We Study Billionaires - The Investor’s Podcast Network - TIP680: Investing in Exceptional Businesses for the Long Run w/ Dev Kantesaria
Episode Date: December 6, 2024On today’s episode, Clay is joined by Dev Kantesaria to discuss the current market environment, the types of investments he is looking for, FICO, S&P Global, and much more. Dev is the founder and po...rtfolio manager at Valley Forge Capital Management. The firm has been highly successful since its inception in 2007, as it’s outperformed the S&P 500 by a wide margin and has over $4 billion in assets under management. IN THIS EPISODE YOU’LL LEARN: 00:00 - Intro 01:46 - Dev’s view on the current market environment and the recent stock market rally. 05:02 - How Valley Forge Capital Management adopted Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger’s investment approach. 09:16 - Why predictability is an essential part of Dev’s investment approach. 11:32 - Why Dev has decided not to invest in any Big Tech companies. 37:11 - Why pricing power is the hallmark of a great business. 53:30 - Why Dev will continue to invest in the US despite optically higher valuations. 56:59 - The reason Dev loves compounding machines that perform share repurchases. And so much more! Disclaimer: Slight discrepancies in the timestamps may occur due to podcast platform differences. BOOKS AND RESOURCES Join the exclusive TIP Mastermind Community to engage in meaningful stock investing discussions with Stig, Clay, Kyle, and the other community members. Check out Valley Forge Capital Management. Related Episode: Listen to TIP389: Buffett's Core Principles w/ Dev Kantesaria, or watch the video. Follow Clay on Twitter. Check out all the books mentioned and discussed in our podcast episodes here. Enjoy ad-free episodes when you subscribe to our Premium Feed. NEW TO THE SHOW? Follow our official social media accounts: X (Twitter) | LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | TikTok. Check out our We Study Billionaires Starter Packs. Browse through all our episodes (complete with transcripts) here. Try our tool for picking stock winners and managing our portfolios: TIP Finance Tool. Enjoy exclusive perks from our favorite Apps and Services. Stay up-to-date on financial markets and investing strategies through our daily newsletter, We Study Markets. Learn how to better start, manage, and grow your business with the best business podcasts. SPONSORS Support our free podcast by supporting our sponsors: Hardblock AnchorWatch Cape Intuit Shopify Vanta reMarkable Abundant Mines HELP US OUT! Help us reach new listeners by leaving us a rating and review on Spotify! It takes less than 30 seconds, and really helps our show grow, which allows us to bring on even better guests for you all! Thank you – we really appreciate it! Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm
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You're listening to TIP.
On today's episode, I'm joined by Dev Kansasiara.
Dev is the founder and portfolio manager at Valley Forge Capital Management.
The firm has been highly successful since its inception in 2007, as it's outperformed the S&P 500
by a wide margin and has over $4 billion in assets under management.
During this episode, we covered Deb's view on the current market environment and the recent
stock market rally, how Valley Forge adopted Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger's investment
approach, why predictability and pricing power are essential parts of his long-term approach to
investing, why Dev has decided not to invest in any big tech companies as of the time of recording,
and why he'll continue to invest in U.S. large-cap companies despite the optically higher valuations
relative to their international counterparts, why Dev loves compounding machines that allocate
capital to share repurchases, and so much more.
Dev is extremely thoughtful and is truly passionate about educating people on how to be a great investor.
So with that, I hope you enjoyed today's discussion with Dev Consistaria.
Celebrating 10 years and more than 150 million downloads.
You are listening to the Investors Podcast Network.
Since 2014, we studied the financial markets and read the books that influence self-made billionaires the most.
We keep you informed and prepared for the unexpected.
Now for your host, Clay Fink.
Welcome to the Investors podcast.
I'm your host, Clay Fink.
And today we have a very special guest for our listeners, Dev Kontasaria, from Valley Forge Capital Management.
Dev, welcome back to the show.
Thank you.
Happy to be here.
So I've wanted to bring you back onto the podcast for quite some time.
You started your firm in 2007 and you've outperformed the S&P 500 by quite a wide margin since inception.
In preparation for this interview, I heard you state two years ago that during the most recent bear market,
you were on record for saying that quality, predictable businesses will be prized again.
And here we are with many of your holdings performing exceptionally well, most notably FICO,
which is the top holding according to your most recent 13F, and it's up over 100% in the past year.
But markets overall, they feel like they can sort of go nowhere but up the S&P 500.
last year it rose by 24% and year-to-date, as of the time of recording, we're up another 24%. So
what are some of your general thoughts on today's market and are you able to find opportunities
to deploy capital? Although there's a lot of different things people discuss that's moving markets,
elections, GDP growth, federal reserve policy, I think that what's been the driver over the last
couple of years is having more clarity around inflation and interest rates. And I think we can
confidently say that we have passed the peak. We're on the downtrend. We don't know the timing
of when interest rates will decline further, but it's our strong view that that'll be the
direction of interest rates and future Federal Reserve Policy. In central banks, actually,
around the world, if you put interest rates into perspective, you're too young, but you go back
to the early 80s, mortgages were 18%, 20% a year. So people often get worked up about whether
interest rates are 5% or 4.5% or 3.5%. The way we look at things is that we're in a low
range, and we expect that range to go even lower. When interest rates are low, that means that
the interest that you earn from your cash, from your bonds, is less competitive
earnings yields. And so equities look more attractive in comparison. That's really been, I think,
the story with equities around the world. And we should expect to see more of that. So I think the
backdrop for equities, particularly those that provide strong organic growth over the next five
to 10 years is extremely attractive.
And we've seen things like Buffett selling down his apple stakes, selling down stakes like Bank
of America. Given what you're seeing in the market, maybe some frothier areas, is this a time
where you're looking to potentially build more cash? Or do you just take timing largely out of the
equation? For us, market timing has been a poor way to generate returns over the long term.
Generally, U.S. equities trade in a range of reasonable lists.
