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Økonomi & Business
My guest this week, back for a second conversation, is Pat Dorsey. Pat ran equity research at Morningstar before leaving to start his own asset management company: Dorsey Asset Management. His areas of deep interest are competitive advantage and capital allocation. He believes that capital allocation should be in service of competitive advantage and invests in a concentrated portfolio that he and his team feel embody these ideas. If you have not already, I strongly recommend listening to our first conversation, which is a sort of crash course on moats. In this conversation, we cover different ground. We spend much more time on individual stocks like Facebook, Google, and Chegg, using them as examples to explore Pat’s investment philosophy and strategy. Across a few conversations with Pat, I can tell he is in love with this stuff, and I always enjoy talking to investors like him who so passionately pursue and edge. Please enjoy round two with Pat Dorsey. For more episodes go to InvestorFieldGuide.com/podcast. Sign up for the book club, where you’ll get a full investor curriculum and then 3-4 suggestions every month at InvestorFieldGuide.com/bookclub. Follow Patrick on Twitter at @patrick_oshag Links Referenced Pat Dorsey's first appearance on the podcast HQ - Live Trivia Game Show Books Referenced World After Capital Principles: Life and Work Show Notes 2:15 – (First Question) – Pat’s methods for valuing a business 4:17 – Is this process done after they would first identify potential targets for investment 5:11 – Pat’s take on how the market classifies stocks as growth vs value 6:40 – Qualitative insights and why the market can’t price them very accurately 9:57 – The business model behind zero marginal cost distribution business model 12:00 – Network effects and the potential downside to them down the road 13:54 – Valuing Facebook as a business heavily reliant on network effects 16:45 – What would have to change for Pat’s position on Facebook to radically change 18:58 – Most important lessons that a smaller/private business could learn from Facebook or Google’s business models 19:48 – Where is Amazon in Pat’s portfolio 22:06 – An example of where primary research led to a big surprise about a company 24:05 – The value of travel in this business, starting with recent travel to India 26:05 – Why are they targeting India and Japan 27:24 – How does he think about the risk of investing in foreign markets 29:52 – His thinking on relative vs absolute market share 31:26 – Exploring the SaaS business model 34:35 – The application of moats and pricing power with SaaS businesses 34:36 – Pat Dorsey's first appearance on the podcast 40:07 – Other models that Pat explores and how to screen for them 41:37 – How does he parse the difference between attention and demand 43:19 – How would Pat monetize something like HQ - Live Trivia Game Show that has aggregated massive amount of attention 45:19 – How does Pat react to the idea that attention is scarce and human capital is so crucial 45:14 – World After Capital 47:04 – How does Pat evaluate human capital in a business 48:09 – Experience in starting an asset management business 50:20 – What are the levers that are biggest value drivers in the asset management business 53:57 – Pat’s view on the strength of the relationship between risk and return 57:06 – The most risk Pat has taken in the face of uncertainty 59:23 – Favorite recent learning resource 59:43 – Principles: Life and Work Learn More For more episodes go to InvestorFieldGuide.com/podcast. Sign up for the book club, where you’ll get a full investor curriculum and then 3-4 suggestions every month at InvestorFieldGuide.com/bookclub Follow Patrick on twitter at @patrick_oshag
Release date
Lydbog: 20. februar 2018
Dansk
Danmark