REPLAY: Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025

Discover great ideas at the 13th-annual edition of this online conference, hosted by MOI Global.

Members enjoy complimentary and exclusive access.

Enjoy the wisdom, insights, and ideas of selected thought leaders:

Ardal Loh-Gronager on His Book, The Perceptive Investor

We had the pleasure of speaking with Ardal Loh-Gronager, founder and managing partner at Loh-Gronager Partners, based in London.

Gwen Hofmeyr on Methods to Verify a Company’s Market Share

Gwen Hofmeyr of Maiden Financial shared her research into competitive positioning in a talk on testing a company’s market share.

Nishant Gupta on the Nuances of Investing Across Geographies

We had the pleasure of speaking with Nishant Gupta, founder and CIO of Kanou Capital, a London-based long/short energy transition fund.

Interest Rate Paradigm Shift: Eastern Europe Poised for Revaluation

In thirty years of investing, we saw the best opportunities emerge when long-held assumptions began to crack. Markets can be slow to adjust…

Polaris Renewable Energy: Attractive FCF Yield with Upside Optionality

Shawn Kravetz of Esplanade Capital presented his thesis on Polaris Renewable Energy (Canada: PIF) at Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025.

Clearwater Analytics: Wide Moat in Investment Operations SaaS

Charles Hoeveler of Norwood Capital Partners presented his thesis on Clearwater Analytics (US: CWAN) at Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025.

Latticework 2023

In December, MOI Global members — along with a group of leading investors and CEOs — explored intelligent investing in a changing world.

Replay the Sessions

Member-Only Podcasts

We are delighted to launch member-only podcasts, enabling you to listen to exclusive MOI Global audio content in your favorite podcast player.

Access the Podcasts

MOI Global en Español

We are proud to have built an active and engaged Spanish-speaking community of intelligent investors in Spain, Mexico, and beyond.

Visit MOI Global en Español

European Investing Summit 2024

Discover Great Instructors and Great Ideas

The Zurich Project 2025

From June 3-5, a select group of fund managers and founders will come together for the seventh edition of this invitation-only forum in beautiful Switzerland. Investors building firms for the long term share experiences, best practices, and ideas in an intimate private setting, far from the demands of day-to-day business.

The Zurich Project has received acclaim for its unique culture of respect, camaraderie, and honesty.

See a few impressions.

Latticework New York 2025

In October 2025 members will meet at the Yale Club of NYC for the ninth Latticework. The summit has been lauded as a uniquely impactful forum of great minds from the MOI Global community.

Speakers have included Charles de Vaulx, Tom Gayner, Peter Keefe, Bryan Lawrence, Howard Marks, Michael Mauboussin, Mohnish Pabrai, Tom Russo, Guy Spier, Murray Stahl, Will Thorndike, Christopher Tsai, Arnold Van Den Berg, and Ed Wachenheim.

Replay selected past sessions.

Ideaweek St. Moritz 2026

Ideaweek brings together inquisitive minds to explore ideas of consequence in investing, business, and life.

From January 26-29, invited members of the MOI Global community will meet in St. Moritz, Switzerland for a week of skiing, discussion, and friendship. The fifth-annual Ideaweek is a showcase of ideas, a platform for great conversations, and an opportunity to catalyze relationships with like-minded individuals.

Read impressions from a past edition.

Best Ideas Omaha 2026

On May 1, MOI Global members will enjoy a unique opportunity to meet and share ideas during the Berkshire Hathaway weekend.

We look forward to a terrific group of speakers. Past instructors have included Christian Billinger of Billinger Förvaltning, Scott Miller of Greenhaven Road Capital, Bob Robotti of Robotti & Company, Tom Russo of Gardner Russo & Quinn, Dave Sather of Sather Financial Group, Jeffrey Stacey of Stacy Muirhead Capital Management, Will Thomson of Massif Capital, Christopher Tsai of Tsai Capital Corporation, and Elliot Turner of RGA Investment Advisors.

Learn more.