I have to go back to 1999-2000 in the dot-com bubble when things got extremely out of hand.
Getting worked up about whether a company has a P.E. of 24, 28, or 32 is far less important
than making the right decisions about what companies you buy.
And if you buy a great compounding machine, over the long term, that type of intrinsic
value growth overcomes whether you've overpaid by 10 or 15 percent.
on the positions that you're buying. So this idea of bringing great precision to valuation,
I think is a silly exercise because at the end of the day, we're trying to predict the future.
And that's an inexact science. Yeah, I think it was Buffett who actually said,
I can't remember exactly who stated it that it's better to be more broadly right than precisely
wrong, especially when it comes to things like valuation. And during your previous discussion
on our show here a few years ago, much of the discussion revolved around Buffett and you're a huge
Buffett fan yourself. And I can't help but kind of compare your investment approach to someone
like Buffett and notice just how valuation-oriented he can be, at least relative to current
earnings. So he paid around 11 times earnings for Apple in 2016. And he seems to really kind of hone in
on securities that are really out of favor. So you look at the basket of Japanese stocks he bought,
Occidental Petroleum or Chevron. I'm curious if you would agree that he might be more valuation-oriented
when looking at current year's earnings, and maybe if there's any other key differences that you might
highlight when comparing your approach to his?
Sure.
So my inspiration, the playbook that we employed Valley Forge all derives who bought that
at Mugger.
I've been studying public equity since I was eight years old, so that's a very long time at this
point.
And I wish there were easier ways to make money.
I wish I could trade gold bars.
I wish I could predict where the price of oil was going to go.
I wish I could invest in Bitcoin at the right time or just ride a momentum.
on stock. But as you look over time, what works, and also what's tax efficient, which matters
in long-term investing. There's no playbook better than the Buffettmonger playbook. And that playbook
is quite simple to describe. You own very high-quality businesses. We define quality as finding the
perfect intersection between growth and predictability. You can have companies that are growing
very fast, like a young software company, but you're not sure of where it's going to be in five
10 years in terms of market share or industry dynamics, or you can find a company that's extremely
predictable, like Nestle or Herschy or, but they're growing organically at only 2% or 3%
of year. In neither one of those situations deliver strong returns over the long term.
If you could find companies that are growing at a much higher rate, but predictable, those are
the types of compounding machines that you want to own. One of the favorite things that I own
is it an annual report from Coca-Cola from 1928. That record I like in particular because
that has a lot of graphics, and it shows the vine growth of Coca-Cola from when the company
started through 1928 and just unbelievable growth. They also show per capita consumption
Coca-Cola. So in only six years, the amount of Coca-Cola per capita in the U.S. consumption
doubled. And I can't think of a product where in six years it's used twice as much as it was
than before. And so you look at what Coca-Cola represented in 1928, and it was obvious for everybody to see
why were people not piling into Coca-Cola? Was it valuation, did they feel like it had saturated its
market? But what Coca-Cola had was another 50 great years ahead of it. We're trying to build a portfolio
that on a weighted average basis can grow in the high teens to low 20s over the next decade,
but can do it in a very predictable way. And if you look at the average, the median SNP-500 companies,
for the next 10 years, it's going to grow in the low single digits organically. And so we have a
portfolio that we think can grow four times as fast, but to do it in a very predictable manner.
And so finding that type of organic growth is, again, we're trying to predict the future.
And so it's great if others don't agree with us because we're not trying to figure out the best
way to make money over the next year or two. We're trying to find the best way to make money
over the next five to 10 years. Things that Buffett has bought more recently are not attractive
to us. Just because we show the same playbook doesn't mean we necessarily agree on the companies
that we buy, like an oil company or a bank or Apple, are not attractive to us today. But he has
different problems than we do. He has to put a lot of money to work. So he's looking at mega-cap
companies. But we're also looking at generally large US cap companies. And that's because those are
generally very dominant businesses. They're monopolies or duoplies and their respective industry.
so that generally means that they're mid-cap to large-cap.
So it's difficult to say what he likes at the moment or why he's raising cash,
but we're using his playbook, but we're applying it with a different set of names.
The two words you mentioned there at the start were predictability and organic growth,
and then there's plenty of what ties into that.
So what sticks out to me is just this very long-term focus.
And predictability is something that only a few investors probably put as much of an emphasis
on as much as you do is what I would say. So could you talk more about why predictability is such an
essential part of your investment process and how you came to this critical realization?
Simply standard, we hate to lose money. It pains me to lose a single dollar. And of course,
we can't always be right. But if you buy in with this constant of margin of safety,
it means that even if your assumptions aren't exactly right, that you can still get
your money back, you can walk away with a small profit. So predictability,
is not something that we sacrifice at Valley Forge. We're happy to give up some growth in exchange
for predictability, but the idea of us investing in something that could go down 90% tomorrow,
that's just not our fishing pot. Those are not the types of businesses we own. We'd like to buy
things where the industry dynamics and the business model has already been successful over decades.
That's not the case with every company we own. And then when we enter the business, I would say
One third of the time, it's because the stock is significantly dropped. And there's a misunderstanding
about an issue and we disagree with how the rest of the world is thinking about the company.
Two-thirds of the time, surprisingly, the opportunities we find are what I call market neglect.
And this happened with FICO six years ago. It's sitting there in plain sight. No one is paying
attention. It's sort of, it might sound outrageous to think that these mid and large cap companies
are just given how many people are trying to work in public equities today. Things are just
sitting there in plain sight to be taken advantage of. But that was a case with FICO six years ago.
And it happens quite often where we see something, a change in pricing power, improvement and
intrinsic value, that even a business that's been around for 50 years, they morph over time.
