Investing is the discipline of “relative selection”
Conventional wisdom dictates that diversified portfolios are “less risky” than concentrated portfolios. I tend to believe the inverse is true: Over-diversification leads to allocating capital to second or third-rate ideas, which introduces significant risk into the portfolio. The desire for diversification can also lead investors to sell their winners too soon, simply because asset appreciation in those positions can lead to large relative weightings. Concentration certainly leads to more volatility, but volatility has nothing to do with risk. Anyway, Howard Marks discusses some of these concepts in much more eloquent detail in one of his recent ever-insightful periodic memos. The central thesis to his piece grapples with Sidney Cottle’s definition of investing, which Cottle calls “the discipline of relative selection.”
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“The bottoms up fundamental investor is basically irrelevant in… the daily movement of stock prices”
On the latest podcast with Patrick O’Shaughnessy, Ricky Sandler, CIO of Eminence Capital, discusses the pure randomness of stock price movements in the short-term. (As an aside, listening to Randy, I was reminded of one of my favorite Nassim Taleb lines about anyone that claims to be able to time the markets: “If you hear a ‘prominent’ economist using the word ‘equilibrium,’ or ‘normal distribution,’ do not argue with him; just ignore him, or try to put a rat down his shirt.'”) In the podcast, Ricky makes the observation that this short-term volatility is actually quite good for stock pickers: It creates mispricing opportunities that can be exploited by long-term investors who have a solid variant viewpoint. “Don’t think the market is smarter than you if you’ve done your work,” he says. “The market is giving you less and less signals today than it ever has.” (H/T Josh Tarasoff)
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Disrupting the hedge fund model — a chat with the Good Soil guys
I recently had the chance to chat with Emmet Peppers, founder and portfolio manager of Good Soil Investment Management, and his managing partner Matt Smith, for a wide-ranging conversation on the Nightcrawler podcast. I’ve known both Matt and Emmet for a little while now—they had me on their podcast a couple months back—and so I was delighted to offer a little podcast reciprocity and have them on and talk about their approach to investing, how Good Soil is structured to give back through charities, poker, market psychology, options strategies, and much more.
A few more links I enjoyed:
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