Motley Fool Money - Meet the Fool: Ron Gross
Episode Date: June 23, 2024Michael J. Fox might not know it, but his character on “Family Ties” set the course for one Fool’s investing career. Ron Gross is the Director of US Investing at The Motley Fool and a frequent ...guest on the show. In today’s episode, Ron talks with Mary Long about his early days on Wall Street, what he’s learned from crises, and the attributes he looks for when hiring new analysts. Share stories of your own investing journey with us at podcasts@fool.com. Host: Mary Long Guest: Ron Gross Engineer: Dez Jones, Annie Pope Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I did the opposite.
I figured that we've come out of every recession in the history of recessions.
Stock market has rebound 100% of the time.
And if it didn't in this time, it would be the only time in history it hasn't.
And I bought more stock rather than sell stock.
And it was probably the best capital allocation decision I ever made because those investments back in 2008 probably are my biggest winner.
today just by the sheer fortune of being able to buy great companies at low prices.
I'm Ricky Mulvey and that's Ron Gross, the director of U.S. investing here at The Fool.
Over the summer, we're spending some time getting to know a few of the foolish analysts you frequently
hear. For today's show, Mary Long caught up with Ron to discuss how a sitcom character kicked off his
career, what attributes he looks for in new analyst hires, and lessons learned from tough times in the
stock market.
And I have honestly had the immense pleasure with being tasked with rounding up a number of
different Fool analysts and chatting with them a bit about how they wound up where they are
today, how they got started in investing.
Love that.
And you were definitely someone that we wanted to talk to.
So thank you for taking the time to kind of walk me through your life, I guess.
Wow.
How much time you got?
No, it's my pleasure.
I love doing this kind of thing.
So we can start broad.
I mean, how did you – I know that you had an investing career before you came to the Fool.
but we can rewind even further.
How did you find investing in the first place?
All right.
Set the scene.
It's the mid-1980s.
I've actually told this story on Motley Fool Money before.
It's the mid-1980s, and I love a TV show called Family Ties.
And in that show is a character called Alex P. Keaton, played by Michael J. Fox, for Back to the Future fame.
And he's a high school student who loves economics and the stock market and maybe most of all
money. And I was just enamored with this character. And I was like, I just loved it. It was just
very exciting to me. Something about it really just captured me. So that started it. It really did.
This was pre-internet. So I didn't like hop on the internet and start doing research. I probably
bought a book or two to see what this was all about. But shortly thereafter, I went like literally
a couple years after I went to college and got my degree in finance and investments.
Then a couple of years later, I went and got my MBA with a concentration in finance and kind
of just honed my knowledge and my skills over years and years and years.
Fast forward 30 years later.
But it all began with Alex P. Keaton and Family Ties television show.
I personally, I love that because one of the first jobs that I really wanted to be, to have, to pursue,
I wanted to be an FBI agent
and that was because of TV shows.
Nice.
So, yeah, very different fields
and I wound up, I'm obviously,
I'm actually not an FBI agent now, I promise.
Good, good, I'm glad to know.
But it is funny how a TV character
can kind of set a desire and a path into motion.
It was, that was it.
So when you graduate college,
then you mentioned you get your MBA,
did you take off time in between
or was that kind of like a straight shot that you followed?
No, I worked for,
two years before going back to school.
I'm originally from New York, moved to Connecticut to work for a couple years,
then moved back to New York for graduate school.
And what were you doing for those two years?
I really wanted a job in the investing industry.
Okay.
But I graduated college during a recession in 1990, and it wasn't so easy.
So I did the best I could do, and I got a job in the investment department of a huge insurance company.
Hartford, Connecticut being the home of huge insurance companies.
So I moved to Connecticut, did my time at an insurance company for two years.
You know, lots of fun, met a lot of great people.