They're not always the same business quality can get better or worse. So we continue to find
these disconnects. There's no dearth of opportunities. And we want to own our eight to 12 best
ideas. As I've said many times before, by the time we get out to our 17th best idea, we're not
very happy with the risk reward proposition. Tying into predictability still here, a lot of
eyes are on AI and how AI is going to change the world, who's going to be the winners, how is that
going to affect all these big tech companies? Everyone knows these big tech companies are extremely
dominant. They seem to only get bigger and bigger. And it's hard to argue against the investment
case for many of them, just looking at the business quality, for example. What are your thoughts on
big tech, AI, et cetera? Big tech, they're above quality business models, right? Google search is an
amazing business model. And AI has given the big tech companies another growth driver for the next few years.
So I expect the invidias and the Googles and the Microsofts and the Amazon's of the world to do well for
the next few years. The concern that I have is what happens after that. And it's our view that AI becomes
commoditized, and then it becomes difficult for these companies to monetize their AI offerings.
We can see today that in terms of R&D expenses, a capital expenditures, that those are
going up exponentially because these companies are fighting each other ruthlessly to stay ahead
of the others. So a few years out, if an off-the-shelf AI program can do 98% of all the tasks,
the human tasks in the world, how do you differentiate yourself? How do you monetize that?
And so as we look out five years you're now, seven years from now, ten years from now,
it's very difficult to know who the winners will be in AI from both the hard work perspective
and the software perspective.
So we can argue with what they've been able to deliver and the earnings they've been
able to produce.
And I think that Cardi continues for a few years.
But I think it will have a bad ending for most people because it's very hard to predict
the one or two companies that are the real winners here.
In one of your previous shareholder letters, you outline the essential qualities of a great equity investor.
Our listeners who were born here in the U.S., like myself, they might have heard a similar
story to me growing up where we were told if we work hard, go to school, get good grades,
find their right mentors, then we can succeed in life.
However, when it comes to investing, you actually argue that this simply isn't the case.
You even made the bold claim that 99.9% of the active management industry adds zero value.
So talk more about why being a great investor isn't as simple as maybe some make it off to be.
Yeah.
So I know this is a provocative statement, but it is my belief that the vast majority of the public equity management industry is simply random statistical noise minus fees.
and that's a real disservice to underlying investors and allocators.
In terms of people that can add true value in public equities, I don't know the exact number,
but it could be less than 15, less than 12, maybe even less than five,
that over a 20 or 30 year period add true alpha.
And so it is an interesting question because I think every, I like to calm down.
Every data in the world has their own stock portfolio, including my dad in the past,
and public equity investing is readily accessible.
Today, anyone can open up a brokerage account.
Commissions are nil.
And so it's very easy for anyone to become a public equity investor.
But as I stated in that letter, very, very few on the planet can outperform.
And what are some of the reasons for that?
And that's what I was trying to get.
I don't have the perfect answer.
But a lot of it goes to how you're constructed in terms of your emotional intelligence,
your personality, certainly some of the things as opposed to height.
you grew up. What common theme I find with great value investors, as many of them have grown up
in frugal environments. So on Saturdays, if you're going out to look at your Ferrari collection in your
garage, that probably doesn't match up well with someone that's trying to find deep value Monday through
Friday in their day job. Yes, we have summer interns from the top universities in the country.
And it's the first question I asked though, is that 99.9% of your peers, you all have close to perfect
GPAs, you have close to perfect essay key scores. I know that all of you work very hard, but
why is it that 99.9% of your peers will end up being mediocre public equity investors.
So there's a lot of themes that go into it. I think a very important part of this is having
the right mentor. Buffett talks a lot about Graham, as someone early on that had an influence
on him. So I think learning from the right mentor, I think could be very important. I think
how you grew up. I think just genetically how you're engineered. You need extreme delayed
gratification. So when they do the marshmallow test with like three to five-year-olds, that's like
15 minutes of delayed gratification. I'm talking about delay gratification that is potentially
decades. When you're in the first grade working hard in school, it's tough to talk to a little
kid and convince them to work hard on their homework every night because you're working on
something that isn't immediately tangible, right? What job you're going to get when you're 22 years
old, try to explain that to a six-year-old. In public equity investing, to be successful, you really
have to have these sort of long timeframes. Because if you focus on the near term, you will have
a lot of information that points you in the wrong direction. The decisions that you will make
will be wrong if you don't have the right time horizon. With my personality, I don't get happy when
the market goes up. I don't get sad when it goes down. I can be unemotional, disciplined,
and take advantage of fear.
And so it's a very rare personality type.
I think it's potentially one out of 5,000, one out of 10,000.
I don't run it to a lot of folks that like to watch paid dry on a wall.
I actually do, and I get great satisfaction from knowing that we're making decisions
that may not pay off for five plus years.
Let's take a quick break and hear from today's sponsors.
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Back to the show.
So I've been an avid listener of this show since 2016, 2017, and I've been a host for a few years now.
And just looking at my own experience, it almost feels like getting a lot of these basics down can be learned.
Things like delayed gratification, patience, discipline, just some of these basic traits.
But then you talk to a lot of people in your day-to-day life.
And you can just tell that a lot of people are just wired.
differently. No matter how many times you say something where you're not thinking about taking a
short-term game, you're thinking 10 plus years out. And it's just like, no matter how many times you say
that, it just doesn't get through to people. So you built this team at Valley Forge and have been
quite disciplined, I'm sure, in who you led on board. And after talking with so many investors,
there's so many of them that can talk to talk, but they can't necessarily walk to walk. So it can be
sort of hard to see through who truly is or has the capability of being a great investor.
So how do you identify the right traits when you're hiring?
It's extremely hard.
The interview process is always short.
So you might be able to meet someone three, four, or five times.
They don't want to meet with you ten times.
So you have a limited amount of time to get to know someone.
You sort of see really what attracts them.
If they like trading cryptocurrencies on the weekend, they like biotech stocks, they like
quick gain.
If that's something that makes you happy, I feel a bit guilty about making quick gains.
Now, with Faitgo, that's a problem because that was up 100% last year and 100% this year.
