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David Orr, founder and CIO of Militia Capital, discusses transforming his $160 million long-short equity hedge fund into a multi-manager platform. Starting with just $3 million in 2021, the fund has grown primarily through profits rather than capital raises. (01:57) Orr explains his unique approach to finding uncorrelated portfolio managers and his willingness to speak openly on social media despite industry conventions.
David Orr is the founder and CIO of Militia Capital, a hedge fund that launched in 2021 with $3 million and has grown to $160 million in assets under management. He has a background in poker which influences his risk management approach and portfolio manager selection process. Orr is known for his active presence on finance Twitter and his contrarian investment philosophy focused on balance sheet analysis and short selling.
Many investors, particularly self-described value investors, fail to properly analyze balance sheets and capital structures. (33:40) Orr emphasizes that you can have a reasonable operating business, but if it's sitting behind massive debt or lease liabilities, the equity can become worthless quickly. This fundamental analysis is often ignored by both value investors who focus solely on price multiples and story stock investors who rely purely on sentiment and momentum.
Rather than relying on overly conservative compliance professionals, Orr advocates for reading actual regulations yourself. (06:27) He discovered that many compliance restrictions were interpretations rather than actual legal requirements. By using the 506(c) exemption instead of the more restrictive 506(b), he gained significant marketing flexibility while still maintaining proper investor accreditation verification.
Successful multi-manager platforms require finding portfolio managers with different styles and geographic focuses to maintain low correlation. (49:01) Orr specifically seeks quirky thinkers who operate outside conventional frameworks, and he's particularly interested in long-short bond and biotech specialists. The key is understanding their risk-taking patterns while allowing them significant autonomy.
During speculative rallies, watch for correlation breakdown among momentum stocks as a signal of impending reversal. (39:48) Orr explains that when speculative money spreads from epicenter stocks to broader junk names, and then correlation dies down before prices fall, it indicates the market has spread to too much speculative content with no remaining dry powder.
Tax loss harvesting and holding long positions for extended periods can provide significant alpha, especially with primarily US-based taxable investors. (22:01) Orr regularly harvests tax losses on short positions by closing them and reopening after 30 days, while holding quality longs for years to capture the tax advantage of long-term capital gains treatment.