Max Hu’s Annual China Macro Update + Unity Software Thesis

April 14, 2021 in Asia, Asian Investing Summit 2021, Asian Investing Summit 2021 Featured, Audio, Diary, Equities, Ideas, Macro

Max Hu of ZZ Capital International shared his annual macro update and presented his in-depth investment thesis on Unity Software (US: U) at Asian Investing Summit 2021.

Thesis summary:

Unity Software is the world’s leading platform for creating and operating interactive, real-time 3D (RT3D) content. The main business has been established over the past two decades around game development platforms, especially mobile games.

The company has been part of a duopoly in the global game engine market (along with Epic Games’ Unreal Engine), serving millions of independent game developers worldwide. Unity derives ~15% of revenue from the Greater China region and ~40% of revenue from Asia. It is the dominant platform in China, with more than 60% market share.

Chinese users have the highest engagement globally, surpassing US users, but monetization levels have been low. Unity has been accelerating its Chinese business, with revenue growth amounting to ~80% last year in China. In addition to Chinese growth in the near term, the company is also uniquely positioned to benefit from long-term growth in Virtual Reality.

Unity has a market capitalization of $28 billion and a forward P/S ratio of 27x, a “bubbly” multiple. However, if Max’s prediction about the future of virtual worlds holds true and the company executes well along the way, it may offer a once-a-lifetime investment opportunity, according to Max.

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

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About the instructor:

Max Hu serves as the executive director for ZZ Capital International, the Hong Kong-based oversea investing platform for the ZEG, a leading Chinese privately-owned investment group with an AUM over 150 billion USD.

Previously, Max was Head of Asset Management for JT Asset Management. He was also the co-founder and fund manager of Tyee Capital Group. He managed Tyee Capital’s global opportunity fund, an equity-based, long-biased multi-strategy fund with a focus on extraordinary businesses. Max’s investment approach is contrarian, long-term, and concentrated. His investments have been focused on easy to understand, wide-moat companies with solid long-term growth prospects. He has worked at Deutsche Asset Management and is a CFA Charterholder.

Max graduated from Tsinghua University in China with a degree in physics and mathematics. He has done Ph.D. research in Financial Economics at ETH Zurich and holds a Masters’s degree from University Heidelberg.

The content of this website is not an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any security. The content is distributed for informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice or a recommendation to sell or buy any security or other investment, or undertake any investment strategy. There are no warranties, expressed or implied, as to the accuracy, completeness, or results obtained from any information set forth on this website. BeyondProxy’s officers, directors, employees, and/or contributing authors may have positions in and may, from time to time, make purchases or sales of the securities or other investments discussed or evaluated herein.

Sid Choraria Shares His Insights Into Value Investing in Asia

April 14, 2021 in Asia, Asian Investing Summit 2021, Audio, Equities, Ideas

Sid Choraria of SC Asia Strategy discussed value investing in Asia and presented an investment thesis at Asian Investing Summit 2021.

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

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About the instructor:

Sid Choraria is an Asian Equities Portfolio Manager focused on identifying exceptional businesses, cultures and CEOs/management teams to invest like a business owner, preferably for 10 years or longer.

The typical company Sid prefers is a business that can endure the risk of impermanence over decades. His research indicates that over 98% of investable companies fail the test. The culture must be unquestionably superior. Such companies are customer obsessed and have strong non-transactional relationships with constituents. Sid prefers early-stage pricing power that is not discovered. The universe is limited to exceptional Asian businesses and great global companies with significant revenue and cash flow from Asia very material to shareholder value.

In Aug 2013, Sid elicited a rare response from legendary Warren Buffett with a letter and thesis on an under-followed, 135-year-old Japanese company. The company, Kobayashi Pharmaceutical (4967 JP) founded in 1886 is as old as Coca Cola and Wrigley’s chewing gum but with poor coverage when Sid discovered it. He presented the idea on MOI in 2013. Since the letter, business value has quadrupled compounding roughly 26% outperforming the S&P, NASDAQ and respective Asian indices. The inversion lessons influenced Sid’s journey to focus on less followed companies, great cultures and businesses that can endure the test of time.

Sid enjoys mentoring young talent and giving back knowledge by speaking at the world’s top universities like Harvard, Princeton, Columbia Business School, NYU Stern, LBS, USC and Brown. From 2014-2016, he consistently won a few research awards for probing research on Asian companies judged by over 70 judges.
His contributions have featured in Goldman Sachs Alumni Network, CNBC, Sydney Morning Herald, Alpha Ideas India, Value Spain, Intel and GIC.