I feel a bit guilty about it.
The company deserves it, but I would much rather be the turtle in the race, so I'll take it
when I can get it.
But it's extremely difficult.
It's like finding a needle in a haystack.
And I'm sure Buffett and Munder have struggled with that as well.
I think that you want to find someone that has a personality that want to be mentored, where
they're still pliable.
And again, you could teach them all of the right lessons.
But if they're wired to enjoy short-term gains and don't have that delayed gratification,
they're just going to go back to day trading biotech stocks.
So there's no magic formula.
But yeah, finding someone with the right temperament, patience, outlook, it's extremely difficult.
And I think with young people today, I sound like an old person, you know, kids are very
short-term in their thinking.
I'm based in Miami and I'm going to be speaking at the University of Miami and they were saying
how difficult it is to even get 150 kids to show up for an event. I mean, putting aside me,
I mean, they've had really famous people come and they can't, you know, unless you're like
an Instagram influencer over 10 million followers or a famous sports star or something, you can't
even get the attention of kids today on just talking about serious intellectual matters.
So I don't know, but every generation will have its set of new investors. I think the key,
even as you get older in the business, is you have to learn from your mistakes.
And you have to be open to constantly way taking into information and evolving.
AI, although it'll be difficult to pick the winners in AI, it is a game changer for society
and for business and to simply put your head in the sand and say, well, I don't understand
technology and I just can't factor it into my thinking.
I think that could be a dangerous way to move forward.
So we have to take into account always how the world has changing around us.
Your comments around temperament reminded me of one of your points in your letter you wrote.
Although we can suppress for a time our natural inclinations, we usually revert to them
when given the opportunity and setting.
For maybe some of our newer listeners of our show, they might feel like they know what
temperament is, but it hasn't been discussed in depth here on the show.
How would you define temperament and what makes for a quality investment temperament if there
is such a thing?
Yeah, I think anyone who has kids and maybe a lot of kids, so they have a big sample set,
they'll know that even from an early age, they have a personality.
And that personality doesn't change very much.
With my kids, the personalities that they had when they were six months old, two years old,
four years old, eight years old, ten years old, it really hasn't changed at its core.
Yes, they're going to have life experiences that will alter them.
But I don't really know how much is genetic.
I don't have a mathematical ratio.
But certain people are just wired the way they are, observing how their parents think about money,
how they think about investing, the environment they grew up in, whether it was a liberal spending
environment or a very shrugel spending environment. They all factor in. People can have
life-changing moments. And one time I was stuck in the library at MIT between classes and just
going through the book stacks. And I came up on a whole section on Mahatma Gandhi. And for me,
that was a life-changing moment, both in terms of outlook and personality and a lot of things.
So, it's certainly open to the idea of people evolving and changing and having these sort of great
realizations. But temperament is probably largely, by the age, really largely set. And, you know,
when you're at the dinner table and you're not supposed to chew with your mouth, ogan, and you're
supposed to not be loud, those are sort of suppressed learnings that you have from society,
from your parents and your peers. But that may not be your natural inclination. Your natural
inclination may be loud and boisterous at a dinner table. So I think often at companies in large
group settings, people's natural inclinations are not evident. They're suppressed because they're
told how they should act or how they should be. But when they're left to their own devices,
they do revert to their natural personality. And that's what's interesting about our
business is that you often hear about somebody working with another investor, a famous investor.
And then they go out on their own and try to open up their own shop. I'm not sure that that track
record is very good for people that go out and try to start their own thing. Certainly, I think
people are expecting more of the same, but in a group dynamic, people are a bit different than
when they're on their own. So I don't think that's a satisfying answer for what you're asking,
because I think we want a badly engineered temperament to be more successful in public equity
investing. But that's why index funds are amazing. I used to live in Norbert, Pennsylvania,
the home of Vanguard. And for 99% of people, an index fund is a beautiful thing. It takes out the
motions, it's tax efficient, it forces the behavior that most people don't have. And I think that's
why index funds continue to gain traction over time. But there is a subset of people that I think
can add tremendous value in public equities. And if you could find those people like a Buffett from
50 years ago, I mean, what a great ride that would have been. Tying back to what you would look for in an
analyst, I'm sure you probably ask them about some of their early experiences and what they were
sort of drawn to. So you talked about in your letters how when you were a child, you were just
engrossed by the workings of each business you encountered, the local newspaper, community bank,
the local restaurants, bowling alley, you name it. So can you talk more about how your early
experience and that deep interest in business has helped carry you forward to being a successful
investor? One of the errors that I see in public equity investing is that people have already
decided where they want to invest, what they find attract.
And they focus all of their energy and time on just those specific areas.
I think to be a great public equity investor, you have to love business in general.
Just because you believe that pizza shops are not a good business, you should love thinking
about a pizza shop.
It's cost of goods, it's labor costs, it's rent, the competition, what it costs to deliver
the pizza, the price of gas.
I've loved since I was a little kid, every type of business.
is fun for me to analyze, but I would have just as much fun analyzing Nestle or Pfizer or
chemicals company or an energy company. I love all types of businesses and wherever I go in life,
I'm constantly thinking about it. It just envelops me. I just, for me, it's fun. It's an interesting
mental exercise. I quiz my kids about it. And I think Buffett is like this. I believe he reads
about hundreds of companies that he knows that he probably will never invest in.
But for him, it's fun and it educates him about business in general, about what not to do,
what characteristics are negative for a great business long term.
And so I think a mistake that I see with a lot of young kids at universities, they're
involved in these business plan competitions.
They find a few companies they like and then they already have a preset notion of what
industries are great.
And I think that's absolutely the wrong way to grow.
It developed as an investor.
You should want to get your hands and learn about every single business on the planet.
whatever you could get your ends on. So I get as much joy and fun out of reading about any
business or any industry on the planet. Yeah, I mean, certainly a hallmark of a passion
for investing in studying businesses. A bit earlier, you mentioned that you hated losing money.
