Motley Fool Money - Meet the Fool: Asit Sharma
Episode Date: June 15, 2024How do you go from writing poetry to reading 10Ks for a living? Asit Sharma is a Senior Analyst at The Motley Fool and a frequent guest on the show. In today’s episode, Asit talks with Mary Long ...about “the long and winding road” of his investing journey, mistakes he’s made along the way, and advice for navigating a career pivot. Have an analyst you want us to feature on an upcoming “Meet the Fool” episode? Want to share your own investing journey with us? Send us a note (or a voice recording!) to podcasts@fool.com Also: Join Stock Advisor, The Motley Fool’s flagship investing service, at www.fool.com/asit Host: Mary Long Guest: Asit Sharma Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineer: Tim Sparks Tickers mentioned: AMZN Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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If you're looking to get into this business, just try to be a synthesis and not a reductionist.
And what I mean by that is take different learnings from your life and apply them to the narratives you hear about a company and start looking at what might be an outcome of a business performance.
It takes some time.
It takes like three years to get a feedback loop on how good you are.
I'm Mary Long and that's Asset Sharma, a senior analyst at The Fool who works on our
stock advisor portfolio. This weekend, we're spending some time with a couple of the analysts you
hear from regularly on Motleyful Money so that you can get to know them even better. I caught up with
Asset recently to learn more about how he went from writing poetry and reading esoteric novels
to becoming a foolish analyst. We also discuss what he gained from being broke, his initial
thoughts on Amazon, and lessons learned from early tries at entrepreneurship. Also, we'd love to hear about your
own investing journey. Send us a note or a voice recording at Podcasts at Fool.com. That's Podcasts
with an S at Fool.com to tell us about how you got to be the investor you are today.
I said, I'm glad that I get some time to chat with you about the path that you took to wind up
where you are today because you've alluded to me many times that it was a long and winding road,
but I don't actually myself know what that road looks like. So let's zoom out. Tell us about this
road. How did you wind up in a role as an investment analyst?
Mary, it's a great question for anyone who's in this industry because I think there's nothing
in the middle. There's straight paths to being someone who makes investment choices.
And then there's the other type, which is like these long paths that are very circuitous
and go in unexpected direction. So I'll start with a question you'd ask me to think about,
which is how did I first get started in just the idea of investing?
Was it like through an early job or as a hobby?
And I'll say that when I was a teenager, like a lot of other folks,
I sort of started dabbling in stocks.
I think I bought my first stock before I had any facial hair.
So maybe 12, I'm guessing.
And I at that time was interested in mutual funds.
This is before the ETF explosion.
I'm sort of dating myself here.
And I bought this company mutual fund.
It was the 20th century ultra fund.
It's since been renamed.
I think it went into a family called the American set of funds.
I had somehow scraped together a couple hundred bucks.
And I think I probably cheated a friend out of some rare comics to do this.
But I bought this mutual fund.
And it really like just performed so well.
I would look at it a few years later, the stock price was going up.
I had set it with my local broker, which I bought it through.
Actually, I went physically into this dude's office, plunked down my money.
And we had set it to reinvest any dividends that it gave.
And it really just sparked my interest.
I'll return to what happened to this as we move along.
But that's how I sort of got interested in all of this.
Okay.
So how did you first find this ultra mutual fund?
Out of all of them, how'd you pick that?
Yeah, it was the old throw-a-dart exercise.
Back in the day, you would go to the public library,
and they'd have the daily newspaper on racks,
on these beautiful wooden racks,
and you'd pull out the Wall Street Journal
and look at the stock prices,
and they started having mutual fund prices.
And I think that's how I stumbled on it.
I wish I could say to you that, Mary, I was just such a genius.
I mean, at that age, it was so clear to me
that this fund was going to outperform.
I looked at the holdings, the track record, the management.
I mean, it was obvious, but it wasn't.
It was just like a guess.
I like the name, I think.
