Samer Hakoura on Lessons from Owning Private Family Businesses

September 3, 2019 in Audio, Equities, Interviews, Transcripts

We had the pleasure of speaking with fellow MOI Global member Samer Hakoura about how his experience owning, managing, and selling a couple of family businesses has helped him be a better investor in public equities.

Since 2013, Samer has served as principal of Alphyn Capital, based in New York. Alphyn invests in a concentrated portfolio of competitively advantaged public companies with high returns on invested capital and long runways for growth, run by talented and aligned operators focused on long-term compounding, with the occasional special situation where the market presents an attractive risk-reward opportunity.

Listen to this conversation:

printable transcript
audio recording

The following transcript has been edited for space and clarity.

John Mihaljevic, MOI Global: It’s a great pleasure to welcome Samer Hakoura. Based in New York, Samer serves as principal of Alphyn Capital, which invests in a concentrated portfolio of competitively advantaged public companies with high returns on invested capital and long runways for growth, run by talented and aligned operators focused on long-term compounding. He also occasionally looks at special situations. Samer, you have a most interesting background in terms of owning and selling a couple of family businesses and are now pursuing value investing in public companies. To begin with, do you mind delving a little into your background?

Samer Hakoura: I’m delighted to be here. Over the years, I’ve derived so much value from MOI in terms of hearing well-thought-out, actionable investment ideas, as well as being able to become good friends and connect with the intelligent, thoughtful value investors you have. It’s a real privilege for me to give back to the community.

I started off as an investment banker about two decades ago, working on some $11 billion worth of M&A transactions and IPOs back in the day when $11 billion was considered a larger number. I enjoyed it a lot, but I always wanted to be a principal rather than just an agent for deals.

After business school, I joined my father in his family investment office. He’s primarily a real estate investor. Some time ago, he helped the Abu Dhabi royal family set up their commercial real estate portfolio in London, and that translated into him doing some of his own real estate investments. I joined him just as that second phase started to kick off, and I was privileged to be able to work with him and learn how he approached things. Even though I wasn’t familiar with the term value investing at the time, looking back, I can see a lot of what he did meshed in really well with the whole value investing philosophy, so it came fairly naturally to me when I branched out on my own.

Other than real estate, one of the investments we made was in a supermarket business in the Turks and Caicos Islands. Through family friends and a fairly long convoluted story, we ended up being owners of this bankrupt supermarket business along with two other families. It turned out to be one of the best investments we made over 15 or so years, and I was extremely fortunate to get involved on a very deep level with what turned out to be a local wide-moat compounder. Those are things which helped me, and I try to replicate them in some way when I look at public companies.

MOI: Did you spend time in London or away from New York City at that point?

Hakoura: I grew up in London and spent most of my time until business school there. After that, I moved to the Turks and Caicos for about five years and then to New York in 2012-2013.

MOI: Tell us a bit about the transition from doing the private side with the family office to doing public investing. Why did you decide to take that step? Have you found if some of the things you learned along the way are now transferrable to the public market?

Hakoura: When we sold the business in 2013, I looked at trying to buy lower middle-market private companies in the US. I moved here for personal reasons and love it here. I found out that when you’re trying to do private deals, you have to pick a couple of industry sectors and go really deep, network in those sectors, spend anywhere from one to five years getting to know people involved in them. I approached things very much as a generalist, and while I was looking for private deals to do, I started deploying my own capital into the market to try and earn a return while waiting for the deal. I can’t tell you exactly when, but at some point, I hit that inflection point where I said, “You know what? I’m practically spending most of my time investing in public market securities at this point. Why don’t I make a full-time job of that?” I haven’t looked back since.

As for your question, I think there are many parallels. The way I approach things is “business is business,” whether you’re buying a public or a private company. The famous quote “It’s not just numbers flicking about in a screen; behind it, there are real people doing real business” is very applicable. There are some constraints in terms of when you buy a private business. Unless you’re a very large fund, you typically tend to look at one thing at a time, and you buy the majority or the entirety of the business. When you buy a public company, you usually acquire fractional ownership, so you get the opportunity to spread your bets a lot more. I run a fairly concentrated portfolio of about 15 to 20 positions, but compared to the private market, that’s still much more diversified.

MOI: Do you have any preferences in terms of the industries or any focus, especially in light of the private experience that included some real estate investing? Have you used that experience in the public side as well, or are you looking for the more capital-light compounder businesses?

Hakoura: These days, I tend to find myself looking much more at the capital-light compounder businesses. The general admonition to make sure you understand what it is you’re looking at and stay in your circle of competence is very important, in my opinion. Beyond that, I take a pretty open approach towards industry. I haven’t found myself doing much in real estate. I won’t do stuff in biotech, for example. Given my background, it’s not surprising that the things I invest in at the moment tend to be family holding companies with what I consider compelling valuations and multiple levers to pull because they have what you would call a synthetic leverage, like float and various other things. On the other hand, I also look at a few smaller-cap, cloud-based, capital-light businesses where the opportunity for growth is tremendous, especially if you can buy them before they’re widely known and their valuations become aggressive.

MOI: Is this now your sole focus, or are you still doing some things on the private side?

Hakoura: I have a directorship at a small company my brother is now running quite well. Other than that, I’m totally focused on this. In fact, I’m in the process of establishing some managed accounts where the goal is to take on other entrepreneurs or families who might think they could benefit from some help and guidance with where to put their money and how to invest it in the equity market.

MOI: You mentioned family-controlled holding companies. Is this on a global scale? How do you go through the process of evaluating a family that’s a majority owner and judging whether they’re going to be the right stewards of capital going forward?

Hakoura: I’ll tell you about one of my favorite current position, where I have tremendous respect for the person heading it and where I think I’ll be able to hold on to this company for many years as I compound value. That’s Exor and John Elkann, who is widely known and respected.

When you think of someone who has deep understanding of the business and cares strongly about safeguarding his family legacy yet is bold enough to do transformational deals to bring what used to be an old-school conglomerate into the modern world, riding alongside someone like John Elkann should be a pretty good thing to be able to do. If you read his letters to shareholders and the thoughtful interviews he gives, it’s evident that this is someone who would like to take his family company and see it last another hundred years and continue to prosper. That’s the type of situation I’d like to be involved with if I can.

Moreover, from a valuation point of view, it has a double discount, so it’s trading at a significant 30-something percent to the sum of its parts, and the parts themselves are extremely undervalued, in my view. You’re in the fortunate position to be able to join in with Mr. Elkann at a very undemanding valuation. Other things he’s done include effectively copying the Berkshire model by buying an insurance company and generating float, then assembling a high-level, high-caliber advisory council featuring people like the former Chancellor of the Exchequer of the UK, Jorge Lemann from 3G Capital, Rob Speyer from Tishman Speyer, and various other impressive people whose job is to advise him on buying companies at a discount when there’s a market dislocation. All of this gets me excited about the potential for the company. That’s one example of the type of thing I like to do.

MOI: A large portion of Exor’s value currently seems to be the Fiat holding. How do you go about assessing such a major investment? Do you need to be comfortable to invest in Fiat and then say it’s even better to invest in Exor? Do you look several years forward to where Fiat might be a smaller portion of the overall portfolio?

Hakoura: I was quite fortunate in 2017, early part of 2018 to be a shareholder of Fiat itself. I love situations where you have an incredibly strong management team who, instead of giving you quarterly guidance, say, “This is our five-year plan.” Then they go into a huge amount of detail about their plan based off the strength of some of their brands, like Ram and Jeep, and the success they’ve been having with some of their vehicles and platforms. When I got involved with the business, it was a company with a market capitalization of about €18 billion and some €10 billion in debt. It said, “Within a fairly short time, we’re going to pay down the vast majority of that debt.” I don’t think you need to build a complicated model to realize that’s going to generate huge amounts of value for the equity shareholders. With minor missteps, it did what it said it would do. This is one of the few times where I actually timed my exit near the top, but it was more due to luck than anything else.

