Wrote a new one today about Constellation Software $CSU.TO $CSU.
Charlie Munger said this once: "The highest form of civilization is a seamless web of deserved trust."
CSU's latest minority stake in Saber $SABR installed David McKay (CEO of Vela Operating Group) and in an exclusive interview he talked about his governance mandate.
In light of all the talk about the peak of Private Equity (and Debt for that matter), it's interesting to juxtapose how CSU handles things differently as a "strategic partner" and how I think they embody what Munger said above.
#PrivateEquity#PrivateDebt
Post in 🔗 (no paywall):
BREAKING: Mohnish Pabrai's Pabrai Wagon Funds Shareholder call -- touches on investment in $CSU.TO $CSU and Mark Leonard.
Here are the key points regarding Constellation:
- Acquisition Strategy: They have a vast universe of 50,000-70,000 potential targets they monitor, focusing on vertical software businesses whose founders may be looking to retire
- Impact of AI: Pabrai believes AI is a tailwind for Constellation, as it may reduce their operational costs and lower the valuation multiples they pay for acquisitions
- Valuation and Investment: Pabrai invested because the stock price finally dropped into a range he found compelling
Former Soros clerc, Sec. Bessent (no longer follows me on X) is so glaringly out of his depth; he has no idea about:
1- Fat Tails
2- Multiplicative interaction between variables
3- Irreversibility
there have been 30+ reports on how to improve Canada's productivity in the last 2 decades. the latest parliamentary report just dropped on March 13 with 40 recommendations.
it's astounding that we keep studying this and drawing the same conclusions. we've known how to fix this for years. now let's do it.
Stewardship is a word that I've come across a few times lately. Once such instance is fellow $CSU.TO $CSU follower: @CJ0pp3l's bio.
No matter what happens to the world of seat-based pricing or outcomes-based pricing, there will still be a need to be an owner of the enterprise and to service its customers. In the end, the highest level of achievement is stewardship -- so might as well make that one's north star from the very beginning.
New (and free) article in 🔗 on $CSU.TO $CSU.
Nuclear has been the talk of the town lately. Power-hungry AI. Jensen says it's the bottleneck. So do many others in the industry.
It's also an industry I have over a decade of experience in as an Engineer and Designer.
Now I pair that with my experience in SaaS and Software in this DEEP DIVE where we explore the industry, how entrenched it is as a software provider and how this Vertical is unlike any other.
Hope you enjoy! Post in link 🔗.
-ET
P.S. Of course I write about $CSU.TO $CSU.
If you have $30K gross income...
Personally at 43.41% tax it's worth $16,977 after tax.
In a corporation in Ontario - after tax it's worth $26,340.
This idea has me thinking about the benefits of incorporating to grow your business faster. 👇🧵
Google wasn't the first to offer search
In fact, they competed with Yahoo!, Altavista, Excite, and a dozen more.
They were 4 years late to the market and ultimately dominated.
The ultimate AI winners, may not be the currently leaders today.
2016 Liberals: End oil
2017 Liberals: End oil
2018 Liberals: End oil
2019 Liberals: End oil
2020 Liberals: End oil
2021 Liberals: End oil
2022 Liberals: End oil
2023 Liberals: End oil
2024 Liberals: End oil
2025 Liberals: End oil
2026 Liberals: Can you make more oil, please?
I've lived this. Let me tell you where this is going.
When I was flying F-18's around the Gulf decades ago, the Strait of Hormuz was first and foremost in planning sessions from Washington to my ready room.
And here is what we knew.
It could not be secured then. Not truly secured. 100% secured.
And that was the key.
Today that is more true than ever. The nature of war changed forever in 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine and got its ass kicked in the first 2 months.
Drones and cheap missiles revolutionized warfare, and gave small nations an assymetry in power projection they had never possessed.
What should get everyone's attention is the Iranian attack on Lars Raffan, the world's largest LNG processing facility.
After 3 weeks of complete air superiority and saturated bombing that "ran out of targets" Iran managed to launch 5 ballistic missiles at that field.
The Shahed 131 and 136 drones cost between $10-50k and can be transported in small pieces in a pickup, assembled onsite in hours and launched.
Most intercepts on our side cost $4M for the Patriot and up to $12M for the THAAD.
And here is something that should get your attention. We will not be able to rebuild our inventories without China's cooperation. Full stop. They have us by the balls due to one thing:
Rare Earth minerals, magnets, and most importantly, the refining needed to process them.
If this conflict continues things are going to break in the system. Severely break.