In those days, ultra sounded more than, you know, bland or it's going to do okay.
This is ultra.
So you like the name.
You throw a dart at the wall, and it turns out that this mutual fund winds up doing really
well.
Was it seeing those awesome returns that kind of got you hooked and then set a fire to pursue
this as a career or did that career pursuit come later?
I think it planted a seed.
I had started with a passbook savings account and I was fascinated by how interest worked,
that you could take your passbook back to the bank.
Again, I'm dating myself.
But when I was this very small kid, like seven years old and you had a summer job,
some of you who are listening today will quite remember this.
You would take your cash to the bank and the teller would write the amount in the pastbook.
And sometimes when you would go back, he or she would,
credit the amount of interest you had earned.
That was really fascinating to me.
And then this also planted a seed.
I sort of forgot all about this.
I've always had a love for literature.
I majored in English literature in college.
I went to grad school for a master's degree in English literature
in NYU in the early 90s.
And this takes us to where I sort of circled back to investing.
So how did you circle back?
You graduate grad school.
And you've got a master's in literature.
You've got an undergrad degree in literature.
and you set off into the big wide world, what falls into your lap then?
Yeah, that's basically the story.
I actually didn't quite graduate on time, but that's another podcast segment.
We can talk about that after you and I finished taping.
But I was about to graduate, and I was broke in New York City.
I had a beautiful small apartment.
It was a size of a closet on Sullivan Street downtown.
And I was looking at trying to pay my rent for the month.
I went to the school's database in the graduate school where they were placing people
who had these types of degrees.
And an investment house called Payne Weber, very old, respected investment bank, which had grown
to be one of the largest investment bank slash brokerages in the country, had an opening
for people with editing skills, communication skills, to come in and edit their mutual fund
newsletters.
So I applied for that job.
I got it.
And suddenly I found myself walking into this amazing building, Midtown Manhattan.
This is on Avenue of the Americas, but New Yorkers who are listening will say, there's no
Avenue of the Americas.
You're talking about the 6th Avenue.
So I walk into this building, a few doors across the street down from Rockefeller Center, an amazing
lobby filled with glorious art.
We'll get to that in a moment.
It didn't look like a brokerage company at all.
It looked like a museum.
And I started working there, and I would go around interviewing investment analysts and those
who actually managed money, and they would tell me how their funds did that.
quarter and I'd write it up. It would go out to subscribers at the investment bank and the retail
brokerage products. And that's how I got started in the investment world. That was my first
so-called investing job. It actually was on the marketing side of investing.
And so then how did you make the leap from the marketing side of investing to the actual analysis?
Yeah, I found myself broke again. So after a year, I really love that job, but it was paying
some ungodly low amount, I think like nine or ten dollars at the
that time in New York City was not enough to live. So I ended up, I got married around that time.
My wife and I worked on a small business idea that was a lot of fun, a small publishing house,
the internet was just taking off. We tried to do it online before there was much of an apparatus
or market for that. It didn't work. So we went back to my hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina,
and I started life again. I was now in my early, late 20s, early 30s, right around 30. And I went
back to school. I took some more finance courses. I got certified as a certified public account
and I started working in an old school accounting firm. And that's where I really got my start
in investing because that's where I learned about financials, balance sheets, income statement,
statements of cash flows as well. And that was a really great experience for me.
I love that we get this look at your pre-investing career and that you studied literature. And that
That is still a love that I know that you have to this day.
Do you view that passion as something that's separate from the investment analysis world of your life?
Or do you think that the skills that you learned in that degree and in that field set you up for success somehow in your current job?
I think they're all related.
I think that the best investors that I've come across are those who are multidisciplinaryians,
either they've got a bent for history or kite surfing or they're really amazing foodies.
There's some passion that they have that kindles this idea to learn, to continually learn.