And if we look at sort of at a high level, the two ways an investor can make a mistake.
We can characterize them as type one versus type two errors. So type one errors are those where you
make an investment that you thought was good, that turns out bad. Or a type 2 error is those in which
you don't make an investment and it ends up being a mistake not to own it. And Buffett refers to these
as mistakes of omission. And I think many newer investors fear missing out on the next Nvidia, the next
Tesla, the new AI or EV IPO. But after speaking with so many successful investors here on the show,
it's pretty clear that the focus on not losing money is essential instead of worrying about how one can
get the biggest upside. I was curious if you could speak more to this because it seems fundamental
to your approach. Yes, I would say in a type one category. You know, I think people take away
the wrong lessons from their mistakes. They might have been in the Great Depression. I've never
experienced something that harsh. So it's easy for me to say. But you might have taken the stock market
crash from the 1920s of the decade that followed as a learning lesson. And then you decided that
you're just simply going to keep all of your money and cash under your mattress for the rest of
your life. And that would have been a bad lesson or the wrong interpretation of the mistake.
And so I have seen many times where somebody loses money on a company, they make the wrong
bit on an industry, and then they make these very blanket conclusions. I'm never going to touch
that industry again or I'm never going to do that again. Usually the learning lessons are
far more nuanced. So you have to be very careful about your mistakes.
and the lessons that you draw from them because you may over-interrid what has happened.
In the second category, generally, the mistakes of omission have far higher magnitude than the
type 1 mistakes. If you miss a great compounding machine, maybe you thought at the Microsoft
IPO that a P.E. of 35 was too expensive and you'd just, you'd rather buy the company that
makes washing machines out of P.E. of 12. What a tragic mistake that was, right? So the mistakes of
emission are always in terms of magnitude and impact always a lot worse. But there again, you have
to take a time machine back to that point in time and understand, you know, why was it? Was there
a risk that doesn't exist today? Was there an environment that made the opportunity less
obvious? But I go back to 1928 Coca-Cola annual report and I don't know why every single
person on the planet did not know coca-cola stuck at that time. Maybe you could have somebody
call in that lived in 1928. They'd be pretty old at this point, but you see it over and over again
where there's things that are obvious. For me, a big omission was the big tech companies. I knew
that Google Search was a powerful business model. I knew that the Apple iPhone or the Microsoft
Windows and Office Suite were powerful. These companies generally were poor capital allocators.
There was no predictability around the capital allocation. There was often dual-class structures
is where the businesses weren't necessarily being run to maximize shareholder value.
But these business models were so strong that they overcame some of the sins that kept me
from these businesses.
But we're not owning these big tech companies 10, 15 years ago.
That's certainly a big omission for me.
You mentioned, say, the Microsoft IPO as an example and highlighted how expensive-looking
companies can still make exceptional investments over very long time periods.
when you're looking to enter a position, typically how far out are you typically looking
just to sort of get a sense of, A, just how predictable is the future?
You know, looking out 10 plus years can be very difficult for the vast majority of businesses.
And yeah, I'd just be curious to get your thoughts on when looking at these great,
great companies, how far out is a reasonable time period and doing some of your modeling work?
Yeah, for me, it's 10 plus years.
So as Buffett describes if the stock market were closed for 10 years,
And I come from a venture capital background.
I understand what's involved in only a private company.
But if the stock market were closed for 10 years, there's no way for somebody to tell you
what they're willing to pay for your business.
Are you confident with your analysis of intrinsic value?
Are you comfortable that you're interpreting the information the right way?
But I don't need a traded share price every day.
I don't meet it every few years.
I don't need it every five years.
So I'm very much a purist.
But if I'm not comfortable with the industry dynamic in the company remaining in a dominant position
for at least the next 10 years, it doesn't meet our bar for predictability.
If I were to put myself in the shoes of many of your investors, I'm sure you've gotten
countless questions about valuation, what you do when the market realizes just how great
some of these businesses are. Of course, FICO is one example. And we could probably point to a
couple others in the portfolio. How do you think about when the market, within that first 10-year time
period. Say, for example, really, it gives, you know, marks up the prices and bakes in some generous
expectations. Most of the time, our businesses trade in a range of reasonable lists. And if you
believe this is a combining machine that will generate phenomenal intrinsic value for you for the next
10, 20 years, you wouldn't sell it because it moved from a PE of 26 to a PE of 29. I think the
mistake that a lot of people make is they fire up their Yahoo finance or Bloomberg machines.
They look at Ford multiples. And for businesses that are very good.
predictable that are low growth, those four multiples are pretty accurate. So the forward multiples
for a candy company or a Nestle, consumer goods, Procter & Gamble, those four multiples are fairly
accurate. But when you're dealing with high organic growth companies on a forward basis,
or special situations that are happening, the foreign multiple is inaccurate. And if people are
using these forward multiples to make decisions, they may think something is too expensive.
it. Without getting into a lot of detail, the FICO4 multiple is high. But what they're missing
there is the operating earnings power from the mortgage scores business. And we know that mortgage
scores volume has been down for the last few years. But if mortgage scores volume returns to previous
levels, which it will. We don't know the timing. And you factor in the recent price increases
that they've made to mortgage scores, which was 100% last year, another over 40% this year. And you just do
some simple math, that's massively accretive to their bottom line. And so the multiple that
exists today that the analysts are putting out there doesn't factor in these special price
increases, doesn't factor in this mortgage volume returning. They add those things when these things
actually happen. They don't take a lot of risk with predicting these factors. So you have to be
very careful with using four multiples for the next year or two to determine whether something is
expensive or cheap. I'm reminded of Mark Leonard's letters from Constellation.
software to figure out the change in the intrinsic value, he would take the return on capital
and add in any organic growth or in many cases just price increases. So that's another thing that
sticks out to me about your approach is just pricing power. Pricing power is the hallmark of a
great business is I believe what you've stated before. So maybe you could talk more about that
because pricing power just from an intuitive level of Coca-Cola or whatever business can simply
just tick up prices and a lot of that flows down to the bottom line. That's an infinite return on
capital. So maybe you could shed more light on that.