Then I sat down and said, “What do I do with the capital I was fortunate to have made?” When I discussed the situation with some experienced and wise friends of mine, they suggested I look at Exor, the parent company, in more detail. I realized I liked what it was doing and, hopefully, I wouldn’t have to make this sell decision, which is always a difficult one, if I held the parent company. I’m quite familiar with Fiat because of my previous holding. I can’t know this for sure, but I think Mr. Elkann will find a way, whether through the current deals being spoken about with Renault or some other way, of merging the company and then potentially taking those cash flows or the cash from selling it and redeploying it into capital-light compounders.

MOI: Speaking of capital-light, you mentioned that you look at companies with a cloud or a recurring revenue business model that don’t require capital to grow. Could you give us an example of the kind of company which would attract you in that space?

Hakoura: I’m looking at a much smaller company right now. My advantage in not managing vast sums of money is that I can look across industries, capital structures, and market capitalizations to try and find value wherever it may lie. I like having a significant amount of my money in the Exors of the world where I can feel fairly safe. It’s not a bad idea for someone in my position to also see if I can find much smaller companies where I believe there’s an opportunity for real growth and value generation.

Like many people, I’ve longed admired companies like Constellation Software, Roper Technologies, or OpenText. These are companies that generated large amounts of free cash flow, redeployed it into acquiring other businesses at high rates of invested capital, and then used those expanded cash flows to go and buy some more companies and keep accelerating that process. They have done incredibly well over the last few decades.

Quarterhill, the company I’m looking at, is much smaller and unproven. It’s a mini version of those larger companies. In fact, the CEO came from OpenText, where he was formerly head of business development and oversaw the deployment of $2.5 billion of capital into acquisitions and integrations, so he seems to have the right background. What I like about Quarterhill is that it has a legacy business, patent litigation, which is strongly cash flow-generative but highly irregular. If there’s one thing we know, it’s that the market strongly dislikes irregular cash flows, and the stock has been punished. However, if you look at this as an easy-to-model business, which the sell-side typically looks for, but instead view it as a source of recurring cash flow for acquisitions, and you pair that with a CEO who’s done this thing before, there’s huge optionality in the name.

One benefits from that famous Mohnish Pabrai quote “Heads, I win; tails, I don’t lose much,” where investors have the opportunity to buy into this company at a really cheap valuation. Should the CEO effect a large acquisition with those cash flows, I think the company will do great. Should he not do that, it is sitting on a very large cash balance which could be dividended back out to shareholders. There are other ways to realize value where even if he doesn’t succeed, you’re probably not going to lose much money at all.

MOI: Could you elaborate a bit on how you would think about valuing a company like this? It sounds like there’s a balance sheet component with some asset value there. Also, how do you think about the value of the legacy business versus what might come in the future?

Hakoura: As a matter of principle, I shy away from building complicated models. When I was an investment banker, it was my job, and one of the things I learned was that a model will tell you whatever it is you ask it to tell you depending on the inputs you provide. I like things to be obvious and simple, which is something I learned the hard way.

This is a company with a market capitalization of about $125 million, with $70 million in cash, so an enterprise value of around $55 million. Its legacy business has generated EBITDA of some $400 million cumulatively over the last 10 years, so on average, $40 million a year, very variable. Free cash flow has been slightly lower than that, but it’s generated huge amounts of cash flow relative to its size. Management highlights the fact that they’ve dividended out and done buybacks cumulatively of about $135 million over the last 10 years. Those are rather large numbers compared to a $55 million enterprise value, so I’m not too worried about the downside in terms of value. The market can and will be highly volatile, but I think the risk of permanent capital impairment is fairly low. That’s on the downside.

On the upside, when you’ve got a $55 million enterprise value, $70 million in cash to deploy into an acquisition, and a CEO who has the right background and speaks articulately about what seems a very sensible plan, it’s just a matter of time before he finds an acquisition to do. Should it be a big transformative one, you’re probably going to see a large amount of value EBITDA. Should it be a smaller, bolt-on type acquisition, you’ll probably see a more muted market reaction. In either case, the strategy will have begun, and provided the CEO maintains this strategy, you have a chance, through buying at such a low price, of legging into a potential compounder for very little money.

MOI: Could you tell us about your personal journey and how you see it evolving going forward? It seems you are looking to build an investment business as well. When I myself invest, sometimes there’s not that much to do, and if you invest for the long term, it feels like you find a couple of good ideas per year or something like that. Tell us a bit about how you, with your entrepreneurial mindset, look to investing as being the main thing for you going forward.

Hakoura: When I was working directly with my father, he made an investment in what turned out to be a wonderful business in a great location, on New Bond Street in London. It was supported by a strong anchor tenant, Ralph Lauren. My father sat on that building for the better part of 18 years, and it compounded in value at about 20% a year over that time. There was a lot of work done with managing the building and making sure it was run properly, but there wasn’t a huge amount of activity going on in terms of sourcing all that many new deals for a period of time. We sat through 2008 and a few other turbulent times. I remember having a conversation with my father where he said, “There’s a time to buy, and there’s a time to do nothing.” That time to do nothing could be six months or three years. We just sit on the asset we have and wait for that to happen.

It’s one thing to read about this through other investors and quite another to live through an experience like that and say, “If it worked with that asset, let me try and replicate the approach in the public markets.” Having seen a bit about managing a compounding asset successfully and given my investment banking background, I’m trying to synthesize all of that into a portfolio company where I manage the majority of my own money. Should family offices, high net-worth individuals, or others decide to come along for the ride, it will be my privilege to go on that journey with them.

MOI: I think you had a fascinating experience with that food retail business in the Turks and Caicos. Do you mind sharing some lessons you took away from it?

Hakoura: We bought it when it was a bankrupt business sitting on about 64 acres of land in a smaller country in the Caribbean with a smaller population. The previous owners overbuilt it relative to what the market could support. My father and his colleagues managed to buy it at bankruptcy prices. In the first year, it lost money. In the second year, it broke even, and then it proceeded to compound in the 30-odd percent range for a good 15 years. What I noticed was the first thing we did was hire an excellent hands-on manager who solved the logistics of getting fresh produce onto the island in an economical and expeditious manner. It meant that instead of lettuce sitting in container ships for a few weeks and wilting, we managed to get fresh produce onto the shelves.

A better product attracted customers, and once you have more customers, your sales and cash flows ramp up fairly quickly. After that, we used those increasing cash flows to reinvest back into the business, continue to expand it, add locations, hire more people, and improve systems and processes. One thing leads to another, so when you keep doing this for a few years, you find yourself having 80% of the market, albeit a smaller one. Then you have this wonderful moat of economies of scale: because you’re a large employer, the biggest purchaser of food, and one of the biggest users of the transportation system in the local market, you get access to better prices and better economies, and you can produce or deliver higher quality products at better prices to your customers. Once you’ve set yourself up in that, it’s a classic moat, and it’s very hard to dislodge.

We began generating large amounts of cash flow and deploying it into building a central commercial hub in the middle of the main island, where we started to develop those 64 acres of land. We built a community, a townhouse village, seven or eight commercial buildings. It’s one of those things where the whole became greater than the sum of its parts – we had the supermarket as the anchor tenant for the location, but we built up an entire community there. When we came to sell the business some years later, it added tremendous value to the whole.

