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Been looking at the institutional money flows lately and there's something interesting happening with stocks that have unusually high institutional ownership. The smart money—investment banks, pension funds, hedge funds, private equity—they're basically signaling where they think real value is. And when you see institutional investors piling into a stock at 80%+ ownership levels, that's usually worth paying attention to.
Take Micron Technology for example. While everyone's obsessing over NVIDIA, Micron's quietly crushing it with 80.84% institutional ownership and up nearly 150% this year. That's way more than NVIDIA's gains. The reason? Institutional buyers have dumped $17.5 billion into the stock over the past year, and the momentum has really picked up since August as demand for their data center products exploded. Vanguard and BlackRock alone hold over 196 million shares. Capital World Investors has been aggressively adding too—up 30% in their position over 12 months. This is the kind of high institutional ownership stocks that shows real conviction from the big players.
Then there's Netflix. 80.93% institutional ownership, and honestly, the numbers are pretty compelling. Net income jumped nearly 94% from 2022 to 2024, hitting $8.71 billion. On a trailing 12-month basis they're at $10.43 billion. Over the past year, 2,804 institutional buyers came in versus only 1,838 sellers, and inflows hit $65.51 billion. That's serious money voting with their feet. The stock's up about 23% this year and they just announced a 10-for-1 split, which usually gets retail attention.
Here's the wild one though—Dutch Bros at 85.54% institutional ownership. Yeah, most people think of Starbucks or Dunkin when they hear 'coffee chain,' but Dutch Bros is actually the fastest-growing coffee chain in the US by revenue. They've beaten earnings for 11 straight quarters and their EPS grew over 1,030% year-over-year from 2023 to 2024. Expanding to 23 states by year-end. Institutional investors have noticed—$2.65 billion in inflows versus $1.9 billion outflows over 12 months. Vanguard increased their stake by 14%, and Fidelity and BlackRock both added more than 17% and 28% respectively.
The pattern here is clear: when you see this level of high institutional ownership stocks concentration, it usually means the pros have done their homework. These three are worth keeping on your radar if you're looking at longer-term positions.