The Frankfurt Conversation 2026

In late 2026, invited members of MOI Global will meet in Frankfurt, Germany, for a day of wisdom and idea sharing.

The Frankfurt Conversation will address selected topics related to intelligent investing in Europe and beyond.

In the past, invited members engaged with European superinvestors Daniel Gladiš, Dr. Hendrik Leber, Guy Spier, and others.

Replay selected past sessions.

Tom Russo on Investing in Global Franchise Businesses

September 5, 2012 in Equities, Featured, Full Video, Interviews, Transcripts

Tom Russo provides insights into investing in global franchise businesses. Tom’s investment philosophy emphasizes return on invested capital, principally through equity investments. He looks for companies with strong cash flow characteristics, where large amounts of “free” cash flow are generated. Portfolio companies tend to have strong balance sheets and a history of producing high rates of return on their assets.

Enjoy the following 75-minute exclusive video.

The following transcript is provided for the convenience and enjoyment of MOI Global members. It has been edited for space and clarity.

MOI Global: It’s a pleasure to welcome legendary investor Tom Russo of Lancaster, Pennsylvania-based Gardner Russo & Gardner.

Tom Russo: I’m here to address some value investing topics which might be of interest to the Manual of Ideas (MOI), touching on my early background, philosophy, and approach, as well as some portfolio companies and maybe certain pitfalls.

Let me start by noting that upon my arrival for this interview, I was offered a cup of Nespresso and a bottle of water. I didn’t tend to worry about whether it was tainted or healthy or whether they would dispose properly of the bottles. The company which owns both of these two happens to be one of my three largest holdings—Nestle— and has been in my portfolio since 1987. It has evolved not only to delight consumers on the high end by investing in upscale coffee, but it has also transformed the bottled water business and done so with an eye toward sustainability and a willingness to argue its case against all of the potential critics calling bottled water an environmentally harmful product. It would claim otherwise.

These are the types of issues I confront daily as an investor – whether consumers will follow a brand like Nestle up into a whole new territory called premium coffee and retain their goodwill for Nestlé’s product even in the face of an assault against the bottled water business, which can be construed by many as being environmentally harmful.

Where did this all begin? I discovered value investing at the Stanford Business School in the early 1980s, when Berkshire chairman and CEO Warren Buffett came to our class. It was taught by Professor Jack McDonald, who was a lone voice in Palo Alto in terms of thinking about investing as though you are acquiring pieces of companies and assessing whether they have an enduring competitive advantage, then coupling these two discoveries into the process of investing regardless of environmental concerns or academic principles potentially in contradiction to the bold assertion that one might simply identify a company with superior economics and a strong culture and would have an investment for the lifetime of the investor.

Warren Buffett is the reason why people like me can today presume they have the trust of investors to attempt to invest for the long haul. He did it and has a lifetime of success to prove it’s possible to consider great businesses and great managements and then align your investor interest with them for the very longest term with disregard to modern finance tools, which have the academic imperator behind them. Buffett stands in contrast to that. It is because of him that people like myself and other value investors can say we too would try to identify similar businesses, maybe in different industries than what Warren’s focused on or different geographies. I chose early on the international markets as a result of the same course where Warren spoke and Professor McDonald said in the early 1980s, “Don’t be provincial. Look abroad.” This idea spelled a huge difference for me through my career.

Value investing is the camp you could say I belong in if you were to categorize investors. This term simply denotes you’re looking to buy a business at some margin of safety which arises because the price pays a sufficient discount from value given. That discount is what you can determine by analyzing the strength of a business through its component parts and then valuing the enterprise. The process involves coming up with a sense of what this business is worth, backing up liabilities, adding in financial assets, deriving a per share value, and comparing it to what you’re paying.

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Replay:
Latticework 2023

On December 12, MOI Global members gathered at the Yale Club of New York City to explore intelligent investing in a changing world.

Members enjoy complimentary and exclusive access.

MOI Global

The research-driven membership organization of intelligent investors worldwide

MOI Global