So I think the passion for literature maybe goes hand in hand in this business because you're anyway
always trying to figure out what the narrative is. Management's got a narrative. You're trying to suss that
out. Does this make sense or is it BS? Like you've got a narrative. I think the company can do
The market has a narrative. We think the company is worth why. So some of this, loving stories,
loving the idea of a story really has gone hand in hand with the lessons I learned in analyzing
financial statements, working different businesses. I also worked later in my career as a person
in a middle market company manufacturer where we had a lot of like colorful narratives. Our
white collar portion of the company, the finance team, was just adjudding our offices, the warehouse
part of this company where all the floor workers were. And we had a lot of interchange. So it was
like part of my day was trying to figure out, okay, are we going to be able to make payroll next
month? So we're going towards the Great Recession here. And the other part was just listening to
the stories of the guys who were running the printing presses in the building, which takes us to
like the next part of my career. I found myself broke, the Great Recession.
Recession happened. There's a common theme. I hope I'll be able to retire someday. And so many companies
had just such an upheaval in old school manufacturing industries during the Great Recession.
I ended up leaving the company and put out a shingle as a consultant. And I started working
with small businesses and advising them on finance and strategies. That was another learning
experience for me. And at the same time, I started writing for Fool.com. So the Motley Fool had a
web service, a web blogging network. I joined that. And for 10 years, I wrote thousands of articles
on every conceivable topic and paid some dues there. I learned a lot there as well.
So let's kind of maybe talk about early lessons and mistakes. So when you, when you're starting
off in your investment career, you have any stories of stocks that you picked that I'll take
positive stories where the stock turned out really well? We've already talked about ultra. So table that
one, but maybe also stories of stocks that did not do so well, that you've learned some
greater lesson from.
Well, you know, Mary, I want to talk about a mistake.
And this is something that I've learned from a lot of other foolish investors.
There's a great thing here at the Motley Fool.
If you spend time with any of our analysts, they love to talk about their mistakes.
Tom Gardner models this behavior and so many others, because if you can get to a point where
you can look at your mistakes without all the cringe and learn something,
from them, it makes you stronger as investors. So this is a mistake that I made personally during
the time I was writing for The Motley Fool for those 10 years. I looked at Amazon.com time and
time again and never bought it. It was such a big mistake. And in fact, I wrote articles
really panning Amazon.com. I'm going to talk about a humiliating story that I wrote.
It's called Ground Control to Amazon, Seattle. We have a problem. I'm going to read you some of the
subheading subheads of this article, it's hard to ignore signs that Amazon stock may soon
revisit Earth.
Illusive profits from other services.
There is no there where Amazon is going at its current valuation.
It's time to value Amazon for what it is today.
Final thought, a rational course of action.
In this article, Mary, I actually compare the P.E. ratio of Amazon.com, not only to Cisco
Systems, which I trump it as a profitable,
tech company, but I compare it to the great pyramids, how high they are. I compare it to the stratospheric
stunt that Red Bull pulled when it had Felix Baumgartner jump out of his strato space capsule.
I really tore up this PE ratio. I was just looking back the other day at Amazon's performance
since I wrote that article and it's up some 1,200 percent. Nice.
enough said. I want to say, let me say, no, let me take that back. One more thing. Hubris is like the
bouncer at the nightclub of elite investing. I mean, if you want to join that club, you can't have an ego.
You can't have this kind of like self-satisfied, arrogant air. You've got to check that at the door and learn to be humble,
because this business is going to teach you every single day that you don't have it figured out.
So you've moved around in your career. You've, you've collected different,
agrees, you've worked in different industries. What advice do you have for people who are on one
career path now and are hoping to break into investing as a career? Or maybe investing is not even on
their radar, but they're just looking to make a career pivot. Any advice for someone who's looking
for a career change and how to navigate that? Yeah, absolutely. The first thing I just want to set the
table stakes here, it's not that hard. If I can do it with my background as someone who used to
write poetry and read esoteric novels, you can do it if you want to be an investor.
The second is to, I've already said this, but to pursue a passion outside of investing.
So start learning about how things work in the stock market.