If you're providing an essential product or service, you should be able to raise your prices
above the rate of inflation. As it relates to protecting yourself from inflation, which was a
big concern of the last year or two, the best way to do that is to want a company with pricing
power. So if inflation goes to 10%, you want a company that can raise its prices 13%.
You also want a company that has very little in a way of reinvestment needs, which is also our
strong preference when owning a great business. But pricing, so,
a lot of problems. You may have some softness in volumes during a recession. There may be some
short-term headwinds, different kinds. But if you have control over your pricing, that is an amazing
tool to have as a company. It can be overused. So if you're having problems with secular volume
growth in your industry and you're simply trying to overcome that with pricing too aggressively,
that can backfire. But generally speaking, a great business should be able to raise its prices
a few percent above the rate of inflation for a decade plus, preferably 20 or 30 years,
and that's an amazing contributor to compounding intrinsic value year after year.
So we look for that, but not every company has the same level of pricing power.
They always talk about Coca-Cola as an example of price amount.
If they just raise the price of syrup by penny, my God, think of how much profits are
dropped to the bottom line.
Coca-Cola has raised prices over time, but it's not been that consistent or that aggressive.
It's good to know that there's this latent pricing power that they have.
But sure, at a certain point of the raise prices too much, people would switch to Pepsi or
C-C-C-C-Cole.
I don't know if it's R.Col even exists anymore.
But we like to buy businesses where the service or product that's being offered is
already to begin with low in price and is essential so that when they're raising prices,
it's still relative to the benefit it provides.
The prices is still minimal.
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All right. Back to the show.
key characteristic when I look at your portfolio is I see a lot of monopolies and duopolis,
which certainly helps when it comes to pricing bower because new entrants aren't able to enter
at a lower price. I'm curious when it comes to duopolis, what is it that sort of keeps this
homeostasis where each of the players is both happy, but also getting marginal benefits
with these pricing increases and such? And how can they continue to innovate and just continue
to grow market share without like going after the other player?
Yeah, so it's interesting. You would think that if you simply bought a duopoly or oligopoly
that profits would just rain down from the sky, even monopolies. You know, there's a company
like Broadridge that has control of almost all proxy boating. And they're an above-average
business, but not a great compounder in intrinsic value long term. I've written about this
in letters, but you have Boeing Airbus, a nice duopoly, but there's a lot of issues with
the businesses that keep them for being great compounders. There's a lot of warranty risk. It's
capital intensive. They have labor issues. They have government subsidies. You have, in the UPS
and FedS. You would think that with e-commerce package delivery increasing every year, that that would be
an obvious duopoly. And those are above-average companies. We in the past, we own Nike. We own
Monster beverage and Red Bull had a very nice duopoly, and it's still relatively a rational
oligopoly, but they don't follow each other on price like.
they have in the past. Nike, Under Armour Adidas, that could have been an ex-aulogopoly, but they got
aggressive in fighting for market share. So it's not as simple as just going out and sliding a
duopoly or an oligopoly. I wrote in the past about the potash market, which was a very nice
sort of cartel. I won't call them an aligopoly. It was really like a cartel and one member
of the irrational behavior and sort of ruined the potash market for a while. I think that dynamic has
improved. There's just no easy way to just have rules around what is investable and what is not.
What do you think is the most underrated aspect of your investment approach besides just this
long-term view and focus on exceptional companies? What do investors get wrong when thinking about
your approach of buying and holding these combating machines? Well, I think the complexity of the
decisions that we make is far greater than what it would appear to an outsider. If you have a
company that you've owned for 15 years, the assumption is that's a static situation that
you're not really following it. But there's this idea that there's maybe some complacency around
it. We think about our companies every day, even the ones that we've held for 15 or 17 years,
about subtle changes to business quality, both up or down. They compete with the other companies
in the portfolio, how they compete with things on our short list. We're very aggressive
about the expectations we have for the companies that we own. So people should not misinterpret low
activity with complacency because we're big animals. We're sort of vicious in how we think about
companies. There's no emotional attachment. I would also say to complexity that goes to the
decisions that we make on going forward basis. So do we want to buy more of something that we already
own? Do we want to add something to the portfolio? Dozens of risk factors that go into a risk-reward
decision. Those are all in the future, so there's no nice spreadsheet you can make as to how
those factors are weighted in what matters the most. But I think we are good at when you have a
large set of information, and today I would argue there's too much information. I think we are
good about hony in on the two, three, four things that truly matter for the next 10 or 20 years
and do not get distracted by short-term events that a lot of other people get caught up with.
You mentioned thinking about your holdings, even if you've held them since the inception of your fund even 17 years ago.
How much time are you spending on your current names relative to reading up on other companies?
I don't have a specific number for you.
Obviously, the companies that are in the portfolio and the ones that are on a short list, we are following extremely closely.
Great business models don't get created very often.
About more than 2,000 companies came to market with the IPO SPAC craze a couple of years ago.
And our hope was that that would bring a lot of interesting new business models to the market.
A lot of those companies were young.
They probably shouldn't have gone public at first place.
But as you look through that listing, we tried to look through as many as we could.
There's not a single business model in there that holds a candle to something like the FICO
Consumer Credit Score Business.
That's been around for 50 years.
So great new business models are extremely rare.
So, yes, we try to look at a lot of things.
we don't spend a lot of time looking at things that we know inherently lack the predictability
we want. So if you're developing a new drug and you're at clinical trials and there's
regulatory issues and competitive issues and patent issues, we don't spend time reviewing
biotech companies or drug development companies. They just inherently lack the predictability
that we need to see. And so, yeah, it allows us to be a bit more focused in what we wanted to.
