Time horizons are everything in this game
Market swings are typically a good time to reflect and ask a fundamental question: What game are you playing? Our game as long-term fundamental investors is relatively straightforward. We spend our time and resources identifying companies that offer the highest likelihood of thriving well into the 2020s and beyond. We study the field, and determine who is best poised to win.
That’s it. That’s the game. In this context, short-term price volatility, while potentially unpleasant, is a sideshow. It’s the amygdala of the market. Bill Ackman gets this. In his recent letter, he shares some of the reasoning behind his decision to purchase shares of NFLX after a steep drop in the stock price: “While we do not know what the stock market will do tomorrow, next month or even over the next year or two, we believe that our companies will continue to compound their intrinsic values at high rates for the long term.” Exactly. It’s all time arbitrage—and opportunity presents itself to those who can play the long game. Ultimately, I think some of the recent market gyrations will prove to be healthy for the market over the long-term. It will flush out the weak and force the concentration of capital into the select winners.
Stories alone will no longer sell to the public market—results are what drive returns. Meanwhile, valuations have dropped to pre-pandemic levels, while business growth, in select companies, has accelerated. Like we said in our annual letter, we think it’s a fantastic time to be a stock picker. Positioning in this environment—and playing the long game—is the key to compounding success.
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What an animal’s metabolic rate tells us about growth companies
I enjoyed this week’s biology-themed research note by Counterpoint Global’s Michael J. Mauboussin. Using work by Geoffrey West, a theoretical physicist, Mauboussin creates a new framework (using biological growth rates) for thinking about corporate longevity and the effects of technological disruption. Of course, there are limitations to this framework—non-linear growth patterns in corporate America don’t exactly correlate to a raccoon’s body mass—but there’s some worthwhile ideas in the piece that can be extrapolated to thinking about markets and technology businesses more generally. “Many organisms, including mammals, follow a trajectory called ‘determinate’ growth,” Mauboussin and his colleague Dan Callahan write. “With age, the allocation of resources shifts from growth to maintenance. Growth stops at the point that maintenance needs consume all of the incoming energy. Companies appear to follow a similar pattern.”
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A re-rating in multiples is healthy: It’s a good setup
Gavin Baker, CIO of Atreides Management, made a smart point on his recent podcast conversation with Patrick O’Shaugnessy: Valuation multiples for software stocks have pretty much round-tripped to 2018 levels. At the same time, many of these businesses (not all, of course) are in much better financial positions. “And I think one thing that is missed in these analyses that you kind of see, whether in multiples today versus then, is these companies are much better,” Gavin says. “So software multiples are back to where they were in ’18, but software companies today are growing faster and broadly speaking have better margins.”
A few more links I enjoyed:
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