MOI: Can you talk a bit about idea generation? How do opportunities come your way or how do you find them, perhaps specifically on the investment you made in the Turks and Caicos? More relevant to today, how you go about finding opportunities in the public markets, such as Quarterhill?

Hakoura: We were fortunate with the Turks and Caicos business. It was through friends of friends of family connections. My mother’s uncle was good friends with the father of my father’s eventual business partner. It was one of these convoluted family stories, and I think it was down to pure luck. In terms of how I find opportunities in the public markets, there’s a bit more of a process there. Some people may disagree with me, but I think ideas are not the difficult part in today’s internet age. There are a number of very high-quality ideas that come out several times a year through your platform. It behooves investor to listen to those and get a couple of tidbits, as I’ve done in the past. If you’re looking for capital-light or high ROIC compounders, it’s fairly easy with today’s tools to screen for them.

One of the best sources of ideas is generating a network of highly intelligent and capable investor friends. In the private markets, information is much harder to come by, and it’s a lot more competitive – either you buy this company or I do. In the public markets, I can buy fractional ownership in a large company, and you can as well, so we both benefit. There’s a lot more sharing of ideas.

The idea generation is pretty standard. There are a lot of quarterly letters from investors and blogs. What becomes more important is the process of rapid elimination of the deluge of ideas into a more manageable list of higher potential names one can look for. That’s where having some experience of running a business or knowing what you like can help you. For me, well-run family offices and public family holding companies are a great source of interest. Seeing a presentation on a company which has generated higher returns on invested capital for many years and is priced in a fairly undemanding way makes me focus on that pretty quickly.

Once you reduce the deluge of ideas to a more manageable list, it’s a matter of simply screening through them all one by one. In some cases, it can be painstaking work to find stuff you like, and many times, this is interesting to learn, but I’m not paying 30x EBITDA or whatever it may be. I’ll wait for the market to give me a better price, if ever. I find that maintaining a constantly evolving watchlist of companies is incredibly useful because it means that should prices come down to a more reasonable level, I can act fairly decisively and quickly because I’ve already done the work on the name. It also helps keep one focused on higher quality ideas versus straying into uncharted waters and potentially making a mistake.

MOI: How do you think about holding cash and do top-down considerations have any bearing on the portfolio? Do you consider where we might be in the market cycle or market valuations when you’re deciding how much to allocate to the equities in your portfolio?

Hakoura: It’s a great question and one I spend quite a bit of time thinking about. I don’t have a cookie-cutter, formulaic answer to it. As many value investors would say, I’m not a global macro specialist. If you look at what’s happened over the last six months or so, it’s just one series of data points, but it shows you how difficult it is to know where you are in the market and what’s going to happen tomorrow. It’s a combination of buying stuff I really like, a micro bottom-up view. If I see a company I like and believe I understand, or I think it’s a potential compounder, and the price is attractive to me, I’ll probably buy it. I may not buy everything in one go. I might scale into the position over a few months to become more familiar and see how the price develops. I usually approach it that way. I find that if the market’s nearer a top than a bottom, valuations typically tend to be higher, so you end up holding more cash anyway because you haven’t found anything to buy at the right price.

I read the news like everyone else, and I’m cautious, but I don’t believe in my global macro skills enough to come up with a definitive view of where we are in the market. There is something to be said for having some cash to give you the chance to buy things you like as and when the market presents opportunities. I’ve been doing this long enough to have seen that when you least expect it, every now and again, you’ll get a tremendous opportunity to buy something wonderful. It would be a shame not to have spare cash to take advantage of that opportunity.

MOI: Thank you so much, Samer, for being here and taking the time to share your perspective.

Hakoura: It’s my great pleasure, John. Thank you.

About Samer Hakoura:

Prior to founding Alphyn Capital Management, Samer worked at his family’s investment office in London and then managed various family investments in the Turks & Caicos which included the country’s main supermarket chain, where he developed processes and systems to enable rapid expansion of the business, a waste management business that won the national recycling contract, a marina, and several real estate developments. Samer applies lessons from managing those businesses to his selection of attractive businesses in the public markets.

​Samer started his career at Deutsche Bank in London, taking part in over $11 billion in M&A and financing transactions. Samer holds an MBA from the Wharton School of Business and an MCHEM from Oxford University.

Mohnish Pabrai on His Book, The Dhandho Investor

August 30, 2019 in Audio, Meet-the-Author Forum, Meet-the-Author Forum 2019, Meet-the-Author Forum 2019 Featured, Transcripts

Mohnish Pabrai discussed his book, The Dhandho Investor: The Low-Risk Value Method to High Returns, at MOI Global’s Meet-the-Author Summer Forum 2019. Mohnish is Chief Executive Officer of Dhandho Funds and Managing Partner of Pabrai Investments Funds.

Listen to this session:

printable transcript
audio recording

The following transcript has been edited for space and clarity.

Mohnish Pabrai: My objective in writing The Dhandho Investor was to crystalize some concepts in my own mind. As they say, the best way to learn is to teach. I found that the process of writing the book helped me formalize the principles inside. It was a useful exercise for me, and I’m happy to get a nice check from Wiley every year. They recently came out with an edition in India, which sold very well ― vastly better than expected.

John Mihaljevic, MOI Global: The classic example that I think most know is the Patel story in the hospitality business as an illustration of what Dhandho means. Could you tell that story, or if you prefer, give another illustration of what you meant with this concept.

Pabrai: The Patel story is a great one because it illustrates the concept really well. In fact, in a number of conversations with Charlie Munger, he always brings that up and reminds people never to try to compete with the Patels in the motel business.

Taking a step back before we delve into the Patels, for me, the starting point of interest in value investing was a quote by Warren Buffett where he said, “I’m a better investor because I’m a businessman, and I’m a better businessman because I’m an investor.” The parts of your brain that get used are the same, whether you’re running a business or making portfolio decisions, and the frameworks are similar. Unfortunately, most professional money managers have never run a business before. That’s a serious handicap because they’re missing a significant framework. If you have an investment manager who’s had experience running one or more businesses, they have a significant leg-up over their peers. I took the view in the book that if there’s a lot of cross-pollination between being an investor and being a businessman, why don’t we talk about some businesspeople, because the way they approach capital allocation and running a business directly dovetails into how an investor ought to look at their investment decisions.

One of the first examples I used was the Patels who came to the U.S. in the 1970s as refugees because they were being evicted from East Africa, from Uganda. When I wrote the book 12 years ago, the Patels had 40% to 50% market share. Of all the motels in the U.S., approximately half of them were under Patel ownership about a dozen years ago. That number is probably approaching north of 70% or 75% today.

The second thing that has happened is the Patels have moved upmarket. They used to be only in the low-end motels, but now they’ve gone into the Marriotts and the Hyatts and the Hiltons. They’ve done a masterful job because in all the cases, whether it’s a motel or any of these other types of hotels, their competitive advantage has always been lowest-cost operator. Low cost is going to give you an edge in pretty much any business you go into. It’s very difficult for non-Patels to compete with Patels on cost. It needs to be in your DNA for several generations to operate like that, which is why they keep gobbling up more and more share.

The Patels had a specific approach when they got into the motel business, which is that they were not interested in taking risks. They didn’t have much money because a lot of their assets were confiscated by the state.

They came with a few thousand dollars. Buying a small motel did a few things for the family. One is it gave them essentially a free place to stay because they would take a couple of rooms and the family would stay there. The second is it would give employment to almost the entire family, because hotels are labor intensive with room service and maid service and all of that. The third was they could lever their investment. The bank could loan them maybe 70% or 80% of the purchase price. On top of that, they were able to run these places more cheaply than anyone else. When a Patel took over ownership of a motel in a given area, they would quickly survey who their competitors were and what they were charging, and then they would underprice versus all their competitors. The competitors had a difficult time matching the Patels, because matching the Patels meant you would lose money. The underpricing led to higher occupancy, and even though they were underpricing, they were making just as much money or more than their competitors.

