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Date Ticker Direction Thesis Source
Feb 12, 2026 AVOID Alphabet issued a 100-year bond, signaling a need for massive, cheap capital without immediate repayment pressure. Forrest notes that LLMs (OpenAI, etc.) are attacking Google's core business: Search. Users want answers, not a list of links. Google must spend heavily to defend its moat against a paradigm shift, making its future cash flows less certain than in the past. The core business model is under direct threat; the 100-year bond signals management uncertainty about the timeline for AI ROI. Google successfully transitions search to an AI-first model without destroying margins. Bloomberg Markets
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Feb 12, 2026 LONG There is concern about whether chipmakers can meet demand, but the memory market is an oligopoly with few players. Whether the market demands "Training Chips" (Nvidia) or "Inference Chips" (for running models), *both* require massive amounts of memory. Demand is agnostic to *which* AI chip wins. High demand + limited competition (Moat) = Bullish for memory makers (implies MU / SK HYNIX). Cyclical downturn in consumer electronics dampening non-AI demand. Bloomberg Markets
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Feb 12, 2026 LONG Microsoft stock has been beaten up alongside other software names due to fears of AI replacing human workflows. Forrest argues MSFT holds the "data repository for most businesses around the world." Unlike generic software, MSFT's moat is the data itself. It will not get "vibe coded out of existence." The sell-off is an overreaction; MSFT is a value-add company on sale. Enterprise spending slowdown or faster-than-expected AI agent adoption bypassing SaaS UIs. Bloomberg Markets
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