Active Investor Conferences

2.5K posts

Active Investor Conferences banner
Active Investor Conferences

Active Investor Conferences

@activemanagers

We host conferences: the London Value Investor Conference, Value Invest New York and the Quality-Growth Investor Conference in New York and London.

London, United Kingdom Beigetreten Ağustos 2022
538 Folgt206 Follower
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
Paul R. La Monica
Paul R. La Monica@LaMonicaBuzz·
Mario Gabelli and John W. Rogers Jr. are investing legends. Here’s what the two members of the Barron’s Roundtable had to say about the market and some of their favorite stocks at the Value Invest New York conference today. My story for @barronsonline. barrons.com/articles/mario…
English
0
2
4
2K
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
Smead Capital Management
Smead Capital Management@SmeadCap·
This morning, CEO & Portfolio Manager @Cole_Smead presented "Manias in American Capex Cycles" at the Value Invest New York 2026 conference hosted by @activemanagers. His presentation covered past investment bubbles coinciding with emerging technologies—and how those historical lessons shape our thinking today.
Smead Capital Management tweet media
English
1
1
3
221
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
Heading to the Value Investing New York conference presented by @activemanagers this Thursday — I am presenting some stock ideas and sitting down with John Rogers of @ArielInvests Investments for a second conversation. Last time we spoke he told me something I haven't forgotten. More to come....
English
0
1
7
603
Active Investor Conferences
Active Investor Conferences@activemanagers·
In January, we revealed that the stocks presented at Value Invest New York in March 2025 have shown strong performance. A look back at past conferences shows a similarly positive trend for attendees looking for investment ideas. The portfolio of stocks presented in December 2023 has increased by 93% in just over two years. At this week's conference, we will also highlight other stocks presented at events prior to 2023, which have demonstrated similarly impressive performance over a longer time frame. This sets a high standard for the speakers at Value Invest New York on March 19th. Currently, there are 25 stocks on the agenda to be presented throughout the day, covering a diverse range of sectors including software, hotels, education services, conglomerates, pharmaceuticals, TV networks, personal care products, jewelry, aerospace, and more. For the final agenda for VINY 2026, please visit: valueinvest.com/newyork/viny-2… If you have not yet registered, please do so by the close of business on Monday to secure your attendance. For any questions, feel free to email us at newyork@valueinvest.com. #valueinvesting
Active Investor Conferences tweet mediaActive Investor Conferences tweet mediaActive Investor Conferences tweet media
English
0
0
1
65
Active Investor Conferences
Active Investor Conferences@activemanagers·
Just over a week to go until the annual Value Invest New York on March 19. Here's the preview video for the event this year. To see the agenda, which includes sessions with Mario Gabelli and John W. Rogers Jr, visit the VINY website: valueinvest.com/newyork/viny-2…
English
0
0
4
624
Active Investor Conferences
Active Investor Conferences@activemanagers·
The stocks presented at Value Invest New York in March 2025 have seen a remarkable increase of 70% over the past 10 months. We are excited to return to New York next month for Value Invest New York on March 18th, followed by the New York Quality-Growth Investor Conference on March 19th. This week, attendees can take advantage of the earlybird rate of $599 for each event. With the impressive stock picks shared in detail at the conferences, the investment in attendance could easily pay for itself. For more details and to register, please visit the following links: Value Invest New York - March 18th: valueinvest.com/newyork/ New York Quality-Growth Investor Conference - March 19th: qualitygrowthinvestor.com/newyork/ #valueinvesting *Prices correct as of January 30th, 2026. Prices calculated using Dividend-adjusted share pricing using S&P Cap-IQ. Not investment advice.
Active Investor Conferences tweet media
English
1
0
5
148
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Money Maze Podcast
The Money Maze Podcast@themoneymazepod·
Thank you to Robert Hunter and the Value Investor Conference and Quality-Growth Investor Conference team for another excellent conference this year!
The Money Maze Podcast tweet media
English
0
1
2
263
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
Excited to be presenting tomorrow at the @outstandinginv conference on the case for investing in Trophy Assets & Non-Traditional Value. More excited to be interviewing my friend @Scaramucci at the conference on Trump, tariffs and much more. hubs.ly/Q03m8VPM0
English
0
1
5
587
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
What do $GPN, $AMP, $HD, and $TKO have in common? They were all discussed at two major investor conferences we attended last week—and we’ve got thoughts. Check them out in our latest Sunday Digest + subscribe open.substack.com/pub/boyarresea… @outstandinginv
The Boyar Value Group tweet media
English
0
1
6
902
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
Lindell Train just gave a compelling presentation on $TKO at the @outstandinginv conference. Anyone have thoughts on the name . Not cheap but certainly high quality
English
3
1
2
679
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
Glad to hear Jennifer Foster from Chilton Investments pitch $HD at the @outstandinginv .It is a stock we bought in the financial crisis and continue to own. High quality business with lots of tailwinds.
English
1
1
1
502
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
Interesting ideas from today’s @outstandinginv conference. While not an area we follow Django Davidson made a compelling pitch for investing in Platinum. C.T Fitzpatrick discussed why he exited $kkr and David Samra of @artisanpartners discussed his investment in Phillips (we prefer $GEHC) Nice running into @EdgeCGroup as well!
English
1
2
1
1.1K
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
This is an amazing stat from @WSJmarkets Of the $8.3 billion that individual investors poured into single stocks last week, roughly $3.2 billion flowed into Tesla, according to a Wednesday report from JPMorgan analysts.   $tsla
English
0
2
3
1K
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
Richard Philbin
Richard Philbin@RichardPPhilbin·
A great chart
Richard Philbin tweet media
English
0
1
1
142
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
James Eagle
James Eagle@JamesEagle17·
Is innovation a fantastic bargain or does quality growth matter? Here's a good old fashioned three-year track record for Warren Buffett and Cathie Woods. I respect both because they follow their conviction. But clearly the investment environment has changed. What do you think?
English
17
74
211
29.1K
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
Fun fact: 📉➡️📈 Historically, buying the S&P 500 after a 5%+ drop has been a winning move—yielding a positive return 85% of the time over the next 6 months, according to Goldman Sachs' Ben Snider. Timing the market? Tough. Taking advantage of fear? Priceless. #Investing #StockMarket
English
0
3
7
847
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
Below is the re-released episode of my podcast with @BillAckman , reflecting the original order of the Q&A at his request. blog.boyarvaluegroup.com/boyar-value-gr… For clarity: No substantive changes were ever made—any edits were solely for listener experience or compliance, which is standard practice in podcasting. I had also communicated these edits in advance to both Bill and a member of his team via email. Integrity is everything, and I would never alter an interview in a way that misrepresents a guest’s words. I hope you enjoy the conversation.
Bill Ackman@BillAckman