Over time, as these motels prospered, they took the capital it was generating, and they kept buying more motels and kept handing them over to family members. Indians make up let’s say 1% of the U.S. population. The Patels, from a small part of Gujarat, make up probably less than 10% of the U.S. Indian population, so you have something like 0.1% of the U.S. population controlling 75% of the motels. Anytime you see a phenomenon like that, you should ask yourself what’s going on.

That’s a quick intro to the Patels. The book delves further into their history and their methods, but that was the crux: you look at a business, you create a competitive advantage, and then you’re off to the races. In investing, you’re trying to do the same thing. You’re either trying to buy a stock cheap so you can make money when it gets fairly priced, or even better, you’re trying to buy a great business which is underpriced, and then that business continues to increase in intrinsic value, and you do very well by holding it.

MOI: I’m fascinated by the Patel story. It’s understandable that when you have a family living and working in a hotel, that you are going to be the low-cost provider, but it sounds like some of the Patels have been able to scale to multiple units where it can no longer be the family doing all the labor. They have to hire labor. How have they still been able to remain the low-cost provider and to ensure that the competitive advantage remains intact when they’re managing people at some point?

Pabrai: I think the game plan the Patels used was that as they started expanding, they would depute one of their relatives who had been trained in the “mother” motel, if you will. That individual had been well trained to look at every tiny cost. Let’s say for example, you needed repairs to a water heater. Typically in a non-Patel motel, they would go about doing things a certain way, but the Patels would have spent the time to cultivate relationships and make sure they watch their pennies when they’re looking at expenditure.

The key for scaling was not that they were employing family. The key was that they were watching the minutiae very carefully. It was like zero-based budgeting, if you will. They looked at every expense and considered whether it was necessary, could it be done a different way, were they optimizing. The intense focus on cost came naturally to them, but it was somewhat unnatural for their competitors to be that intense on cost, and so you get an advantage.

I’ll give an analogy, although maybe it doesn’t quite work: no matter how much most full-service auto insurance companies try, they’re going to have a delta versus GEICO in terms of cost because of the direct model. That delta has actually grown because of the internet. The Patels are just keeping their nose to the grindstone even when they have not had family members working there. Even when they’ve gone to full-service motels, they just watch their pennies a lot more carefully than most operators and most businesses.

MOI: It sounds like it’s essentially a mindset they’ve kept, and you mentioned zero-based budgeting —

Pabrai: They look at every single line item with a fresh set of eyes and say, “Okay, we are not accepting any old rules of how it was done under previous ownership.” They’ve had experience running motels, and they’re familiar with every line item, so they understand how to optimize. Regardless of what industry you’re in, each company has a DNA. Many companies become really good at focussing on the top line and growth, and growing their profits that way, while many companies focus on the bottom line and make the numbers work that way. The Patels have always been more interested in having a cost advantage, and because they also live frugal lifestyles, they were able to accumulate capital and help each other. Then over time, the banks became more comfortable lending to them because they saw how the historical default rates of this particular ethnic group or community were different from Joe Public when it came to buying motels. All of that snowballed into more and more of an advantage over time.

MOI: One concept that you popularized, but now is used very broadly, is this notion of “heads, I win, tails, I don’t lose much.” I wonder if that applies to the Virgin Dhandho that you have in the book?

Pabrai: I always get that quote attributed to me, though actually, that quote is not mine. There was a professor at Harvard Business School ― I think now he’s at Tufts ― who’s a good friend of mine, Amar Bhidé. He wrote an excellent book called The Origin and Evolution of New Businesses. It’s a great book to read if you’re starting a business because it goes into all these nuances of how entrepreneurs don’t take risks and they’re really good at dealing with uncertainty. So “heads, I win, tails, I don’t lose much” comes from Amar, who mentioned it in that book. Even though Amar didn’t intend that approach for value investing ― he was looking at it more from the perspective of non-venture-backed startups ― I saw that it fit in very well for value investing. That’s the key with investing, even for Buffett and Munger. I think the first thing they look at is downside protection. If we as investors fixate and overdose on downside protection, the upside, in many cases, takes care of itself. If you can put floors on the downside, then you’ve got a huge advantage. That framework of “heads, I win, tails, I don’t lose much” ― in other words, when things don’t work out, you get all or most of your capital back ― is a huge advantage.

MOI: And the Virgin Dhandho, is that essentially where Richard Branson got into the business without a big investment upfront?

Pabrai: Yes. In fact, there was an announcement today about him taking, I think, Virgin Galactic public. It’s classic Branson. He throws a lot of stuff up against walls. If you look at the range of companies he’s started and the number that have failed, it’s a good-sized number, but his downside in almost every case is limited. He’s been really good at coming up with business after business where, like the Patels, he’s fixated on what happens if it doesn’t work. Because of that fixation, Virgin frequently gets to make almost risk-free bets. There was Virgin Cola, which failed. There are a number of failures in the Virgin group, but if you dissect how much money they lost in those failures, it’s usually pretty small because they do partnerships. For example, when they set up Virgin Mobile, they did not set up their own network. They leveraged their branding, and they came up with unusual offers that appealed to people in terms of the way billing was done and the way customer service was done, but they pushed the cost of the network off on the incumbent carriers. He’s been really good, even looking at capital-intensive businesses like airlines and getting into them without putting up capital. Virgin Atlantic had almost no equity put into it. If it had failed, they would have lost hardly anything. In fact, at that time, they had a music business that was doing really well and could easily have carried them if the airline failed. Richard Branson is like a cousin to the Patels in the way his mind works. He has a similar approach in a completely different context and industry and continent, and it still works.

Christian Billinger: How do you assess when a business fundamentally goes from being temporarily challenged, to structurally challenged, or in terminal decline? If you look at the big consumer-goods companies or much of retail, that’s a pertinent topic currently. How do you assess that?

Pabrai: We have such a large range of options when we’re making investments — there are around 50,000 stocks globally — that you should be a harsh grader. Unlike baseball, there are no call strikes in this game. You can let a lot of balls go. We can do very well without buying consumer packaged goods or buying retailers. Capitalism, by definition, is brutal. Most companies in existence today will not exist even a couple of decades from now or maybe even less than that. The demise of virtually every business is guaranteed. Given that backdrop, we as investors should be very harsh graders. If you don’t have a crystal ball that tells you a retailer is going to be in great shape 10 or 15 years from now, then unless you’re getting it really cheap, and you’re only dependent on the next two or three years of cashflow to cover what you’re paying, and you have strong conviction on that, you can take a pass. There are entire industries you can take a pass on. It’s not a problem. You can build plenty of wealth while just understanding one or two industries. One doesn’t need to have a Swiss Army knife approach to investing. If you look at most entrepreneurs, they’ve created their wealth with an extremely narrow skillset that they’ve capitalized on. They are basically an inch wide and a mile deep, and that’s a perfectly fine way to go. Better to be an inch wide and a mile deep than a mile wide and an inch deep. Specialization has a huge advantage. If you’re questioning core structural aspects of industries, you can always take a pass. There’s no penalty for that.

MOI: In The Dhandho Investor, you talk about this concept of arbitrage, which is slightly different from when we think of M&A arbitrage. What do you mean by arbitrage in the business context?