I'll do that for fun because, again, I just like reading about companies for fun, but it's not
part of what we do every day at Valley Forge.
You mentioned owning a business for 10, 15 or more years, and since your fund's inception in 2007,
you've owned S&P Global.
And many people talk about buying and holding great businesses for long periods of time, but
very few can actually speak to that experience.
And you've even added to S&P Global as recently as Q2, 2023 as of the 13F filings.
So what are some of the key learning a stock like this over a 17-year time period looking back
today?
Well, I'm fortunate to have been at the right age to see both the dot-com bubble of 1999 and 2000
and the financial crisis.
I think that every great investor should go through a few in those periods.
The 10 rating agencies, there was just nothing positive you could say about them in March 2009.
They were being sued, Congress hated them, they were front page of the Wall Street Journal every
day, be waived for the financial prices.
That issue went tight plummeted.
If you brought up Moody's or S&P over dinner, I mean, you were just, people just rolled
their eyes.
I talked about some of the greatest trades of my life.
I would say that one of those was buying S&P Global at $17.50.
And I remember where I was when that happened, I was on my honeymoon, and I was sitting in a hotel
lobby in Mexico. Like most days back then, futures were down. The market was plummeting and took a lot
of conviction to buy any U.S. public equity at that time, but buying something like S&P Global, which
looked very scary back then. But today, S&P Global is over $500. And that type of compounding
over time, I never could have factored that into my expectations. But I knew that Rayy's business
was one of the strongest business models of the world. Moody's and S&P are toll collectors and all
the debt issuance that happens. There's some cyclicality to those businesses when debt issuance
goes up and down. During 2020, it was an amazing year for debt issuance. The years that followed
were a bit more modest. That type of cyclicality doesn't bother me because I'm focused on the
long-term earnings power of these businesses. But yeah, we want SMP Global for its core ratings
business. Back then, it had a lot of things that people don't remember. It used to sell textbooks.
And it had JD Powered Associates and sold a lot of those assets. So today it's more of a
a provider of data, toll collector in a few different industries. But a great example of thinking
differently than market, having a long-term view. And it's difficult to describe when I'm buying
a great business, there's a joy that comes with what I'm buying. Buying S&B Global S7,050,
no matter all the scary things that were going on at the time. There was like an inherent,
more of a contentness. I felt a great feeling of content that I was buying something really truly
amazing that very few other people agreed with Leon or were paying attention to.
You pointed to the cyclicality of these businesses, since they're, of course, exposed to the
credit cycle and pockets of the economy like residential real estate, for example, has slowed
significantly in light of higher interest rates. So what's allowed these businesses to continue
to grow in light of higher interest rates? Yeah, a number of our holdings have cyclicality.
So, the payments companies, you know, if you go into recession, people are going to swipe the credit card less often.
If you look at FICO, mortgages, autos, you know, mortgages have been low over the last few years.
So that's certainly as for FICO's business, the debt ratings businesses will also have
cyclicality relating to the economy and interest rates.
You know, the time of cyclicality we're talking about doesn't bother us.
It often gives us a buying opportunity to buy more into these businesses because most people are very short-term
focused in if they look at Moody's debt issuance and they think it's going to be down for the next
couple of years. Stock price may remain. There might be a cloud hanging over the stock for a couple of
years, but that doesn't bother us in the lease. These companies are highly cash flow generative.
They can play offense during those periods. They can buy back a lot of their stock. They're obviously
raising prices during that interim so that when volumes do come back, they're just earning more
on the debt that was delayed and being issued. So I probably have overused this analogy, but I think
of Moody's, the S&P, being toll collectors on a highway. And sometimes the toll collectors go out to
lunch and the cars are just backing up on the highway and we don't care because we know that all of
those cars on the highway have to get to the other side. They're all going to have to go through
that toll. And so maybe when the toll collectors come back after lunch, they've raised the price
on the toll in the meet time. But we take comfort in owning companies and industries where we know
that the volume drop is temporary. There's a lot of talk now on U.S. Marks.
markets more broadly being expensive relative to some of the other countries. And pre-recording
here, you mentioned that you're going to continue to focus on U.S. companies and large-cap companies.
The U.S. over the past 15 years has largely been the place to be for a lot of investors.
And despite higher valuations more broadly, it just continues to seem to be that way.
So what are some of the key ingredients that enable the U.S. specifically to continue to be an
attractive place for you in 2024? At Valley Forge, we're bottom-up fundamental investors. So we're not
trying to pick macroeconomic trends. We're not trying to pick what country may be a better environment.
We simply are looking for the best business models. And fortunately, for us, they happen to
almost entirely be in the U.S. or the 50 or 60 companies that we track on our short list,
maybe five to seven of them are foreign, the remainder are in the U.S.
And so anyone that is looking for strong compounding, strong organic growth, putting aside
patriotism and a lot of other things that go into, picking where you want to invest, a lot of
those great business models reside in the large cap area, but some in the midcap as well.
They're just from a 20 to 30 year perspective, absolutely the best place to be putting your money.
Again, finding that perfect intersection between growth and predictability, I don't believe it's
in the U.S. small cap. I don't believe it's in Europe. I don't believe it's in Asia. I don't believe
it's in India. On a risk-reward basis, the best place to make money on the planet for the coming
decades is right here in the U.S. Again, that doesn't come from any other call than us trying to
find the best business models. Couldn't some of these business models theoretically be in these
growing markets like, say, India, China, or whatnot, or do you even look in those markets?
There's something about our system here in the U.S. that just generates entrepreneurs that create
business models with lasting potential. And obviously, there's brilliant people everywhere in the
world. But there's something about our environment that allows entrepreneurs really to prosper.
And you need that type of environment to create the next generation of great business model.
