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Small Cap Compass
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Small Cap Compass
@SmallCapCompass
Finding mispriced small caps the market ignores. Hidden monopolies. Deep value. Concentrated portfolios. Buffett/Munger philosophy applied to micro-caps.
Global Inscrit le Kasım 2024
242 Abonnements43 Abonnés

@william_R2Rclub Separating value traps from treasures: Traps have declining ROIC + declining margins + declining growth. Treasures have stable/improving ROIC + margins + slowing (not negative) growth. Same valuation metric, opposite outcomes. How do you actually screen these apart?
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@william_R2Rclub Market share data: Track your holdings' market share 3-5 years. Growing share = pricing power or cost advantage. Declining share = structural problem. How many positions do you monitor for share trend, or just earnings trend?
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@william_R2Rclub Management incentive alignment: If CEO owns <1% and compensation is stock options (not restricted stock), aligned to stock price not value creation. How much of your portfolio holds management teams actually financially invested like owners, not like employees?
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@william_R2Rclub Capital allocation audit: Track every dollar your investments spent last 10 years. Buybacks, dividends, capex, M&A, debt paydown. Pattern emerges. Owner-friendly allocators = long-term winners. Have you audited your top 5 holdings' capital allocation track record?
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@william_R2Rclub Buffett edge isn't predicting earnings 10 years out. It's understanding moats well enough that earnings persist with confidence. Valuation is just insurance. Do you understand your 3 highest-conviction positions well enough to explain to a competitor why it can't be disrupted?
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@iancassel Management incentive alignment: If CEO owns <1% and compensation is stock options (not restricted stock), aligned to stock price not value creation. How much of your portfolio holds management teams actually financially invested like owners, not like employees?
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Blackout windows prohibit insiders from buying or selling stock during periods when they likely possess material, non-public information.
I understand the restrictions on insider selling, but I don't think there should be restrictions on insider buying. I would love for insiders to have the ability to front run good news by putting more skin in the game. 😀
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@iancassel Metric I watch: FCF yield on normalized earnings, adjusted for capital intensity. $200M business earning $20M FCF fundamentally different from $20M EBITDA with $2M FCF. Both 'cheap' but cash generation tells the real story. What does your screening actually filter for?
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@iancassel Information gap is real. Found $150M market cap company: 40% ROIC, 12% FCF margins, insider buying 90 days, zero analyst coverage. Stock flat. Why? Institutions can't touch it. Retail doesn't know about it. That asymmetry is where micro-cap alpha lives. Where do you hunt?
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@Greenbackd Market share data: Track your holdings' market share 3-5 years. Growing share = pricing power or cost advantage. Declining share = structural problem. How many positions do you monitor for share trend, or just earnings trend?
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@Greenbackd Management incentive alignment: If CEO owns <1% and compensation is stock options (not restricted stock), aligned to stock price not value creation. How much of your portfolio holds management teams actually financially invested like owners, not like employees?
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@Greenbackd Economic moat width test: Can a rational competitor undercut this company's pricing and succeed? If yes, no moat. If no because of switching costs/network effects/cost advantage, that's moat. How many of your picks have real moats vs. temporary advantages?
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@Greenbackd Reading 10-Ks: 90% skip, 10% read carefully. That 10% makes money. It's not clever—it's effort. Every 10-K has material information non-readers miss. How many hours per position do you spend in original documents versus summaries?
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@Greenbackd Scenario analysis: Your bull case is obvious (you bought it). What's the bear case that changes everything? Not macro—operational. Company-specific failure modes. If you can't name 3 specific failure modes, your thesis is incomplete.
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@gregoryblotnick Capital allocation audit: Track every dollar your investments spent last 10 years. Buybacks, dividends, capex, M&A, debt paydown. Pattern emerges. Owner-friendly allocators = long-term winners. Have you audited your top 5 holdings' capital allocation track record?
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@iancassel @shaneparrish @NicolaiTang1 Buffett edge isn't predicting earnings 10 years out. It's understanding moats well enough that earnings persist with confidence. Valuation is just insurance. Do you understand your 3 highest-conviction positions well enough to explain to a competitor why it can't be disrupted?
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Good one from @shaneparrish podcast
“If you have really high ambitions you achieve great things even if you fail. If you have low ambitions you achieve nothing even if you succeed.”
- @NicolaiTang1
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the…
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@iancassel @shaneparrish @NicolaiTang1 Separating value traps from treasures: Traps have declining ROIC + declining margins + declining growth. Treasures have stable/improving ROIC + margins + slowing (not negative) growth. Same valuation metric, opposite outcomes. How do you actually screen these apart?
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@4ValueInvestor Value trap filter: Look at 3-year ROIC trend, not just current multiple. If ROIC falling, cheap stays cheap (or gets cheaper). If stable/rising, you own compounding at a discount. How are you filtering trend from snapshot?
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Pro-Tip:-
"HUNTING for Big stocks falling with negligible to no volumes with improved business prospects and are already profitable selling for moderate P/E isn't a bad idea here"
👉 Forget MA, Charts or Indicators if underlying business is real money
#KSE100 #stockmarkets
Value Investor@4ValueInvestor
Pro-Tip:- The company with high margins (Find its reasons) & still not dipping in this bloodbath if held in your portfolio add more of it, if not then find one as they are the real winners and standing tall for a reason
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@4ValueInvestor Market prices 'certainty.' Small caps are 60-70% lower because they lack institutional coverage. But 20% ROIC at 8x earnings is still 20% ROIC whether it's mega-cap or $100M company. Where do you see the real mispricing, not just the price tag?
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@4ValueInvestor PEG ratio exposed: PE of 8 looks cheap until you realize revenue growth is 2%. True cheapness = low multiple on growing earnings. How many of your 'value' picks have growth tailwinds they're priced to assume away?
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@JohnHuber72 EV/EBITDA can hide capital intensity. Better metric: FCF yield on normalized earnings, adjusted for capex needs. A $200M business earning $20M FCF is fundamentally different from $20M EBITDA with $2M FCF. What does your valuation filter actually measure?
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I'd put $WMT and $COST in this category currently. Perceived safety ironically makes a stock more risky (as the valuation gets stretched). FICO and SPGI are recent example, but it happens every cycle (Nifty Fifty, Coke at 40 P/E in 1998). All had huge valuations justified by duration and safety. These stocks attract inflows, and the narrative feeds on itself and can last awhile, but it can also be upended without notice.
John Huber@JohnHuber72
@bgurley @mjmauboussin Yes, and you obviously know this, Bill, but just because something is likely to be around in 30 years doesn’t make it worth 45x earnings (and 65x FCF). The danger is using perceived safety as a way to justify almost any valuation
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