Pabrai: Virtually all businesses that get started are focusing on what I would call offering gaps. Some entrepreneur sees an unfulfilled need, a lack of some product or service, and therefore starts a business. I give an example in the book of two towns — let’s call them Town A and Town B — that are, let’s say, 30 miles apart, each with a barber or a group of barbers. A new town — Town C — is coming up between these two towns. Because it’s a new town, there are no barbers in that town. Some enterprising barber in Town A or Town B will say, “I’m seeing some clients come in who are driving in from this new township. I think I can do better if I service them locally because there are no barbers there, and maybe I can charge them more because they save on the driving time.”

An entrepreneur is going to see that as an offering gap, where Town C should have barbers, but because of the growth, there’s a void. It’s a bit like what’s happening in the fracking areas of the U.S. which are going through turbo growth. A lot of services were just not available because the growth was so aggressive. So the barber sets up a small shop. Maybe he leases some space, buys some secondhand equipment, and is there one or two days a week. Over time, he increases his time in the new place as more business comes in. The downside is limited in that type of approach because the barber hardly put up any capital, and he took advantage of an offering gap. Arbitrage in effect is the way pretty much all successful businesses get started and formed. They’re going after offering gaps.

Classic arbitrage is risk free. When we used to have these different prices of gold in different cities — in London it’s at $1,000 and in Dubai it’s $1,020 or something per ounce — you could buy in one place and sell in the other and collect the difference without having anything at risk. That type of approach happens in investing as well. For example, about 14 or 15 years ago, I invested in a Canadian steel company called IPSCO. They had $15 in cash per share, and they had contracts where the next two years of earnings were going to come in at about $15 a share for each of the next two years. The stock was trading in the low 40s, and there was no debt. If you took the current cash and added in the next two years of contracted cash flows that had a high probability of coming in, you were basically getting the entire business for free. There was an arbitrage there, if you will.

Because this business was highly cyclical, it was entirely possible that after two years, earnings would be zero or even negative. That is why the market was pricing it at 2x earnings, but I think that was an extreme reaction. I bought the stock in the low 40s, and then it drifted up to the 60s in the next few months. Then the company announced they had one more year of visibility, again at $15 a share, and the stock went close to $90 because you now had a little more visibility. Then some Swedish company came and bought it for $160. In that situation, it was difficult to come up with a scenario where you would lose money. To lose money what would have had to happen after two years is not only would earnings have had to go to zero, but they would have had to go negative, and of course the company had a lot of levers they could pull if that happened. That’s an example of arbitrage.

What we are looking for in investing is exactly what the entrepreneur is looking for. The entrepreneur focuses on risk-free bets or as close to risk free as they can get. That should be our focus as well. Look at opportunities where the downside is muted. In the case of IPSCO, you had contracts. There were these pipelines being built and they needed those steel pipes. The odds that they could just walk away were pretty low. We find those are far more common than you would think.

MOI: I recall from some years ago — and I don’t know if this would be another example of what you just described — but back in the former shipping industry crisis, I believe you made an investment where the company was trading for less than the scrap value of the steel, so you had that as the downside protection, and eventually, the cycle might turn.

Pabrai: That was Frontline. I was stupid then because I think I made a 30% or 40% return on Frontline almost risk free. I bought the stock at $6 or $7, and I think I sold it for $10 or $11 after a few months. It went to $140, and it gave some pretty significant dividends along the way, and it spun other companies. I don’t want to think about how much I left on the table. That was an example where they had the largest fleet of VLCCs (very large crude carriers). They had a lot of debt, but the debt was non-recourse to the company. The debts were tied to the ships. At the holding-company level, they didn’t have any issues. Each vessel was its own universe in terms of the debt on that vessel. What happens in the shipping industry is similar to what happens in Class A high-rise office buildings. If you look at downtown New York or Chicago, for example, the economy booms and office space gets tight, so rents go up. A bunch of developers look at that and say, “Wow, I can put up a tower or two and really make a killing.” What happens is there’s lemming behavior: they all start constructing towers at the same time. These towers take three to five years to get built, so they’re all hitting the market at the same time, which of course depresses rents. Then these maverick real estate guys go from being exuberant to being stressed, with banks foreclosing on them. The shipping business is similar in the sense that to build a VLCC is a multiyear process. These Greek ship owners are probably worse than the New York or Chicago developers, where they vacillate far more quickly between fear and greed. The moment they see that all the ships are busy and rates are going up, all of them go crazy and place a bunch of orders for new ships. When these ships get delivered, there’s a glut and prices collapse, and then the cycle repeats itself.

Frontline found itself in a situation where there were too many VLCCs relative to the demand, but what the market forgot is that these VLCCs have a scrap value. If you looked at all the ships based on either what they could sell for in terms of distress sales or what they could be scrapped for, and you took out the debt, you were significantly above where the stock was at. At the time I was making the investment for these VLCCs, I think the daily shipping rates were $10,000. At those rates, those VLCCs cannot make money. They lose money. When you have money-losing operations, the older ships get scrapped, and as the older ships were getting scrapped, capacity kept getting taken out. At the same time, economies grew and the curves crossed. Frontline went to $140 because that $10,000-a-day shipping rate went all the way to $250,000. That wasn’t the first and only time that happened. Maybe an increase of 25:1 is extreme, but you do see very wide swings in terms of lows and highs. Of course, when rates are at $250,000 per ship, markets go crazy, and they assume [high rates] will last forever.

So I got one part of the equation right, which is I couldn’t lose money, which was correct, and I made some money. What I did not get right was the more important part, which was to keep at least a part of the investment to see what would happen when the market got tight. It’s a lesson learned, and I try to keep that in mind for the future.

MOI: In The Dhandho Investor, you have a chapter on the art of selling, called “Abhimanyu’s Dilemma.” Could you reflect a bit on that and perhaps how you might update it given another dozen years of experience?

Pabrai: Selling is always a lot more complicated than buying. I used the example of Abhimanyu because there’s a great Indian epic called the Mahabharat that was written about 2,500 years ago. There are two factions of a large family that are at war with each other. There’s a big battle going on with swords and elephants and everything else in between, with thousands of troops and so on. One of the sides arranged their troops in a spiral formation, which is called a Chakravyuha in Hindi or in Sanskrit. That Chakravyuha formation makes it very hard for one’s opponent to inflict losses. Lord Krishna’s sister was the mother of our hero, Abhimanyu, and when he was in her womb, Lord Krishna was explaining to his sister how one enters a Chakravyuha and how one decimates it. She listened carefully as he was giving the first part of the story, and then she fell asleep in the second part, so her unborn baby only heard half the story. (They assumed about 2,000 years ago that you can talk to unborn kids and they listen to you.) Abhimanyu goes into the Chakravyuha, trying to help out his losing side, and he has great success getting to the center of it and inflicting damage on the enemy, but he doesn’t know how to get out. In the end, he’s killed.

It’s similar to investing in the sense that it’s relatively easy for us to buy stocks, but sometimes things start unfolding about a business somewhat differently from what we may have predicted. We may have had certain models in our mind, and then we see reality on the ground is completely different. Then, if you’re below your cost basis, the question is do you want to wait until you break even, wait until you make some money, or do you want to cut your losses and run. These become challenging and difficult questions to answer. Selling is always a lot harder than buying. It’s more complicated because we don’t have crystal balls that tell us what markets are going to do or what individual businesses are going to do. That’s why I use that analogy. It’s important before we buy a stock to be able to write down maybe in fewer than four or five sentences why we are buying it and under what circumstances and pricing we would be selling it, so that we have that clarity etched in our brains.

Billinger: In terms of what you say about limiting your downside, to what extent does that happen at the company-specific level — for instance, looking at the business model or the balance sheet of the companies you invest in — and to what extent does it happen at the portfolio level — say by some diversification or by looking at the liquidity of the securities you invest in? The Buffett school says you don’t want to diversify excessively, but at the same time, there are unknown unknowns, and no matter how much work you do on a company, things can go wrong. How do you balance those two — the company specific and the portfolio level?