Last week, I did a podcast which included some commentary on Warren Buffett who has been an extremely important hero for me and an unofficial mentor. The media, as they sadly often do, twisted my words about Buffett to create the impression that I "had taken a shot at him." In short, I was asked a few questions about Buffett including why Berkshire was holding so much cash, why we had sold Berkshire during Covid and thereby owned the stock for a relatively short period, and whether our approach to corporate oversight is more Buffett or Greg Abel, Buffett's CEO heir apparent. I explain my remarks below: Why I Believe That Buffett is Holding So Much Cash The reason I believe that Buffett is holding so much cash is that he has found it difficult to find businesses he likes at prices he likes in light of current market conditions. On the podcast, I explained that: "But Warren sort of has this price discipline where if it trades for more than 10 times operating income, no matter how good the business, he won't buy it and that's worked really well for him for 60, 70 years. Why should he change?" This was not meant as a criticism. It was simply an observation of Buffett's approach, which has led to arguably the best long-term investment record ever. On Why We Sold Berkshire During Covid I explained on the podcast that we sold Berkshire during Covid because we found better things to do with our capital. Again, this was not meant as a criticism. While Berkshire stock declined significantly during the Covid crash, other businesses we knew as well, traded to even larger discounts to intrinsic value, so we redeployed capital from Berkshire to those companies which included Hilton, Loews, Restaurant Brands and others. As I said on the podcast: "We probably lost more money on Berkshire, ironically, than almost anyone else because of the scale of our investment, and we sold part of the stake back to Warren, by the way. We wanted to at least contribute to Berkshire's intrinsic value. We could redeploy the capital in Hilton at $55 a share and Lowe's at $70, and other businesses, and that turned into a very good decision. So the benefit of owning liquid securities is you can sell a 70 cent dollar to buy a 40 cent dollar. And that's what we did, and maybe some at 30 cents." On Our Approach to Governance Buffett vs. Abel On the podcast, I said: "We bought Berkshire because we thought it was very cheap and we're Warren Buffett fans. And even after Buffett passes and I hope he continues to live forever and he's doing a pretty good job on the forever part I think the next generation of leadership is very good and I think they'll be that much more disciplined. There's a lot of value to be extracted in running the businesses that Berkshire owns better, so that itself was a pretty good story. Our job is to oversee how's management doing, make sure they have the right incentives, make sure they make the right capital allocation decisions, but we view our job as more chief capital allocator. Maybe we focus on designing compensation incentives and then making the hard decision sometimes to replace a leader, but we don't run the business. Greg Abel, I think I was more of an operator. Now you're going to have more of an operator in charge of Berkshire and I think there's a lot of value that can be created at Berkshire with better operations. I mean Burlington Northern, for example, is the biggest railroad but it's probably the least efficiently operated of all the railroads years ago. I think the next generation of leadership will be a little more disciplined about making sure the right people run the companies. But we view our role as capital allocation, certainly beginning of life of this company, identifying transactions, executing on them after we do proper due diligence, making sure the right person is running them, giving the right incentives and letting them do their thing." The press interpreted my above remarks as critical of Buffett when they were not intended to be. Buffett has taken a pretty hands off approach to overseeing the management of his companies. I don't think he likes firing CEOs, and he has built many decade relationships with his CEOs and the families that run businesses that he has acquired. He values those relationships over the incremental economics that could be extracted if a better operator were running those businesses. In my commentary, I was explaining my view that the next generation of Berkshire leadership is likely going to be more focused on improving operations, and won't have the same relationship history that has likely constrained Buffett from taking more steps to improve operations. Again, this was not intended to be a criticism of Buffett. In fact, there is lot of good to be said about the loyalty he has shown to the leaders he has hired over time. I thought the podcast was excellent and I encourage you to watch if you are interested. My only critique is that when I reviewed the transcript this morning, I realized that the podcaster, Jonathan Boyar, had cut and pasted the interview and put all the Buffett commentary together, which may have changed, perhaps subtly, the impression the original would have conveyed. I believe that podcasts should be largely unedited real time recordings of what was said (subject on occasion to compliance-related editing) so I was surprised when I read the transcript in that it did not match my recollection of how the interview transpired, which may have contributed to any misimpressions. I have asked Jonathan Boyar to release the original interview without the cutting and pasting so that my views can be better understood.