Sid has worked in Asia for 15 years and grew up in the region. Previously, he has served in senior investment roles in Asia, at multi-billion long-only and long-short funds. He worked at Goldman Sachs technology investment banking in Asia. These experiences taught him the significant importance of teams, culture and incentives.

Sid received his MBA from New York University Stern School in 2011 and was recipient of the Harvey Beker Scholarship. During his MBA, Sid worked at Bandera Partners, a fund focused on small mid cap activism, run by Jeff Gramm, Author of “”Dear Chairman””, Greg Bylinsky and Andy Shpiz.

SC Asia Strategy aims to offer select like-minded accredited investors with a minimum investment horizon of 7-10 years managed accounts and a Fund on the Gordian Capital fund platform. As of Q1 2021, Gordian Capital oversees over US$5.9bn.

Havells India: Leader in Electrical Goods and Consumer Durables

April 14, 2021 in Asia, Asian Investing Summit 2021, Asian Investing Summit 2021 Featured, Audio, Diary, Equities, Ideas, Transcripts

Rajeev Mantri of Navam Capital presented his investment thesis on Havells India Limited (HIL) (India: 517354) at Asian Investing Summit 2021.

Thesis summary:

Havells India is an industry-leading, best-in-class electrical goods and consumer durables manufacturer in India with a market capitalization of INR 645 billion / US$ 8.8 billion. The company is well-positioned to capitalize on rising per-capita incomes in India, which provide a strong tailwind and should lead to higher discretionary spending on electrical goods and consumer durables.

With a strong R&D focus, a track record of profitable growth, superior financial management, and strong emphasis on nationwide distribution, HIL has the opportunity to emerge as a global-scale player in its industry while it enables the transformation and modernization of the Indian home.

Along with the rise of the domestic market and enabling government policy, HIL is also positioned to capture large export opportunities. A shakeout of subscale, non-organized sector players in the Indian electrical goods industry through the Covid crisis has strengthened HIL.

The company’s leading-edge capabilities, proven leadership, and growth headroom should lead to substantial earnings growth in the years to come.

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

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About the instructor:

Rajeev Mantri is managing director of Navam Capital, an India-focused investment firm. Prior to founding Navam Capital, Rajeev worked as a venture capitalist at New York-based Lux Capital, focusing on investments in energy, water and nanomaterials.

Rajeev has contributed columns and articles on technology, investing, venture capital and political economy to The Wall Street Journal, Mint, Swarajya, Financial Times, The Indian Express, The New York Times International Weekly, Roubini Global Economics, and other publications.

In August 2010, Rajeev co-founded Vyome Therapeutics, a biopharmaceuticals company, and served as Vyome’s president through the company’s formative years.

Rajeev graduated with a BS in materials science and engineering from Northwestern University, and an MBA from Columbia Business School, specializing in private equity and value investing.

Rajeev is the author (with Harsh Madhusudan) of the book, A New Idea Of India, an international bestseller on the history and future of modern India covering a diverse range of topics in economics, foreign policy and politics.

The content of this website is not an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any security. The content is distributed for informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice or a recommendation to sell or buy any security or other investment, or undertake any investment strategy. There are no warranties, expressed or implied, as to the accuracy, completeness, or results obtained from any information set forth on this website. BeyondProxy’s officers, directors, employees, and/or contributing authors may have positions in and may, from time to time, make purchases or sales of the securities or other investments discussed or evaluated herein.

Shriram City Union: Competitively Advantaged Finance Company

April 13, 2021 in Asia, Asian Investing Summit 2021, Asian Investing Summit 2021 Featured, Audio, Diary, Equities, Ideas

Sidd Thomas and Kimi Venkataraman of India Intrinsic Value Advisors presented their investment thesis on Shriram City Union Finance (SCUF) (India: SHRIRAMCIT) at Asian Investing Summit 2021.

Thesis summary:

Shriram City Union Finance is a leading non-bank financial company (NBFC) in India. Part of the wider Shriram group, SCUF is known for its prowess in subprime, semi-rural lending. 

SCUF has created a strong franchise in the medium and small enterprise segment and the two-wheeler loan market in India. The company has a strong track record over the last ten years of growing assets and book value, along with high returns on equity, while employing low levels of leverage.