Pabrai: That’s a great question. My natural tendency is to concentrate. One thing I learned from John Templeton is that even the best investment analysts will be wrong the majority of the time. More than 50% of the time, your decisions are going to be incorrect in terms of what actually happened to the stock versus what you thought would happen. That difference may or may not lead to a loss, but it’s certainly a difference on what you may have predicted. Companies are complicated entities. They are in competitive spaces and capitalism is brutal. The future trajectory of businesses you invest in can diverge vastly from what you may have forecast. I don’t use leverage at all at the portfolio level. I’m not shorting anything because that is infinite downside. We don’t use derivatives in our investment funds. We keep it vanilla so that if a portfolio position has a problem, it cannot cascade because of these issues. Its loss is limited, in the worst case, to the entire position size. If you’ve got 10 or more positions, and hopefully, you’ve been careful in your selections, you shouldn’t have more than one or two that give you serious problems every two or three years.

MOI: The Dhandho Investor has now been out for a dozen years and you’ve had the chance to learn from successes and mistakes in that time. How would you update the book? Would you add anything to it? Are there nuances that are not in that original version but that would be in another edition?

Pabrai: One of the things I would correct is a mistake in the book in the way the Kelly Formula is applied. The Kelly Formula is actually not very relevant to equity investing or value investing as most of us practice it. The underlying assumption is, for example, if the odds of a head are 51% and the odds of a tail are 49%, if you get to bet only once, it’s not very useful to have that kind of edge, but if you get to make that bet 10,000 times and you can always bet on the 51% each time, you’ll do very well. The Kelly Formula is useful when you get these serial betting opportunities, which is quite different from the way equity investing works. One of the things I would change in the book is I would completely take out the entire discussion on Kelly because it’s not relevant.

The other thing I would do is spend more time on the downside protection and the free lunches. The book does talk about how markets hate uncertainty, and they confuse risk and uncertainty. Frontline, which was the VLCC company, had massive uncertainty, but it had very low risk. When you have the combination of very low risk and very high uncertainty — the same thing in IPSCO, the steel company, which had extremely low risk and extremely high uncertainty — usually that will mean extremely high rewards because markets will significantly misprice those. If you have an edge in terms of understanding those businesses and understanding the dynamics, then it can work out well. I don’t know whether I should mention this but I’ll go out on a limb: one of the businesses that I think we’re almost at the tail end of buying, is a company which in the next five years will generate cash flows equal to or probably higher than its market cap. It’s like with IPSCO — they are contracted cash flows. They’re locked in. It’s not just giving a multiple. You actually have visibility into 2022, 2023-type numbers. The company is probably going to dividend out these cash flows as they come out. If I invested, say, $50 million in this business, and $50 million or $70 million of cash flow will come in in the next five years, and that entire $50 million or $70 million gets pushed out, then in five years, I’ve got my money back. In fact, some of that is starting to come back a year from now, but I still own the business, and I still own all the assets and plant and equipment and all of that, just like IPSCO. I like those types of bets. I cannot tell you what that business is worth, but I can tell you what the floor is, and we’re buying below the floor. That’s quite exciting. Anytime we get to make these kinds of bets where we have very low risk with very high uncertainty, then the next part of the equation, which is a likely high reward, is on the cards. I have more experience now than I had when I was doing Frontline, but we’ll see how it actually plays out. If it doesn’t play out with a bull case, then we won’t lose any money. We’ll probably make some money. If it works out with a bull case, then we’ll make a lot of money.

MOI: Of course, we want to know the name now, Mohnish.

Pabrai: We can’t go there right now. But at some point, you guys will figure it out from the filings, and that’s okay.

MOI: Absolutely. You did mention Frontline there in this context so —

Pabrai: I think the filing is mid-August for the end of June. By then, I’ll be fully loaded, and I really don’t care what happens at that point.

MOI: I would be remiss not to mention Dakshana because I’ve been watching your work with the foundation since you started it, and its impact has been amazing. Since we’re talking about The Dhandho Investor, in the not-for-profit space, Dakshana is a great illustration of dhandho, because for the amount of money that’s actually gone into it, the impact it’s had is amazing.

Pabrai: It’s worked out wildly better than I would have ever dared to predict. It’s worked for a number of reasons. One is that we copied a model that had already been proven to be successful. Cloning is very powerful. We didn’t go into cloning much in this talk, but Dakshana is a good example of cloning. Pabrai Funds is also a good example because we cloned the Buffett partnerships. I have gained a lot of advantage in my life from the mental model of cloning.

The second thing that we did in Dakshana which a lot of non-profits don’t do, is around the concept of feedback loops. Let’s go back to our barber in Town C. If that barber gives bad haircuts, he’s not going to be in business for very long because people will try him once or twice and then if they’re unhappy with his service, they’ll go back to whoever else they were using even if that means a longer drive. Capitalism has what I would call a natural feedback loop where if you don’t deliver value, eventually you’re going to go out of business or you won’t be profitable. It will show up in the numbers. In the non-profit world, there is no such feedback loop. For example, if I am the Ford Foundation and if I’ve got let’s say a $10 billion endowment or portfolio, the law requires me to spend 5% a year, which is $500 million. No matter what happens to that $500 million in terms of effectiveness, next year, there’ll be another $500 million available, and the year after that, there’ll be another $500 million available because the odds are they can generate more than 5% a year on average in investment returns. If they are generating more than 5% a year and they are spending 5%, they can run for 50 years with terrible outcomes in terms of what is actually helping society. Unfortunately, that is the norm in the non-profit world. Almost all non-profits operate without feedback loops. One of the reasons they operate without feedback loops is most non-profit activities do not lend themselves to quantification to measure effectiveness.

I did an inversion. Munger says when you see a problem, always invert, and it will get you to a better place, so I inverted the problem. Because it’s hard to measure outcomes in the non-profit world, I decided to look only at endeavors where outcome measurement is easy. I inverted the problem and said we’d only look at those things where we get the same feedback loop as in a capitalist society. What Dakshana does is help kids in India get into elite colleges, like IITs (Indian Institutes of Technology) or AIIMS (All India Institute of Medical Sciences). Getting into those schools is tough, and in effect, we get an independent grade on how we are performing based on the number of kids that get accepted. We have no control over that because it’s an independent entity. Just like a barber delivering bad haircuts, you’re going to see the real picture when you look at their financials.

Because of that feedback loop, Dakshana is able to do two things. One is we are able to measure our effectiveness: we can see what dollars went in, and we can see what the outcome is. The second is we can make changes. When we see that our success rate is low, we can drill down and tweak the model, because we know what the factors are, to get better outcomes. That is extremely important. I get contacted by a lot of non-profits, and when I tell them this, I think they stop listening because they would have to hit the reset button on all they’re giving and start over. From their perspective, that’s too hard.

I was lucky that I overdosed on Buffett on this subject and I was aware that giving money is a lot more difficult than making it, and giving it away effectively is difficult, so Dakshana created feedback loops, and those have been great.

MOI: I think your approach is being copied now not by not-for-profits but by people like Lambda School and all these startups where essentially, they’re investing in talent and then the payoff is coming once this talent has marketable value. Those guys are basically mimicking what you’ve been doing, but they’re doing it in a for-profit way.