But then I went back to NYU to get my graduate degree, NYU being, NYU and Columbia being
the main schools in New York City for investing professionals, or those who want to be investing
professionals. And that's really where I learned more and then kind of started on my so-called
Wall Street career. I want to talk about your Wall Street career, but before we get there,
it sounds to me, having heard the story from the TV character inception to today, it sounds to me
like investing has always kind of been the focus and the plan. And, okay, apart from two years of
a minor detour at an insurance company, you've pretty much stayed to that. Was there anything,
but is that wrong? Like, is there anything else that you kind of entertained pursuing as a career
before this? Just peripherally, upon entering graduate school, I thought maybe I would be
an investment banker, not an investment manager or an analyst. I wasn't positive of either
one of those. So I let the two years in school kind of guide me.
but it was going to be in the investment industry, you know, regardless.
I know that you worked at a hedge fund in another life.
How did you wind up there?
And from there, how did you wind up here at The Fool?
Okay, so graduate school, graduated graduate school,
and got my first so-called real job in the investing world as an equity research analyst at Standard and Poor's.
First, as a generalist, then I followed the exciting world of utilities, the utility
sector before finding my way to the technology sector, focusing on telecommunications equipment
companies, but more interestingly, the very first internet companies were just coming public.
So Yahoo, Netscape, companies like that.
And people listening to this will laugh because I know nothing about technology now.
But back in those days, that was my job.
And it was very exciting because the internet was brand new and didn't have any idea it
would be what it is today. But that was a really exciting time to be in that field. From there,
I went to a small investment bank as an equity research analyst, also following technology companies
and some other sectors as well. At that firm is where I started my first hedge fund with the chairman
of that investment bank. And it was a value-focused, small-cap activist hedge fund. So we would take
positions in companies and try to create some kind of change if we thought there was improvements
that could be made to enhance shareholder value. And did that for multiple years. Then move to Maryland,
fast forward, for personal reasons, this is where we wanted to settle down with our children
who were getting to be grade school age and we were trying to decide where we wanted to be.
This is the neck of the woods where my wife is from, so we thought this made good sense.
came here, still worked for my hedge fund in New York, started my own hedge fund at the same time,
did those things concurrently for five years, and then got introduced to the Fool.
And that was 16 years ago.
Originally introduced to the Fool because they were considering getting into the asset management business,
which we now have a whole asset management division, but spoke to the folks at the Fool for
six months or so about that potential business.
ended up joining the Fool on our membership side
after getting to know everybody again for six months
and really thinking there was something special here.
And that was right around the 2008-2009 recession.
Things were getting a little dicey in the hedge fund world.
And so both things kind of collide at the same time.
Met these great group of people at the Fool.
Wall Street was shaky.
The economy was shaky.
Everything was shaky.
and thankfully they offered me a position and I happily accepted.
And as I said, that was 16 years ago.
So Wall Street was shaky around 2008.
But I'm sure, like, coming to a company that specializes in investment advice was also shaky around 2008.
How did you navigate that transition when, like, so much external stuff?
And I would think internal considering it's 2008 was unknown.
It was a tough time.
What I did know is that the way I made most of my money in the hedge fund world was by taking a carried interest or a percentage of the profits I generated.
Typically 20% in the industry is typical.
And if there weren't going to be any profits for any period of time to come, who knew if we were in a recession, we were going into depression.
I didn't really know.
20% of nothing is nothing.
And so the proposition of that was a little bit scary.
And the fool offered, now of course, you know, all businesses, especially investment in businesses, were shaky back in 2008, 2009.
But the fool offered me what I felt was something more stable, more concrete.
Again, the people were, getting to know the people over time were, was a big draw for me, doing my thing in Maryland, but also in New York at the same time.
had grown a little bit tiresome and having something here in this neck of the woods with
wonderful people kind of solidified it for me.
I think often when we talk about like the foolish philosophy and the foolish investing
philosophy, we kind of like juxtapose it to the conventional wisdom on Wall Street and like
the short term horizon that most of those traders are dealing with.
Having kind of had a foot in both worlds, how has your investing philosophy changed over time?
So my hedge funds were value investing focused, and they were also long-term focused as well.
So we weren't traders.
So in that sense, that kind of jives with the foolish philosophy.