At a market quotation of 1.2x book value, the shares trade near historical lows. Sidd and Kimi believe the shares may be worth twice the recent market price.

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

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About the instructors:

Siddharth M-Thomas serves as a principal of India Intrinsic Value Advisors. He founded Beaconsfield Investment Management in 2010. Prior to that he worked as an analyst covering Asian equities at Fairfax Financial Holdings and as an associate analyst at Credit Suisse equity research. Born and raised in Chennai, India. Siddharth completed his bachelor’s of science degree from Purdue University. He is also a level 3 candidate in the CFA program.

Krishnaraj (Kimi) Venkataraman serves as a principal of India Intrinsic Value Advisors. He is the Managing Partner of Kimi & Partners, an investment firm he founded in 2008. Kimi’s previous work experience includes Tata Steel and P&G India, as well as several business startups in India, including Marketics which was successfully sold to WNS. Kimi has been an investor for more than 20 years and, after reading Warren Buffett, has been investing in undervalued Indian stocks. Kimi lives in Bangalore, India, with his wife and two daughters.

Ep. 36: The Art of Short Selling | A Survey of Market Tail Risks

April 13, 2021 in Audio, Diary, Equities, Interviews, Podcast, This Week in Intelligent Investing

It’s a pleasure to share with you Season 1 Episode 36 of This Week in Intelligent Investing, co-hosted by

  • Phil Ordway of Anabatic Investment Partners in Chicago, Illinois;
  • Elliot Turner of RGA Investment Advisors in Stamford, Connecticut; and
  • John Mihaljevic of MOI Global in Zurich, Switzerland.

Enjoy the conversation!

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In this episode, John Mihaljevic co-hosts a discussion of

  • short selling and how it differs from the long investing mindset, led by Elliot Turner; and
  • a survey of market tail risk fears, led by Phil Ordway.

Follow Up

Would you like to get in touch?

Follow This Week in Intelligent Investing on Twitter.

Engage on Twitter with Elliot, Phil, or John.

Connect on LinkedIn with Elliot, Phil, or John.

This Week in Intelligent Investing is available on Amazon Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Pandora, Podbean, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, and YouTube.

If you missed any past episodes, you can listen to them here.

About the Podcast Co-Hosts

Philip Ordway is Managing Principal and Portfolio Manager of Anabatic Fund, L.P. Previously, Philip was a partner at Chicago Fundamental Investment Partners (CFIP). At CFIP, which he joined in 2007, Philip was responsible for investments across the capital structure in various industries. Prior to joining CFIP, Philip was an analyst in structured corporate finance with Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. from 2002 to 2005. Philip earned his B.S. in Education & Social Policy and Economics from Northwestern University in 2002 and his M.B.A. from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University in 2007, where he now serves as an Adjunct Professor in the Finance Department.

Elliot Turner is a co-founder and Managing Partner, CIO at RGA Investment Advisors, LLC. RGA Investment Advisors runs a long-term, low turnover, growth at a reasonable price investment strategy seeking out global opportunities. Elliot focuses on discovering and analyzing long-term, high quality investment opportunities and strategic portfolio management. Prior to joining RGA, Elliot managed portfolios at at AustinWeston Asset Management LLC, Chimera Securities and T3 Capital. Elliot holds the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation as well as a Juris Doctor from Brooklyn Law School.. He also holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Emory University where he double majored in Political Science and Philosophy.

John Mihaljevic leads MOI Global and serves as managing editor of The Manual of Ideas. He managed a private partnership, Mihaljevic Partners LP, from 2005-2016. John is a winner of the Value Investors Club’s prize for best investment idea. He is a trained capital allocator, having studied under Yale University Chief Investment Officer David Swensen and served as Research Assistant to Nobel Laureate James Tobin. John holds a BA in Economics, summa cum laude, from Yale and is a CFA charterholder.

The content of this podcast is not an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any security in any jurisdiction. The content is distributed for informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice or a recommendation to sell or buy any security or other investment, or undertake any investment strategy. There are no warranties, expressed or implied, as to the accuracy, completeness, or results obtained from any information set forth on this podcast. The podcast participants and their affiliates may have positions in and may, from time to time, make purchases or sales of the securities or other investments discussed or evaluated on this podcast. [dkpdf-remove]
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Public Equities in Southeast Asia: An Overlooked Asset Class

April 12, 2021 in Asia, Asian Investing Summit, Commentary, Equities, Letters

This article is authored by MOI Global instructor Florian Weidinger, Chief Executive Officer at Hansabay, based in Singapore.