Pabrai: We have a guy at Google in Mountain View. His family was earning less than $40 a month. Many times, all they could afford for dinner was boiled rice and pickles, and often it was just pickles. They had nothing to eat, no dinner. He’s now about 26 or so, and I don’t know his exact comp, but I think he’s north of $250,000 a year. It costs us $2,000 to take that family from $40 a month to something like $20,000 a month. That’s a payoff in, you could say, three days after he starts working for a few years. I’m not even measuring lifetime income. He was just working on a project directly with the CEO of Google — I don’t even know where that’s going. It’s heartening to see that. Nobody else was in this space that Dakshana is in, and still no one else is in this space because humans are bad cloners. We’ve tried to advertise our model, but no one else wants to enter. That’s fine. We get tremendous ROIs on Dakshana with what we’re doing, and it’s very satisfying.

If you really break it down, I’m just a kid who likes to play math games. I play math games on the investing side, and I’m playing math games on the giving side. All I’m trying to do is make sure that one day, before I die hopefully, everything I made is gone on the other side. It’ll be fun to achieve that. I hope the day I’m gone is very far away, and I hope those numbers are large, but we’ll see.

MOI: You’ve certainly been extremely good at playing math games, both on the investing side as well as the non-profit side, and we look forward to a lot more of it in the coming decades.

About the book:

In a straightforward and accessible manner, The Dhandho Investor lays out the powerful framework of value investing. Written with the intelligent individual investor in mind, this comprehensive guide distills the Dhandho capital allocation framework of the business savvy Patels from India and presents how they can be applied successfully to the stock market. The Dhandho method expands on the groundbreaking principles of value investing expounded by Benjamin Graham, Warren Buffett, and Charlie Munger. Readers will be introduced to important value investing concepts such as “Heads, I win! Tails, I don’t lose that much!,” “Few Bets, Big Bets, Infrequent Bets,” Abhimanyu’s dilemma, and a detailed treatise on using the Kelly Formula to invest in undervalued stocks. Using a light, entertaining style, Pabrai lays out the Dhandho framework in an easy-to-use format. Any investor who adopts the framework is bound to improve on results and soundly beat the markets and most professionals.

About the author:

Mohnish Pabrai is the Managing Partner of the Junoon Zero Fee Funds and the Dhandho India Zero Fee Funds. Mohnish is the Founder and CEO of Dhandho Holdings, the parent of Dhandho Funds that was formed in 2014 and capitalized with over $150 million in assets. He is the Founder and Managing Partner of Pabrai Investment Funds, which has grown from $1 million in assets at inception in 1999 to $575+ million in 2019. He is the Founder and Chairman of The Dakshana Foundation (www.dakshana.org), which has gotten over 1,146 impoverished, but brilliant students admitted to the IITs.

As a 24-year old, he founded TransTech in 1990 and funded it with $70,000 in credit card debt and emptying out the $30,000 in his 401(k) account. TransTech was recognized as an Inc. 500 company in 1996 and had revenues of over $20 million when it was sold in 2000. He has been an active member of YPO for over 19 years. He loves reading, racquetball, biking on Irvine’s bike trails and playing duplicate bridge.

Francisco Garcia Parames on His Book, Investing for the Long Term

August 30, 2019 in Audio, Interviews, Meet-the-Author Forum, Meet-the-Author Forum 2019, Meet-the-Author Forum 2019 Featured, Transcripts

Francisco García Paramés discussed his book, Investing for the Long Term, at MOI Global’s Meet-the-Author Summer Forum 2019. Francisco serves as Chairman and Chief Investment Officer of Cobas Asset Management, based in Madrid.

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About the book:

World-renowned investor Francisco García Paramés shares his advice and tips on making smart investments in this must-have book for those looking to make smarter choices for their portfolio. Investing for the Long Term is divided in two parts. The first is formed by three chapters covering Francisco’s education and first steps, his initial experience as an investor working alone, and the team work after 2003. This riveting section covers the end of the biggest bull market of the 20th century and the technological and financial crashes of 2000 and 2008. How the team dealt with all that is an interesting personal account that can help you deal with similar situations, should they occur.

The second part of the book covers the cornerstones of Francisco’s philosophy. It starts with a chapter in Austrian economics, in his view the only sensible approach to economics, which has helped him enormously over the years. It follows with an explanation of why one has to invest in real assets, and specifically in shares, to maintain the purchasing power of ones savings, avoiding paper money (fixed income) at all costs. The rest of the book shows how to invest in shares.

  • Discover the amazing investing principles of one of the most successful fund managers in the world
  • Examine how one man and his company weathered the two of modern times’ biggest economic crashes
  • Learn how to safely invest your savings

Value investing and effective stock-picking underlie some of the world’s most successful investment strategies, which is why Investing for the Long Term is a must-have read for all investors, young and old, who wish to improve their stock selection abilities.

About Francisco García Paramés:

Born in 1963 in El Ferrol, Spain. After graduating in Economics, he took an MBA at the IESE business school. A voracious reader, he gets through books as briskly, it seems, as his long daily walks. He is also a keen swimmer, and sometimes plays golf. His track record of 25 years near the top of performance rankings make him one of Europe’s leading asset managers in the “value” school. He is a self-taught follower of Warren Buffett’s investment approach. His asset management style is based on strictly applying the principles of value investing (Graham, Buffett, Peter Lynch, etc), within the framework of the Austrian business cycle theory. He is the author of Invirtiendo a largo plazo (Investing for the Long-Term), a book in which he explains the underpinnings of his own investment approach and experience.

Sid Mohasseb on His Book, The Caterpillar’s Edge

August 25, 2019 in Audio, Interviews, Meet-the-Author Forum, Meet-the-Author Forum 2019

Sid Mohasseb discussed his book, The Caterpillar’s Edge: Evolve, Evolve Again, and Thrive in Business, at MOI Global’s Meet-the-Author Summer Forum 2019. Sid serves as CEO of Anabasis Advisory Services.

Listen to this session:

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About the book:

The secret code to growing a successful business is adjusting your strategy every single day. Business leaders, large and small, need to learn a new game with very different rules. They must accept an ever-changing and uncertain landscape, but a landscape that can be constantly leveraged for greater profitability. They must believe that their companies are caterpillars with the potential to become butterflies.

The Caterpillar’s Edge shows why we must embrace a future of flux. It exposes the addictions that chain us to our past and the truths that influence our behaviors. And, it shows just how to seize breakthrough advantages by pushing through all the noise around “Big Data”.

Within its DNA, the caterpillar aspires and pushes for more, and it gets just that, evolving gracefully from one entity into another, always building a competitive edge in the process. Break free from accepted archaic business practices by cracking that secret code which demands evolving your business always.

About the author:

Sid Mohasseb is known as The Entrepreneur Philosopher. He is a published author, serial entrepreneur, venture investor, university professor, innovation leader, business thought provoker and public speaker.

At 16, he immigrated to the US without his family, at 21, he started and later sold his first company while at college. At 25, he taught comparative Eastern and Western philosophy. At 27, he became the youngest partner of a national management consulting firm. During the next two decades, he supported large scale acquisitions and acted as principal investor in middle market companies leading company turnarounds. He also founded and led several early-stage and hyper-growth companies from inception to acquisition.

Sid has served on the boards of over a dozen profit and non-profit companies. He has logged thousands of hours developing strategies for various enterprises and working with board members and management to execute. As a teacher, he has taught Strategic Management, Corporate Finance, Venture Capital, Negotiation and Data Analytics to MBAs at USC, Chapman, and UCI.

As a professional fund manager and angel investor, Sid has mentored dozens of entrepreneurs, met with hundreds of start-up companies, and reviewed countless business plans. As a management consultant and board member, he has advised corporate leaders across a wide spectrum of industries and scale. As an author (The Caterpillar’s Edge), adjunct professor, a venture capitalist, a few times over corporate CEO, former Strategic Innovation leader in Strategy Practice at KPMG, a Harvard trained negotiator, a veteran board member and a featured TED speaker, Sid’s real expertise is in connecting theory and reality and helping people see the bend in the road ahead and make visions a reality.