There's lots of great books that you can read.
We often talk about books like One Up on Wall Street by Peter Lynch.
That's a great starter book.
Read Warren Buffett's annual shareholder letters.
That's another great source to learn.
And go to the web and start figuring it out.
It's not rocket science.
Don't have a fear of financial statements as a second one.
Anyone can actually leaf through a set of financial statements and start to understand
what they're communicating.
So don't let that scare you.
Spend some time with those.
So embrace what's difficult because it's actually not that difficult.
I think listen to podcasts.
There's this amazing podcast called Motley Fool Money, which I highly recommend.
If you listen to that daily, you will increase your knowledge sort of exponentially.
And I'd also say if you're looking to get into this business, is just try to be a synthesis
and not a reductionist.
And what I mean by that is take different learnings from your life and apply them to the
narratives you hear about a company and start looking at what might be an outcome of
a business performance.
It takes some time.
It takes like three years to get a feedback loop on how good you are, according to my good
friend and colleague, Brian Stofel.
So don't feel that you have to rush it.
either. That's probably a last thing. All of this can be done. It doesn't have to be such a huge
thing in our minds because I know for so many people, I was the same way. Investing seems like
a really hard nut to crack and it seems like an industry that maybe is impossible to get through.
But I don't think that looking at the difficulties of something is the best way to go about it.
If you want to break into it, just do it. Just do it. Just just just look.
leave your inhibitions, check them at the door, and dive in.
So I've got one more question for you.
You've mentioned that you and your wife kind of dabbled with a small business idea,
starting this publishing house, and that it didn't work out.
What did you learn from that experience of trying to get something, your own thing,
off the ground, and then having it not pan out?
I learned so many things, Mary.
I mean, one of the lessons I learned was something my dad had said.
Like, if you want to do something, why don't you get trained?
in it first. He didn't understand why someone with no background in finance would want to jump
into an entrepreneurial business, even though he had always told me like, yeah, entrepreneurialism
is good if you can do it, but you should get trained first. So I don't necessarily think you have
to get trained in something new if you're an entrepreneur, but you do have to pay your dues, do the
research, like learn if there's a market for what you're going to do, figure out the parts and pieces.
You don't have to go to school, but there's a basic amount of data that you're you're going to do.
you've got to collect. And then second is, I don't think I reached out to as many people as I could
have. If you're going to do something ambitious, look, there's tons of people around who may
want to help you, mentors, friends, I mean, people off the street. I think third, I was at that age
a little more introverted than I am now. So I didn't pick the brains of folks as much as I should
have. Another thing that I learned, though, in retrospect, is that failure can be so beautiful. I mean,
I failed so many times in my life, and each time it felt tragic.
Like, nothing's ever going to get better.
How the hell did I land in this situation?
But, you know, time shaves off the burn, and it gives you a chance to be introspective,
to be retrospective, and realize it wasn't that bad.
I'm still standing.
I'll learn some things from that.
Let me take those lessons and plop them down here in this thing that I'm doing now.
So there was so much of that.
I'm getting some gray on me.
So I don't know if I want to jump into something.
something like that and feel so to such a magnitude. But yeah, I think that thinking as you as you
ask me now, thinking out loud, that was the biggest lesson that it's okay. I mean, you're going to
survive. Whatever happens to you in life, it's all right. Don't don't take it so hard on yourself.
I mentioned at the top of the show that Asset is a senior advisor for our flagship investing service,
Stock Advisor. When Asset's not coming on to Motley Full Money to talk stocks or his life background with
us, he's scouring the world for quality companies capable of beating the market for long-term
investors. If you're interested in more analysis from Osset and access to stock advisor's full
scorecard of stocks generating market beating returns, visit www.fool.com slash Osset.
There's also a link in the show notes. As always, people on the program may have interests
in the stocks they talk about. And the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against,
so don't buy ourselves stocks based solely on what you hear. I'm Mary Long.
listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