Florian is an instructor at Asian Investing Summit 2021.

Southeast Asia is an overlooked asset class. More than half a trillion dollars of foreign direct investment is showing public equity investors the way.

SEA should not be a niche

We at Hansabay, investment managers covering the region, believe that Southeast Asia (“SEA”), the world’s 5th largest economy with more than 600 million people is an unjustifiably overlooked asset class – and curiously near its cheapest relative to broader Asia and Emerging Markets in over ten years, at a point in time when long-term fundamentals have never really looked better.

(For purposes of this article, let us equate geographic Southeast Asia with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, short ASEAN, covering the Mekong countries of Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, and Laos, as well as Singapore, Brunei, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia; Papua New Guinea and East Timor are seeking accession to ASEAN.)

ASEAN represents the most integrated group of nations after the European Union, and its economy of over $3 trillion nominal GDP is the world’s 5th largest, bigger than the United Kingdom in developed markets, and bigger than India in emerging markets. Yet it is undiscovered as an equity market with an MSCI market cap of only around $700bn, the same as Tesla. Curiously, for every 1 dedicated SEA fund manager on Bloomberg there are more than 20 dedicated India managers, for a comparable opportunity.

SEA is made for active management and constructive shareholder activism: there are more than 5k listed stocks, with a majority with no analyst coverage and median coverage of 1-2 analysts, typically family-owned businesses.

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Rajeev Agrawal on Key Lessons Learned Over the Past Year

April 10, 2021 in Asia, Asian Investing Summit, Commentary, Equities, Letters

This article is an edited excerpt of an annual letter by MOI Global instructor Rajeev Agrawal, founder and managing partner of DoorDashi Advisors, based in New York.

Rajeev is an instructor at Asian Investing Summit 2021.

Warren Buffett’s animated series, The Secret Millionaires Club, has a catchy tagline, “The more we learn, the more we earn.” We are on a journey to learn and earn!

Another important consideration is that the biggest returns from compounding are all back-ended. Warren Buffett made his first Billion at the age of 56. All the remaining billions he has made, and many more that he has given away, have been accumulated from that first billion at the age of 56. Similarly, what we will do in our future years will have an even bigger impact on what we will achieve.

Hence, we should continue to learn and improve. How do we learn continuously? It pays to listen to Charlie Munger on this subject, “I know I’ll perform better if I rub my nose in my mistakes. This is a wonderful trick to learn.” The lessons below are our effort at rubbing our nose in our mistakes. Hopefully, we will remember them better.

The best time to buy a stock is when there is blood on the street, even if the blood is your own

March of 2020 left most investors bloodied and bruised. There was no place to hide. We were no different. We would wake up, see our holding go down another x% for the day and go back to bed. Next day was no different. Do look at the chart again (earlier in the letter) to see how swift and deep the fall was!

My wife rightly diagnosed that I wasn’t sleeping well. I knew I was not. However, I told her I was sleeping soundly so as not to spread the panic that I was feeling inside. Everything that we owned was in free fall.

Many investment managers that I spoke to during March told us how they have moved 50% of their portfolio to cash or are in the process of raising cash to a very high proportion. Most investment managers also talked about another down leg in the coming months.

Such market moves, and response from investment managers, left me numb. Yet when we looked at our portfolio holdings, we were seeing something totally different. Expected returns in many of our holdings looked unbelievably good even under pessimistic scenarios.

Our investment approach gave us the courage to be active buyers with the cash that we had. I am glad we did. It helped us do much better than the benchmarks.

Of the various stocks that we bought during the March period, we put out a thesis for a few in the public domain. Thesis on KRBL was presented in MOI Global Asian Investing Conference as well as submitted on Sumzero in late March and early April. We were already invested in KRBL when March came. However, when the stock tanked we loaded up on it. It has worked out very well so far.

A good business and good management, at a bad price, is not a good stock

The ten-year bull market in technology stocks has fuelled the narrative that investing is all about finding good businesses and good management. Price doesn’t matter.

Trees don’t grow to the sky no matter the soil and the care with which they are looked after. Similarly, a company won’t keep growing, forever, at very high rates and prices do matter. Resistance can come from unknown quarters including government policies, company’s bureaucracy, industry development, business environment or even a virus!

We had such an experience with a company called Piramal Enterprises in 2018. We liked the management of Ajay Piramal – a good capital allocator. We liked that they are going into business areas where there is a lot of white space and hence a long runway. However, as the business performed, the price ran far ahead of the fundamentals.

