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  • 3 weeks later...
Posted (edited)
17 minutes ago, Eldad said:

His portfolio is a beautiful, simple, collection of monopolies. 

 

This is the kind of portfolio I love to see! Not too many names and all great businesses. Just wish there was less quarterly activity haha.

Edited by Spooky
Posted
2 minutes ago, yesman182 said:

Interesting listening to him say no retailer, insurance company or manufacturer has a moat. 

I would disagree.  Clearly Costco, Chipotle, HD, MCD did insanely well for decades under different management teams.  Manufacturers again can have a moat, hell he is invested in two - GE/Safran.  

Posted
8 minutes ago, Marco Van Basten said:

I would disagree.  Clearly Costco, Chipotle, HD, MCD did insanely well for decades under different management teams.  Manufacturers again can have a moat, hell he is invested in two - GE/Safran.  

Yeah. He has a very high standard on what a moat is looking at his stocks. 

  • 5 months later...
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 5 months later...
Posted

Uh, just the series of interviews that the FT writer had with Hohn as part of his writing of the profile. Lengthy profiles such as this aren’t usually based on a single interview.

Posted
55 minutes ago, Michael Campbell said:

Uh, just the series of interviews that the FT writer had with Hohn as part of his writing of the profile. Lengthy profiles such as this aren’t usually based on a single interview.

Thank you.  

Posted (edited)

It seems like he had a traditional carry structure which helped him make all his money and after that he switched to a charitable model. But unclear exactly how he runs it now. Is he the GP (charitable) and all performance fees accrue to that? Seems like a nice tax advantaged way to compound. 

Edited by hasilp89
Posted
1 hour ago, hasilp89 said:

It seems like he had a traditional carry structure which helped him make all his money and after that he switched to a charitable model. But unclear exactly how he runs it now. Is he the GP (charitable) and all performance fees accrue to that? Seems like a nice tax advantaged way to compound. 

I found it interesting that his first wife was averse to money even though they met at Harvard Business School...  Seems the first Mrs Hohn was quite a hypocrite, unless she confused HBS with a theological seminary...

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