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Broeb22

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Posts posted by Broeb22

  1. 22 hours ago, RichardGibbons said:

    Bought some YALA. It's a Middle-Eastern voice-centric social media company that grew the top line by 40% since last quarter and 240% YoY.

    When you look at valuation, the company has a run-rate PE in the low-20s based on Non-GAAP Income (which just excludes share-based compensation) or the 40s based on GAAP income. And it has an EV to run-rate sales ratio of about 10.

    I'd guess that, because of the voice-centric nature of the business, the pandemic may have provided a tailwind. But, even if tailwinds are potentially going away, I'm still happy to buy a company at a 20 PE that has a moat based on network-effects and is growing the top line by 100%+.

    Thank you for posting, because now I can say this. Yalla yalla bills, y’all.

  2. I think wage inflation may not hit until 2022 There are some who are waiting for all of the extraordinary stimulus to fade away before saying that there will be massive wage inflation. I think if we're still seeing tightness in the labor market when people have to go back to work but don't for whatever reason then that will sound alarm bells for me.

    Anecdotally speaking, a company I know has lost multiple maintenance people to Amazon because they can "sit in an AC controlled room and then go out on the floor when something breaks" and probably make more money. The same company is missing ~8-15% of its budgeted staffing at multiple sites, and the HR person has told me that when she contacts temp agencies, there are physically not any people walking through the door. 

  3. 19 hours ago, Gregmal said:

    The thing is, businesses may be a reflection to some degree of their future earnings. But assets are not necessarily. What was the PE or FCF yield on the Dallas Cowboys when Jerry Jones bought them, or the NY Yankees when Steinbrenner picked them up? How does that compare to today? To me, it is much easier to forecast safety in the long term, of an asset, vs durability, let alone ability to appreciate, of a business. There will only be one NY Yankees 15-20 years from now. There will be more billionaires. Meanwhile someone can come along and displace Costco, or the government can break up Google or Berkshire. So far, my only level of comfort in predicting long term oriented events, would be with things they cant replace.  

    While I get the broader point, to your specific example, Will there be more or less fans to watch the MLB 15-20 yrs from now? Nothing guarantees that baseball will be around in its same capacity 15-20 years from now. Historically speaking, baseball has only been big business for the last 3 decades, and Steinbrenner happened to buy right before a huge watershed moment in the history of the sport because of the advent of free agency. 

  4. I own a couple shares of Royalty Pharma, which is great except pharma is relatively capital-light anyways.

    I am also pretty high on DFH (or you could use NVR), and I think these companies have very asset-light models which act like royalties in a way. They have the negative effect of being exposed to interest rates in a big way which would really hurt their business.

    I think payments companies like V, MA, PYPL, and other payments companies function like royalties.

    There are also WPM, RGLD, FNV for straight metals streaming companies too.

     

  5. DFH after earnings

     

    Those order and backlog numbers are stunning.

     

    Some of the backlog is acquired (not sure how they broke that out) but yeah, I agree with you.

     

    I have never owned a homebuilder before, and some would argue that owning a homebuilder in a potentially rising rate environment won't end well, but I don't think the demographic, affordability, and tax trends driving people there are going away any time soon, and the business model is built to generate a profit even if closings fall.

     

  6. PTON - starting a position here in mid 90s after the steep fall. $4b fw revenue run rate, 40% margin profile, $28b MCap so not as bad a multiple now. Demand >> Supply, able to sell everything they make. Lots of optionality around accessories, apparel and subscriptions (as the blades) with the bike/tread just like a razor (and they make margins on the razor too). Global product and not specific to just the US. It's becoming part of culture now - people falling in love with their digital avatar instructor (some articles around that), AirBnBs and Hotels put them as a perk on their premises. Pay later business models making them affordable for mass consumers (Affirm is the largest source of biz). People using them for 20+ days a month shows the stickiness.  Like the risk/reward.

     

    Buena suerte. Lots of air still in this bubble.

  7. I would add progressive to the list. This looks seriously cheap at this point.

     

    It does. Thanks for pointing it out.

     

    Maybe I should think less and buy good companies like PGR, but the overanalytical bear in me says at some point people start pricing in a secular decline in premiums due to autonomous driving making driving much safer, and I don't want to own this when that happens. Maybe that's too far off to care about now.

  8. Do you think there is anything about your process that you would have changed?

     

    In general, I caution against drawing too many strong conclusions about your investment process during this particular market swing because I think it made a lot of people look silly and some of those people wouldn't look silly in an alternative version of events, whereas some of my decisions to hold on might look smart now but could have been disastrous. 

     

    I know I passed on some things in March/April thinking that we were going to be in for some rough times in the economy (and market).

     

    I continue to try and spend less time worrying about the macro environment. It is paralyzing at times and makes everything look like a bad investment because it can always go lower. I have left a lot of money on the table and was unfortunately surrounded by a colleague in my earlier years who was even more cautious than I was already (holding 40% cash for 7+ years, etc.)

     

    I don't know if this matches with your investment style, but I like the analogy Peter Lynch gave about investing and 7 stud poker in his book Good to Great. The information available is always evolving, so if you feel like you know a business well enough to invest and think the odds might be there, I have gotten in the practice of buying small positions with the intention to scale up either when prices become more reasonable for a business I like and understand well, or to scale up when a business I know less well begins to give more concrete signs of success.

     

     

     

  9. I guess I'm way less concentrated than others on here. Oh well. Suits me.

     

    By position size:

     

    VGSH

    GDYN

    FB

    TRRSF

    Cash

    JD

    DAVA

    FSV

    MKL

    AMOT

    STNE

    PINS

    EPAM

    CSWI

    TIG

    ESI

    ROP

    FTV

    POST

    DFH

    PAGS

    GOOG

    FRFHF

    GDDY

    WFC

    OLLI

    TV

    CIGI

    TAP

    RGLD

    WRB

    KAR

    HEI

    XPO

    MA

    CBOE

    KMX

    ELLH

    ARCO

    VNT

    ACFN

    STDY.CVR

     

  10. A colleague at work said he was starting a Robinhood account. He's probably the dumbest employee we have. His reason for starting an account? Because his friend who owns a Nissan dealership said that the dealership sales team "does their own work" and "one guy" bought $20k of Gamestop and is now a "millionaire". It's pretty frothy, although I think success stories like GME will fuel the euphoria for a while longer as people pick up "easy money" in stocks like GME.

     

  11. Saying you dont know is bullshit.

     

    Even Buffett admitted last year that the market may be cheap if interest rates stay low.  We just don't know.

     

    https://www.cnbc.com/2019/05/06/warren-buffett-says-stocks-are-ridiculously-cheap-if-interest-rates-stay-at-these-levels.html

     

     

    The market means different things to different people. Berkshire Hathaway for instance, is 99% confidence NOT in the bubble. MSFT is possible, but not likely. ZM, most likely is. One can start there, and plan their allocations for the next 3-5 years rather than the next 3-5 months. 80% BRK, 30% MSFT, and short 15% ZM probably works whether the bubble bursts or not. The names and allocations are just examples, so if you disagree, dont get too hung up on them. The one big thing with euphoric markets is that there are too many participants involved that shouldn't be. Their money is there for our taking.

     

    Anecdotally, there are a lot of people I know who have never been in the market before but are all about it now. Multiple people in my office asking me what stocks to buy, day trading at work, boasting about huge gains in short periods of time, etc. It definitely feels "different" right now, that's for sure.

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