English
3
10
56
202.8K
Active Investor Conferences retweetet
The Boyar Value Group
The Boyar Value Group@BoyarValue·
Just finished a two hour wide ranging interview with @BillAckman where we discussed antisemitism, his thoughts on how @realDonaldTrump is doing,@elonmusk , DODGE, and of course the @HowardHughesHQ transaction. Editing it now and aim to get it out tomorrow. $HHH
English
3
2
27
2.1K
Active Investor Conferences
Active Investor Conferences@activemanagers·
Attendees familiar with our conferences are aware of our detailed stock pick performance records dating back to 2012 for the London Value Investor Conference. These records consistently demonstrate significant outperformance compared to the MSCI World index across multiple years. The success story continues with the Value Invest New York conference, showcasing the stock performance data from December 2023. Mark Hiley from The Analyst is in the lead by presenting Leonardo S.p.A., +163%. When viewed collectively as a "portfolio," the stocks from VINY 2023 exhibited a growth of +45.9%, surpassing the MSCI World index's +27.4% during the same period. Looking ahead, the upcoming Value Invest New York is scheduled for March 26, followed by the inaugural Quality-Growth Investor Conference in New York on March 27. Registration links for both events are available below: - Value Invest New York 2025: valueinvest.com/newyork/ - Quality-Growth New York: qualitygrowthinvestor.com/newyork/ Please note that all price calculations are based on S&P Cap IQ dividend-adjusted share prices accurate as of February 20, 2025. This information is provided for reference purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. It's important to acknowledge that the managers may have executed transactions at varying prices. #valueinvesting
Active Investor Conferences tweet media
English
0
0
0
85