We knew that the price didn’t justify the fundamentals. However, we were intoxicated by what can happen a decade out rather than what could happen in the next few years. Mr Market gave us a whacking and a lesson that we will try to remember for the future.

The misplaced craze for compounders

Another narrative which has developed with the bull market is that one needs to find Compounders and hold them for multiple decades. This narrative talks about how FANGAM (Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, Google, Apple, Microsoft) has rewarded its shareholders. However, what the narrative misses is how many such “perceived” compounders have failed in the past as well. Think of Nokia, Yahoo, General Electric, Myspace and many more.

Unfortunately, compounders are only known in hindsight. However, one is managing the portfolio for the future. Thus, buying and selling of a stock should be done based on our assessment of the business prospects and the valuation. It should be done irrespective of tax consequences and frictional costs associated with the activity.

Ian Cassell wrote an interesting article recently where he talked about how portfolio turnover is the price of progress. He mentioned, “Peter Lynch had a 300% turnover per year in the early years of the Magellan Fund. Joel Greenblatt had similar turnover at Gotham Capital. Even Warren Buffett’s public company portfolio ranged between 50-100% turnover per year during his first three decades.”

We had carried low turnover as a “badge of honour” in the past. However, over time we have realized that low turnover is not the goal, good returns are!

Portfolio allocation is key

Unless one actively guards, a lot of trifles get collected in the portfolio which doesn’t add much to the portfolio but take away a lot of time. It is important to get rid of them as soon as one realises that there are trifles in the portfolio.

We realized that while our portfolio grew multi-fold over the last seven years, we had not proportionately increased our buying/selling of the position to account for the increased size of the portfolio. Hence, we were ending up with sub-optimal allocation to positions.

We instituted a simple rule to correct for the above: There will be no position in the portfolio unless it is >1% of the portfolio. The only exception is if the position is being actively sold, being actively bought or if we want to “watch” it closely.

To some 1% may seem too small a position. However, the conviction in a new position comes over time. So we will take baby steps in a new position and gradually build our conviction over time.

Diversification versus concentration

One of the key questions in investments is the level of concentration in one’s portfolio. When we started we preferred a concentrated approach with having most of our allocation in the top ten positions. While there is no right answer our thoughts continue to evolve here.

We now prefer to have a diversified portfolio for the same expected return-risk profile of securities. This viewpoint reflects our experience that occasionally stocks move wildly without a corresponding change in the business outlook. Having a diversified portfolio allows us to take advantage of these moves.

However, we will not diversify our portfolio for its own sake. New positions have to provide a compelling return-risk profile to get into the portfolio. We need to be comfortable with our understanding of its business and management. Lastly, we metaphorically ask these positions to justify “why they should be in our portfolio?”

Mistakes are a sign of progress if you are learning from them

While in 2018 we did beat the indices (but not our internal benchmark), in 2019 we underperformed the indices. We are glad that in 2020 we are now out of the woods and beating the industry benchmarks and, more importantly, our internal benchmark

2018 and 2019 gave us a lot of opportunities to think about and learn from. While many lessons outlined here remind us of the corresponding pain that it caused, we are glad that we went through it. We are even happier that we talk about them with our investors and through that improve ourselves and (possibly) our investors.

If we take the right lessons from life and investing then the inferior part of life is the “earlier part”. Ray Dalio puts it succinctly, “Pain + Reflection = Progress.” Charlie Munger has elaborated further, “Any year that passes in which you don’t destroy one of your best-loved ideas is a wasted year.” By Charlie’s measure, we have been on a fruitful journey!

Dare to be different, and right

Too many investors and too many institutions run towards the positions that have done well recently and, out of positions that have gone down. There is no denying that momentum in stocks is alive and well. Understanding who is buying and selling stock and why can provide important insights.

However, insight on incremental supply and demand of a stock is only a start. It is even more important to have an understanding of the business, the management incentives and, the competitive landscape.

IDFC’s stock price had gone only one way since 2010 – down! Nobody wanted to talk about it. It was a pariah. Most investors were selling it as soon as they were getting even! Due to the fall, the stock had turned compelling which drew our attention to it.

On our investigation, we found that Management was hugely incentivized and management talk and action had been consistent. There was a regulatory trigger point as well. In June 2020, we put out a thesis of why we like IDFC on Sumzero. We also gave a few talks – talk 1 and talk 2 – in which we discussed IDFC and other ideas in brief.