Search Engine Optimization: An Enduring Competitive Advantage?

August 25, 2019 in European Investing Summit, Letters

This article is authored by MOI Global instructor Paolo Cipriani, a private investor, based in Tuscany, Italy.

In the era of the internet a certain amount of companies perform and create value with business models exclusively based on their websites, enriching them with content in order to attract web users. They make money by sending traffic to other companies, which convert the traffic into customers. The company with a website is usually identified as an “affiliate”, “broker”, or “publisher”, depending on the vertical in which it operates.

The SEO provider gets paid a performance marketing fee once a user is converted into a customer. Among “affiliates”, the few companies that are able to appear on the top of the google search results are the ones that can get the largest part of traffic. Indeed, many researches show that web users click 98% of the time on the first three searches of Google, excluding the AdWords.

Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process to optimize websites to rank higher in queries on search engines such as Google. Only the few companies that succeed in SEO are able to appear with a natural search on the top of google bar for specific topics. Those companies will be able to get the larger amount of traffic creating a sort of “oligopoly” whereas all the competitors will be relegated to a much smaller amount of traffic.

There are examples of listed companies in different verticals all around Europe, for example, Money Supermarket.com and GoCompare.com in personal finance in UK, MutuiOnline in personal finance in Italy, XLmedia and Catena Media in gambling in northern Europe. Taking a look at the most mature sector of personal finance (i.e. insurance, mortgage, energy etc.) in UK, it is easy to illustrate this kind of “oligopoly” I was mentioning before. The biggest comparables are Confused, Gocompare.com, Comparethemarket and Moneysupermarket. The volumes of all the other players are much smaller compared to the big four and it is an inevitable result of few spaces available on the search results on Google. These companies have a strong pricing power, an above average profitability and lastly a high return on investment thanks also to the good scalability.

SEO is an enduring competitive advantage because it can last for a long time for companies that have been invested in this technology for years. It is difficult to replicate for a competitor because it takes a lot of time to be good at SEO, it is not related on how much money you can invest. A fundamental part of SEO is understanding how are structured Google algorithms which keep evolving because they have always been updated. In general, the optimisation is given by providing the right content on the website and linking the website to other high authority website. The content needs to answer the different search queries about certain high value keywords and provides the visitors with the most relevant information in response to their query. A website that is a high quality source by Google can influence positively another website by referencing it. This competitive advantage is not only enduring but also potentially transferable to other business division.

A company that is succeeding in a vertical, for example igaming, due to the SEO, can diversify into another vertical, for example sport betting, keeping the same probability of success. Whereas the knowledge of a vertical (ex. insurance, mortgage, gambling and so on) can be acquired quite easily and it’s not the key success factor, the transferability of this competitive advantage is what make a company being able to keep allocating the capital to the highest returns. An example could be XLmedia that comes from gambling and it is expanding to the nascent and growing vertical of personal finance in USA. What will matter to succeed in this market of huge potential will be, again, an excellence in Search Engine Optimization.

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Pat Hedley on Her Book, Meet 100 People

August 24, 2019 in Audio, Interviews, Meet-the-Author Forum, Meet-the-Author Forum 2019

Pat Hedley discussed her book, Meet 100 People: A How-to Guide to the Career and Life Edge Everyone’s Missing, at MOI Global’s Meet-the-Author Summer Forum 2019. Pat serves as founder and CEO of The Path Ahead.

The full session is available exclusively to members of MOI Global.

Members, log in below to access the full session.

Not a member?

Thank you for your interest.  Please note that MOI Global is closed to new members at this time. If you would like to join the waiting list, complete the following form:

About the book:

Networking can happen anywhere: on planes, at barbecues, at basketball games. Everyone has the seeds of a great network within reach. To establish genuine relationships and build a network with life-long value, we must proactively meet people in person.

Pat Hedley offers hard-earned wisdom about the true spirit of networking, a learned skill that can be mastered by anyone, even introverts. She debunks the notion that networking is a self-interested act. Instead, she makes networking accessible, joyful and life-affirming.

Meet 100 People provides the networking toolkit for career success by offering inspiration, motivation, and practical advice, including:

  • Real stories from those beginning the networking process
  • Sample resumes and outreach emails
  • Dos and don’ts
  • Reflection exercises

Jump start your career by meeting 100 people—and more! The network that will sustain you for a lifetime begins with the first person you shake hands with today.

About the author:

Drawing upon a thirty year career at a major global private equity firm, Pat Hedley shares the secrets of master networkers so you too, can have the advantages that come from a valuable network of contacts. Throughout her career, Pat has advised young and seasoned professionals on how to find jobs, access expertise, leverage networks and discover new opportunities. Pat is the author of the book, Meet 100 People.

Carl Richards on His Book, The Behavior Gap

August 23, 2019 in Audio, Interviews, Meet-the-Author Forum, Meet-the-Author Forum 2019, Meet-the-Author Forum 2019 Featured

Carl Richards discussed his book, The Behavior Gap: Simple Ways to Stop Doing Dumb Things with Money, at MOI Global’s Meet-the-Author Summer Forum 2019. Carl is the founder of Behavior Gap.

The full session is available exclusively to members of MOI Global.

Members, log in below to access the full session.

Not a member?

Thank you for your interest.  Please note that MOI Global is closed to new members at this time. If you would like to join the waiting list, complete the following form:

About the book:

Why do we lose money? It’s easy to blame the economy or the financial markets-but the real trouble lies in the decisions we make.

As a financial planner, Carl Richards grew frustrated watching people he cared about make the same mistakes over and over. They were letting emotion get in the way of smart financial decisions. He named this phenomenon-the distance between what we should do and what we actually do-“the behavior gap.” Using simple drawings to explain the gap, he found that once people understood it, they started doing much better.

Richards’s way with words and images has attracted a loyal following to his blog posts for The New York Times, appearances on National Public Radio, and his columns and lectures. His book will teach you how to rethink all kinds of situations where your perfectly natural instincts (for safety or success) can cost you money and peace of mind.

He’ll help you to:

• Avoid the tendency to buy high and sell low;
• Avoid the pitfalls of generic financial advice;
• Invest all of your assets-time and energy as well as savings-more wisely;
• Quit spending money and time on things that don’t matter;
• Identify your real financial goals;
• Start meaningful conversations about money;
• Simplify your financial life;
• Stop losing money!

It’s never too late to make a fresh financial start. As Richards writes: “We’ve all made mistakes, but now it’s time to give yourself permission to review those mistakes, identify your personal behavior gaps, and make a plan to avoid them in the future. The goal isn’t to make the ‘perfect’ decision about money every time, but to do the best we can and move forward. Most of the time, that’s enough.

About the author:

Carl Richards is a Certified Financial Planner™ and creator of the Sketch Guy column, appearing weekly in the New York Times since 2010.

Carl has also been featured on Marketplace Money, Oprah.com, and Forbes.com. In addition, Carl has become a frequent keynote speaker at financial planning conferences and visual learning events around the world.

Through his simple sketches, Carl makes complex financial concepts easy to understand. His sketches also serve as the foundation for his two books, The One-Page Financial Plan: A Simple Way to Be Smart About Your Money and The Behavior Gap: Simple Ways to Stop Doing Dumb Things with Money (Portfolio/Penguin).

His sketches have appeared in a solo show at the Kimball Art Center in Park City, Utah as well as other showings at Parsons School of Design in New York City, The Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, California, and an exhibit at the Mansion House in London.

His commissioned work is on display in businesses and educational institutions across the globe.

He currently resides in New Zealand with his family and is available for speaking engagements and conferences both nationally and internationally.

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