| I shall post the entire article after this, but the article says some fund managers are going with ABMD (and BABA) because they are better values than AMZN. 
 "Some fund managers are avoiding Amazon as it leads U.S. market"
 7 June 2018
 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - For most U.S. fund managers, beating the market  this year has come down to one decision: whether or not to own shares of  Amazon.com Inc ( AMZN.O).
 
 More than 70 percent of the actively-managed U.S. large-cap funds  that are beating the 3.5-percent gain in the benchmark S&P 500 own  shares of the Seattle-based e-commerce giant, according to Lipper data.  Shares of the company are up nearly 45 percent for the year-to-date, and  account for nearly 40 percent of the S&P 500’s gain for the year,  according to S&P Global.
 
 Those gains have left even  investors like Warren Buffett, who has never invested in Amazon, kicking  themselves for missing out on the company’s growth.
 
 “I was too dumb to realize what was going to happen,” Buffett said at Berkshire Hathaway Inc’s ( BRKa.N) annual shareholder meeting in early May.
 
 Amazon  has benefited this year from continued growth of e-commerce and is a  business that seems largely immune from the threat of a global trade  wars.
 
 Yet with volatility in the stock market expected to  continue through the U.S. midterm elections in the fall, Amazon’s pricy  valuation and high level of fund ownership may leave the stock more  vulnerable to a steep decline, analysts warn.
 
 As  a result, some outperforming fund managers who have so far avoided  Amazon are branching out into companies ranging from Asian e-commerce  company Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd ( BABA.N) to medical device maker Abiomed Inc ( ABMD.O), all in an effort to find better values.
 
 “Not  owning Amazon has obviously hurt us this year, but we’ve been fortunate  to own names that have made up the difference,” said Bob Doll,  portfolio manager of the Nuveen Growth fund.
 
 Doll has avoided  Amazon because of its trailing price-to-earnings ratio of 267, a  valuation more than ten times that of the broad S&P 500. Instead, he  has benefited from positions in MasterCard Inc ( MA.N), Red Hat Inc ( RHT.N), and Intuit Inc ( INTU.O), all of which are up more than 30 percent for the year and trade at less than a third of Amazon’s valuation.
 
 “These  stocks aren’t exactly cheap, they’re cheap compared to a concept stock  like Amazon where the valuation is so full,” he said.
 
 Amazon.com Inc1683.8
 
 AMZN.ONasdaq
 -11.95(-0.70%)
 
 
  
 
 AMZN.OBRKa.NBABA.NABMD.OMA.N 
 Scott  Goginsky, a portfolio manager at the Biondo Growth Fund, said that his  fund has been increasing its position in Alibaba instead of owning  Amazon because he sees it as a cheaper way to invest in the growth of  e-commerce.
 
 “Would we have liked to be in Amazon 5 years ago?  Yes. But in last year maybe Alibaba is the way to play it, because  you’re getting the same growth profile without the same multiple.”
 
 Shares of Alibaba are up 21 percent for the year and trade at a trailing price to earnings ratio of 54.3.
 
 Fund  manager concentration in Amazon may leave the company more vulnerable  to sell off if the volatility in the broad market increases this fall  ahead of the mid-term elections, said Todd Rosenbluth, director of  mutual fund research at CFRA Research.
 
 “We’re of the  belief that there will be greater market volatility for the duration of  2018 and while in theory that gives active managers a chance to buy in  on whatever they have missed out on, that volatility could hit the  better performers first,” he said.
 
 The outsized gain in Amazon  relative to other stocks in the S&P 500 suggests that growth is hard  to come by in the U.S. market and should benefit more concentrated  portfolios, said Daniel Davidowitz, a portfolio manager of the  $2.1-billion Polen Growth Fund.
 
 Davidowitz, whose fund holds  only 20 stocks, said he has avoided Amazon because of its high valuation  and stretched balance sheet and has instead moved into stocks like  Invisalign braces-maker Align Technology Inc ( ALGN.O) and Adobe Systems Inc ( ADBE.O), both of which are up more than 40 percent year-to-date.
 
 “The  average U.S. company is not growing that much. Earnings may be up a lot  but a big slug of that is from the benefits of the Trump tax cut,” he  said. “The only way to outperform is to find companies that are creating  their own theme.”
 
 Reporting by David Randall; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Nick Zieminski
 
 reuters.com
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