“The idea that you can’t innovate in the public market is nonsense”
One of my favorite conversations from this past week was with Brad Gerstner, founder and CEO of Altimeter Capital, a crossover investment firm based out of Boston. The discussion is wide-ranging but Brad hits on something that I’ve thought about regarding the nature of investing in public markets: Namely, does innovation regress post-IPO? In my opinion, not at all. In fact, I’m inclined to believe the counterfactual, which is that over the coming decades, we’ll likely see the most technological innovation (and highest return streams) emerge from public companies, rather than private companies. Why? Generally speaking, I think a convergence of dynamics—from increasing returns to scale and winner-take-all consolidation effects—will create exceptional outcomes for a small cadre of public companies.
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Outcomes are unreliable indicators of success—process is what matters
Michael Mauboussin of Counterpoint Global is out with another smart research note, this one centered on the improvement of investment processes in order to improve outcomes. As with all Mauboussin notes, his research is multidisciplinary, ranging from studies of football player performance to work on prospect theory and heuristics. “Providing feedback to fundamental investors is inherently difficult because the process to make decisions is often poorly defined and the outcome, the rise and fall of asset prices, is noisy in the short run,” he writes. “One way to solve this problem is to break down decisions into measurable components. But it all starts with documenting decisions and how they are made. Without a record of what you expect to happen, it is difficult to measure the accuracy of your predictions.”
in a probabilistic world by understanding what has happened in the past, properly updating their views to reflect new information, and working hard. These skills do not come naturally to many, and the research suggests that how we think is more important than what we think.”
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A few more links I enjoyed:
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