So if you go to places like India, great GDP growth. Obviously, they have a huge
on population, but the business models are almost entirely commoditized. If you're building
residential office buildings, you're an industrial manufacturer, maybe you're selling consumer
goods, you're selling diapers or infant formula or something in India. Obviously, those businesses
have a green tailwind, but that doesn't fundamentally make those great business models.
So I think the correlation between GDP growth and performance of the stock market, I think
it's been known for quite a while that there's no direct correlation between those two.
So simply investing in the fastest growing countries from a GDP perspective is not going
to create better stock market returns. Most of our companies are multinationals.
So they have the exposure around the world, but in the U.S., we benefit from our reporting standards.
We benefit from our audit standards. We benefit from our capital allocation thinking,
which I think is better than most places in the world. So we have management teams that might be
more focused on shareholder value creation than other parts of the world. So it's an interesting
phenomenon, but I'm a great believer in the future of the U.S. relative to other economies.
If we cross the border up north to Canada, I've interviewed a surprising number of quality-oriented
investors here on the show and studied a number of investors that you would be largely familiar
with that own Constellation Software as one of their top holdings. And you've stated that you prefer
not to own highly acquisitive companies. I was curious if Constellation was ever in your
investable universe or on your list of companies you were following. And if you have any comments
on these sort of unique serial acquires that have just managed to be compounding machines,
to put it simply. This goes back to our view of predictability. So I think Valiant, which was in the
end of failure, you know, when I was buying pharmaceutical companies immediately raising prices on
those pharmaceuticals, that was a, you know, a, you know, you know, I was a, you know,
grow by acquisition strategy. You have that today with Transdine, which is absolutely an above-average
business. Constellation is an above-average business. We just don't like companies that need
acquisitions as part of their long-term strategies. We think that at some point you're overpaying
for businesses. There's integration risk. Benefits may be more short-lived. Pharma companies do this
quite often. They rationalize manufacturing. You get these very short-term benefits, but not these
benefits that we're looking at at Valley Forage. We want serious cost and revenue synergies that go
up 10 plus years. So there are some very nice businesses that exist that continue to grow by
acquisition. We just had Valley Forge want a straighter path. That taught us as an element of risk
that we are generally not willing to take. Some companies, they grow organically for some time,
then they sort of venture into this acquisition to continue to grow a market share. Would that be
sort of a sell signal for a lot of your companies? Yes. I would say,
capital allocation is absolutely something that can ruin a great business. It's really unfortunate
because we own a lot of great business models and out of either boredom or they need to smooth
out earnings for Wall Street to increase their multiples or you just simply hire a business
developing person and they have nothing to do and if you give them a hammer, they're going to
go around looking for nails. But invariably, these great businesses ruin their companies by
buying into lower quality business models. If you already inherently owned a great business like
Moody's debt ratings, and you go and buy a lot of other things for your Moody's analytics business,
you're ruining the business quality, the overall weighted average business quality of your
company. And so it drives us nuts. And it's really quite unfortunate. FICO does not do this.
So they deserve a blue ribbon for that. To date, they've not gone out and decided they might
to diversify into other areas. But arguably, like with S&P Global, they have the debt ratings
business, which we love. They have the S&P index business, which is a phenomenal business,
even maybe PLAS. But, you know, with IHS market, they bought some things where they were able
to roll into other areas. But does market intelligence, is that in the same league as debt ratings
businesses or the index business? Absolutely not. And if S&P goes out and starts to make a lot
of acquisitions to bolster its market intelligence business because growth is slowing there,
we think that ruins the overall business quality of the company. So it's frustrating for us. You can't
throw out the baby with the bathwater because they still are one of the best business models in the
world. But yes, I'd love to go around and shake a lot of these CEOs in these boards and say,
what are you doing? You've been lucky enough in life to have one of these great business models.
Why are you lowering the business quality of the company? That's an unforced error.
I see with a number of your holdings, share repurchases is a key part of their capital allocation.
Is that sort of your preferred method after they make any investments into their business that
they need to make? A lot of that should be allocated towards share repurchases.
Ideally, we want to own businesses that have very little in the way of reinvestment,
preferably zero. Obviously, that's not reality. So most of the companies that we have do require
some reinvestment, but it's very small relative to their enterprise values.
Given that the companies trade in a range of reasonableness, and we believe in their long-term
ability to compound, buying back stock remains the most efficient use of capital.
raising the dividend is fine, but with current tax rates on dividends, that's really an efficient way
to return capital to investors.
So we love it when a great compounding machine buys back a lot of their stock.
That is our preference.
I think it also keeps these companies out of trouble.
So my preference is a company that holds virtually no cash because it keeps them from
making mistakes.
Wonderful.
Well, Dev, that's all I really had for you today.
I really appreciate the opportunity to chat with you and have you on the show.
again, here, I want to give you a chance to give a handoff to how people can learn more about
Valley Forge Capital Management and learn more about you if they'd like.
We really appreciate being on the program. They can find us really anywhere on the web.
I love to mentor and teach. And so there's a podcast on FICO, there's another podcast I've done
with your colleague. So if they just Google us, they'll find a lot of material on who we are.
As Buffett in Munger, I've already said many times, it's so darn simple. When you're
you describe it, there's a lot of nuances to how you execute the plan. But my goal is to keep
investors out of trouble. I grew up in a lower middle class family. It upsets me when I hear about
a family that is trading Bitcoin or doing something silly, day trading options. And even if you
think about it down into pension funds, wouldn't it be nice to build another building or dormitory
for your students or to have more money available for your pensioners? And I just, the allocators
continue to make the same mistakes over and over again. So I want to be a voice of reason and
common sense. Buffet and Munger are the best in the world. I sort of want to follow on their footsteps.
But if I can help in that messaging in any way with both individuals and allocators,
that would be really a great way for me to have impact on the investment industry.
Wonderful, Dev. Well, I know many people are going to enjoy this conversation,
and I think they'll get a ton of value out of it. So thank you again.
Thank you.
Thank you for listening to TIP.
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