Motley Fool Money - 1 Hidden Tech Stock, 92 Birthday Candles for Warren Buffett
Episode Date: August 30, 2022Day 2 and we're live (again) from FoolFest 2022! (0:21) Tim Beyers discusses: - Why Walmart is the un-tech tech stock - Interview highlights from investor Michael Mauboussin and author Annie Duke ... - How Warren Buffett can (or should) celebrate his 92nd birthday Stocks mentioned: WMT, BRK-A, BRK-B Host: Chris Hill Guest: Tim Beyers Engineer: Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Live from Fool Fest, it's day two. Motley Fool Money starts now. I'm Chris Hill coming to you from
the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Washington, D.C., and I'm very happy to be joined by Motley Fool Senior
Analyst, Tim Byers. Thanks for being here, man. Thanks, man. Fully caffeinated, ready to go.
And our lunch is just waiting for us. So we'll get to that right after. We won't put the dozens
of listeners through the pain of listening to us eat, which is never fun. So yesterday, Bill Mann,
and I talked about sort of some of the highlights from the first half of day,
I wanted to talk with you about the second half of day one and sort of what we've done on day two.
But in terms of the conversation you and I and others had, we had a breakout session yesterday afternoon, which I thought was a fun topic.
Because there are so many, in the Motley Fool universe of services and recommended stocks, there are literally hundreds of stocks to get recognized.
And there are some that kind of get glossed over, overlooked.
and you highlighted one, which I love because it's kind of an overlooked stock,
and yet I can't imagine there's a single person listening who does not know this company.
Yeah, yeah, smaller story, Walmart, a little company out of Bentonville, Arkansas.
It is truly astonishing that it isn't widely recommended inside the full universe.
And actually, Chris, I don't know that it's really all that widely recommended amongst institutional investors on Wall Street.
I think it's more widely ignored.
And I think the reason for that is maybe a little bit of headline risk.
And what I mean by that is Walmart sometimes gets dinged for labor relations or it gets dinged for fines or it runs a foul of something somewhere federally.
And that does happen from time to time.
But let's remember that this company is a voracious user.
of data. It's kind of the original gangster of data warehousing in the retail space, meaning that
they're a better user than data than most of their peers and have been for a very long time.
And that shows up in the margins. It shows up in the cash flow. And even in this period that
we're in right now, which has been very tough on retailers. And we do know that.
Walmart is still generating billions upon billions of dollars of cash flow. So it's a very
interesting company that I think gets better coming out of the crisis that we see.
find ourselves in right now. And you made the point in the session about how it's not a name that
people think of in terms of, oh, this is a tech company. But it's like, you can make the case that
Walmart is a tech stop. And they hire a tremendous number of data engineers. They hire software
developers. They have, they actually have a blog. They have a tech blog, which is ostensibly meant,
Chris. I mean, they do show off tech projects, but basically what they're doing, you know, a friend of mine on, and we do the show together this week in tech, Tim White and I, we were talking about this. Is it really what this is? It's kind of performance art to draw in people who may not think of Walmart as a career for a software engineer and trying to attract those people and say, hey, by the way, here's why there's an interesting software career for you at Walmart. They do a lot of really sophisticated stuff. It's a smart move. So today we have,
had four external interviews. People external to the Motley Fool Company on stage. I got the chance
to interview Morgan Housel. Deidre Wollard interviewed Brian Fairbanks, the CEO of Trex. Bill Mann interviewed
Michael Mobison, who when I made the opening remarks this morning, I referred to him as, I think
of Mobison as the investor's investor. But he's not as well known as others. He's not on TV all the
time. But a lot of people on the investing team here at the Motleyville would love the chance to
just sort of sit down and talk with Movis. So we're actually, as a heads up to the audience,
we're actually going to be bringing these conversations to the Motley Fool money feed over the
weekend. So we're going to have Bill's conversation with Michael Moviso. So you'll get to hear
the full thing. But I'm curious if there was like anything that stood out to you from that conversation.
that just sort of struck you.
Well, I'll tell you, the most important thing, he talked about how he started,
and he started talking about how, as he got into analysis, he got into equity research
and his career at Credit Suisse, he started in a completely different role in which he described it.
I think he used the term abject failure.
I'm pretty sure he did, yeah.
People can check us when we run the episode, but I'm pretty sure abject failure is how he described his first job.
Which is completely fascinating. So I think the term of investors, investor is right. This is somebody
who is accustomed to and understands what failure looks like and why you want to model in,
what expectations are, and what success has to look like as you model out whether or not
a company is worth investing in. I do think Balbison's framework for expectations investing
is an absolute must. For anybody who is in my business, a professional equity research,
but also I think it's just a good, solid reading and an understanding for any investor.