So far IDFC has worked out well. It is up more than 100% since we put out the thesis 7 months back. Being willing to be different and right can be very rewarding! However, being different also entails the risk of being wrong. We have the scars to show for our audacity. In the words of Lou Brock, one of baseball’s best players of the late 1960s, “Show me a guy who’s afraid to look bad, and I’ll show you a guy you can beat every time.” We don’t want to be that guy!

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Special: Stitch Fix Deep Dive, with Mario Cibelli and Elliot Turner

April 10, 2021 in Audio, Diary, Equities, Interviews, Podcast, This Week in Intelligent Investing

It’s a pleasure to share with you a special episode of This Week in Intelligent Investing, featuring Elliot Turner of RGA Investment Advisors in conversation with Mario Cibelli of Marathon Equity Partners.

Enjoy the conversation!

download audio recording

In this special episode, Elliot sits down for a deep dive with Mario Cibelli, Founder and Portfolio Manager at Marathon Equity Partners.

Mario recorded this episode on the 24th anniversary of the launch of his main fund, and in reflecting on that milestone, he shares his wisdom with “A Stock Picker’s Guide for Surviving 20+ Years in the Business.”

Mario discusses his background and some historical investments before diving deep on Stitch Fix and the opportunity the company has in the apparel vertical for customers and brands alike, built around a culture infused with data analysis.

Mario then summarizes the opportunity in shares of Just Eat Takeaway in the consolidating food delivery space.

Follow Up

Would you like to get in touch?

Follow This Week in Intelligent Investing on Twitter.

Engage on Twitter with Elliot, Phil, or John.

Connect on LinkedIn with Elliot, Phil, or John.

This Week in Intelligent Investing is available on Amazon Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Pandora, Podbean, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, and YouTube.

If you missed any past episodes, you can listen to them here.

About the Podcast Co-Hosts

Philip Ordway is Managing Principal and Portfolio Manager of Anabatic Fund, L.P. Previously, Philip was a partner at Chicago Fundamental Investment Partners (CFIP). At CFIP, which he joined in 2007, Philip was responsible for investments across the capital structure in various industries. Prior to joining CFIP, Philip was an analyst in structured corporate finance with Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. from 2002 to 2005. Philip earned his B.S. in Education & Social Policy and Economics from Northwestern University in 2002 and his M.B.A. from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University in 2007, where he now serves as an Adjunct Professor in the Finance Department.

Elliot Turner is a co-founder and Managing Partner, CIO at RGA Investment Advisors, LLC. RGA Investment Advisors runs a long-term, low turnover, growth at a reasonable price investment strategy seeking out global opportunities. Elliot focuses on discovering and analyzing long-term, high quality investment opportunities and strategic portfolio management. Prior to joining RGA, Elliot managed portfolios at at AustinWeston Asset Management LLC, Chimera Securities and T3 Capital. Elliot holds the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation as well as a Juris Doctor from Brooklyn Law School.. He also holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Emory University where he double majored in Political Science and Philosophy.

John Mihaljevic leads MOI Global and serves as managing editor of The Manual of Ideas. He managed a private partnership, Mihaljevic Partners LP, from 2005-2016. John is a winner of the Value Investors Club’s prize for best investment idea. He is a trained capital allocator, having studied under Yale University Chief Investment Officer David Swensen and served as Research Assistant to Nobel Laureate James Tobin. John holds a BA in Economics, summa cum laude, from Yale and is a CFA charterholder.

The content of this podcast is not an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any security in any jurisdiction. The content is distributed for informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice or a recommendation to sell or buy any security or other investment, or undertake any investment strategy. There are no warranties, expressed or implied, as to the accuracy, completeness, or results obtained from any information set forth on this podcast. The podcast participants and their affiliates may have positions in and may, from time to time, make purchases or sales of the securities or other investments discussed or evaluated on this podcast. [dkpdf-remove]
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Pablo Gonzalez on Idea Generation, Management Quality, Mistakes

April 8, 2021 in Equities, Europe, Interviews

We are pleased to bring you the following interview with Pablo Gonzalez, founding partner and CEO of Abaco Capital, based in Madrid, Spain. The conversation was originally published in Spanish on MOI Global en Español.

Pablo Gonzalez is one of the foremost value investors in Spain, having amassed an impressive long-term track record. He has been a participant in The Zurich Project, hosted by MOI Global.

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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:

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