The activist component is something completely unique, where we would sometimes end up being litigious or contentious or whatever is you want to add to that,
where if we thought we saw something that needed to change in a company, we would do.
a proxy fight or do whatever we needed to do, that's certainly not something we get involved
in at the full.
We attempt to just find, relentlessly find great companies that we can hold for long periods of time.
And we did that as well back in my hedge fund days.
We were focused on smaller companies, so we weren't buying Apple or Navidia or Microsoft,
but smaller companies, which we do at the full as well, but we were exclusively
focused on small and microcap companies back in the day. And the really kind of emphasis on
value investing, very valuation focused. We do some of that at The Fool, but my hedge funds were
exclusive to that. Does that activist part of your brain still kind of go off? Like, is there a
company that you're looking at now or you have looked at since coming to the Fool where you're like,
oh, I would buy into that if only they did this.
The answer is yes, certainly less than back in the day,
because everything was thought through,
looked through in that lens with that lens on,
of what could be different here to enhance your holder value.
So I definitely do some of that.
It kind of is even more so when I see an activist investor
actually get involved in a company,
and then I want to see, okay,
what's their platform?
Are they long term or they short term?
Do they have a good track record?
What are they trying to accomplish here?
That is more interesting to me, maybe, than the average investor, just because of my background.
It sounds like most of your career.
You've been broadly, while you've dabbled in different specifics, you've been broadly
in this finance and investing world.
Anything from any of those earlier experiences or even before, when you're watching family
ties or before then, any experiences,
skills, attributes that you think have really set you up for success today?
Becoming educated in the field was essential. It doesn't have to be in school. I mean, we have
plenty of members at The Fool who are self-taught, hopefully with our help, but probably on
the side too. And that's perfectly fine. But educating yourself, at least in the basics of
accounting and finance and competitive advantage and how business models work and how companies make
money. That's essential. That's kind of like table stakes in my mind and lots of folks go ahead and do
that. I think I'm well suited to the business kind of because of my temperament. I'm relatively even
keeled. I have patience. I'm intellectually curious to the point of where I always want to understand
why something is happening or how a company makes money or why a stock is down or why a stock is up.
So I think those characteristics are essential when we hire here at the full for the investing team.
I always ask candidates what three things do they think an investor really should have.
And I'm kind of looking for those answers.
I'm looking for patience, intellectual curiosity, and kind of a way to understand one's emotions or be even keeled if you can.
And if you can, at least to recognize when you're not being even keeled and when your emotions can maybe be getting the,
better of you because at some point we all know accounting and finance. So there's something that
differentiates us all and that often is emotions. We sell at the wrong time. We buy it the wrong
time because we're either fearful or we're greedy or we're nervous or we're happy. And at least
being able to recognize when that might be happening to you, you can help to mitigate some of the
damage that that can do. Do you have any anecdotes from recent memory or long ago memory when
of like you, despite having a pretty even temperament,
that those emotions did get the better of you,
or you were tempted to sell before you should have,
or fill in the blank.
Disasters, or sometimes we call Black Swan events
are the easiest ones to think of.
And in 2008-2009 is the one that immediately comes to my mind
because everything was bad.
And you, I didn't,
know if we were going into a depression or not and I didn't know how long it was
going to last and I didn't know what was going to happen to stocks so the natural
inclination is to move to cash in that in that scenario to be safe and that in a
sense is why the stock market crashes are corrects because people move to cash
because they don't want to have risk in situations like that I did the opposite
I figured that we've come out of
recession in the history of recessions.
Stock market has rebound 100% of the time.
And if it didn't in this time, it would be the only time in history it hasn't.
And I bought more stock rather than sell stock.
And it was probably the best capital allocation decision I ever made because those investments
back in 2008 probably are my biggest winners today just by the sheer fortune of being able to
buy great companies at low prices.
I bought Costco and Microsoft in 2008.
Just wonderful companies, wonderful investments.
But you had to, I mean, it's not easy to do.
I mean, things were bad.