I think understanding the expectations built into a company and its performance is critical.
It'll make you better as an investor.
Annie Duke, for those unfamiliar, was a professional poker player.
She was one of the best professional poker players in the world.
Yeah.
And walked away from that, wrote a great book called Thoucler.
Thinking in Betts.
Yes.
And has a new book called Quit, which she and Morgan got into and some of the details.
So again, that'll be an episode we run over the weekend.
But one of my thoughts listening to that conversation was, you know, I'm not someone
who follows professional poker.
Yep.
But just the way she talked, the way she thinks, the way she was composed on stage, I thought,
oh yeah, I could just instantly say, I was like, oh yeah, I could see how she would be devastating to play
against. What, if anything, struck you in that conversation? Well, I had a follow-up conversation
with her afterwards, and I think a lot of the things she's saying is something that ties into,
something I talked about yesterday. I always talk about mindset. We had a mindset session here
yesterday. And so when she was talking about various strategies for quitting, and she was talking about
this specific to stocks, it made me think of like, is she?
talking about things like stop losses and that sort of thing. And what was clarifying to me as I
talked to her afterwards is she was recognizing and trying to get us to think about what is your
weakness as an investor. What are the things that you have to account for, your biases, your
emotional fragility, let's say, in terms of your investing and accounting for that ahead of time?
And that was very clarifying, hearing her think about that. And honestly, it's going to make me think a
little bit about how I want to do this in my own investing. So I really appreciate that conversation
that Morgan and she had. Yeah. And just the whole idea of, and this is difficult to do. It's,
it's tough for us as investors, and it's obviously tough for people in employment situations,
but how important it is to try and remove yourself from the situation, just the mental exercise
of, okay, do I think this way about this stock?
the job I have right now. Do I think this way because I'm in it? Yes. And if so, is there a way for me
to sort of step outside myself and think, wait, what, if I can remove myself from this situation
mentally, would I think about this differently? Right. Yes, exactly right. And she's, she was very
clear about this. And I think it's such an important point, like you just said, if you're in the
moment, it's very difficult to make a dispassionate decision when passions are running. And
high. And that happens to all of us as investors. We're supposed to think of emotions as information.
Sometimes we take them as not just information, but like the signal, it's the bat signal and we
have to do something and then we end up doing something irrational. So having a framework around
that is such a good idea. I highly recommend that conversation with Annie Duke. Think of that,
or listen to it maybe with a mindset lens. Think about your mindset and how what she's saying,
can help you. I think it'll be really instructive.
Today is Warren Buffett's birthday.
Yes, it is. Happy 92nd birthday, Warren Buffett, who I cannot imagine in a million years,
is actually listening to this. But what do you suppose that's like? Well, like, what do you get
the billionaire who's turning 92 and has the wherewithal to get whatever he wants anyway?
You know what you get that guy? You get that guy a cheeseburger and a cherry Coke because
that's the thing that, I mean, our producer, Dan Boyd, is shaking his head.
And of course he is, because that is what Warren Buffett does.
Like, that guy is winning at life because he has a diet that kills most 30-year-olds,
and he can go in and get another 10 years out of that.
I mean, God bless Warren Buffett.
It really is, among other things, a case for DNA and just sort of like that.
I guess, man.
Hey, look, some people just, you know, they, they, they, they, they,
They can eat whatever they want.
Well, or even more than that, do, if you can, to the degree that it's possible,
spend time doing things that you genuinely actually really love.
I think it probably plays a much bigger role in our overall physical health than we may, in fact,
realize because that guy lives his best life.
And the food that he, I mean, I'm not sure the food is doing him any.
favors, except for maybe his taste buds. But you know what? I think he's happy. And God bless him for it.
Yeah. And, you know, the documentary about Buffett, I mean, there have been several, but the one that's
on HBO, for anyone who has HBO on Max, was done, I believe, five years ago. Yeah.
If I'm recalling correctly, the documentary, the documentary begins with Buffett speaking to a class of
high school children. And then after the credits, the first scene is,
Buffett driving to work, and as he does every day driving to work, he goes to McDonald's to the
drive-thru, and that's where he gets his breakfast. There you go. This is not a healthy eater. No,
but you know what? The man knows how to live. So happy birthday, Warren. Keep living your best
best life, man. Tim Byers, thanks so much for being here. Thanks, Chris. As always, people on the program
may have interest in the stocks they talk about and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for
or against, so don't buy yourself stocks based solely on what you hear. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening.
We'll see you tomorrow.