I mean, you know, same thing like a COVID comes to mind.
The pandemic comes to mind.
Market was tanking.
We didn't know if we'd all be at home forever.
We didn't know if we were going to get sick.
If our loved ones were going to get sick,
if businesses were going to be able to be reopened.
Very, very scary time.
No one would be faulted for having extreme.
anxiety about life and certainly about your investments and about everything during those times.
But then you just have to make your decision about, okay, is this really going to be it?
Is the stock market never going to recover? If so, that's probably not my worst problem.
If the stock market is, if things are so bad, the stock market is not going to recover,
there's probably some real bad stuff going on. And my money might not be my biggest problem.
So again, I said, I think, you know, 100% of the time, stock markets come back.
and I don't think this is going to be the one time it doesn't.
So again, I purchase stocks rather than sold them.
Yeah.
And there's an inherent optimism in that.
Like, yes, there's the realist take two of like, okay, if this really is all bad,
I got bigger problems.
But the continuing to buy and looking to the future and having like an underlying belief
that, okay, even though things are scary now, I don't think it will always be that way.
To have that as a North Star, that's a strong thing to work.
turn to for sure. And it might be easy for me to say because since I do this professionally and I do
it literally every day of the week for 30 years, if you just dabble in it, it's maybe not so easy.
And your emotions, you're not used to dealing with those emotions and you want to de-risk and you
just want to feel safe. And I completely understand that. But if that's happening, at least
recognize it in recognizing it is important. You've kind of given us an overview of your career.
And in the early days you mentioned, okay, you were into tech, you were studying utilities.
And now your focus is maybe elsewhere, whether it's an investing or it's entirely outside
of investing and it's just in life, what are you intellectually curious about now?
Interesting. Well, it's hard not to be intellectually curious about artificial intelligence,
unless you're under a rock.
But it's, I mean, it's like, it's like I felt about the internet back in the day, but maybe even more.
Because the internet seemed just like a way for us all to like learn and communicate and be connected.
AI seems like it's something, could be potentially something, some whole other thing.
But fascinating, fascinating.
If you play around with chat, GBT or Clod or any of the LLM.
models just fascinating and only in its infancy it's probably like aOL dial-up was to the internet
back in the day where you could have said i don't think this is that great it's so what it's so
cumbersome this internet thing right but now look what it's turned into i can't only imagine what
what what a i is going to be like 10 20 years from now so that for sure but then i've got like
crazy other hobbies and stuff i love i love to cook so
I'm just constantly searching for gadgets or recipes or food items.
And I'm the worst golfer in the world, but I'm constantly trying to get better and watching
YouTube golf videos and reading and understanding or attempting to understand.
I love music.
So I'm constantly not only listening to, but researching music as well.
I play a little, some instruments and I'm always, you know, very amateurishly trying to get better.
at those as well. So lots of stuff to keep me busy and sometimes in trouble, sometimes out of
trouble. Okay, so that's a whole lot of hobbies. But as one final question, those hobbies make me
so curious, if you were not an investment analyst right now, what would you like to be doing?
It's funny. I once told someone that I would be perfectly content just playing a piano in a dive bar.
Okay.
And that would be a happy life for me. And they were like, you are so,
full of it's so full of it no way would that make you happy
Alex P. Keaton of Mr. Family Ties who loves money the stock market and economics so
maybe I was maybe I had a little vision of myself that isn't actually true there but
hey if I think a lot of us if we could be musicians that wouldn't be too bad I'll tell you
what if I ever hear that Ron Gross is playing at a dive bar near me in Denver
Colorado I will be there I want to see that piano playing appreciate
Appreciate it. I don't think, don't hold your breath.
Well, Rod, thanks so much for taking the time to chat with me today.
It was great kind of learning more about your background, how you wound up here,
and about some of the stories and ideas and stocks that have informed you and made you who you are today.
Thanks, Mary. Always a pleasure. Appreciate it.
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 or sell anything based solely on what you hear.
I'm Riki Mulvey. Thanks for listening. We'll be back tomorrow.
