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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this quarterly mastermind episode, three seasoned investors tackle a fascinating trio of investment opportunities across vastly different industries. Stig dives deep into Uber's evolution beyond ride-hailing, exploring the company's surprising advertising potential and defensible network effects (09:39), while wrestling with the looming threat of autonomous vehicles that could reshape the entire landscape. Toby makes a compelling contrarian case for Bath and Body Works—a fragrance retailer generating massive free cash flow at trough valuations (77:27)—betting on customer loyalty and brand strength in an AI-resistant business model. Meanwhile, Hari presents Merck as a pharmaceutical giant trading at deep discounts due to patent cliff fears (62:49), arguing that the market is overreacting to predictable industry cycles while ignoring the company's dominant position in the rapidly growing oncology market.
Host of The Investor's Podcast since 2014, which has garnered over 180 million downloads. Former Berkshire Hathaway shareholder meeting attendee and co-founder of TIP Media, building one of the largest finance podcast networks globally.
Founder of Acquirer's Multiple and portfolio manager of ZIG and DEEP ETFs focused on deep value investing. Author and quantitative value investor with extensive experience in contrarian small-cap strategies, frequently appearing on major financial podcasts.
Co-conceiver of The Investor's Podcast idea during a 2014 Berkshire Hathaway meeting flight. Active investor and financial analyst who regularly contributes insights on technology disruption, market cycles, and investment strategy across multiple asset classes.
Stig's approach to building conviction reveals a powerful truth: "I need to first own the stock. Learn differently whenever I own a stock." (04:20) Instead of trying to perfect your analysis upfront, start with a small position to engage your learning systems differently. Your brain processes risk and opportunity with heightened clarity when you have actual skin in the game.
When multiples appear "absolutely ridiculous," dig deeper into the operational leverage story. Uber's deceptively low margins hide massive earning potential as they don't need significant CapEx to scale. The key insight: companies in inflection moments often trade at seemingly insane valuations that mask extraordinary underlying economics about to emerge.
Unlike demand-driven businesses, platforms like Uber require critical mass of supply (drivers) first to create meaningful demand. (11:20) This creates a powerful moat once established—competitors must burn enormous cash to reach that supply threshold. Identify businesses where supply scarcity creates the network effect, not just user growth.
Toby's Bath & Body Works pick at 40% off all-time highs with 12% free cash flow yield exemplifies perfect contrarian positioning. (77:28) The best opportunities emerge when high-quality businesses with loyal customer bases trade at trough valuations due to temporary headwinds or sector rotation.
Hari's Merck analysis reveals the pharmaceutical playbook: patent cliffs are features, not bugs. (62:56) Instead of trying to predict specific drug success, bet on companies with proven capabilities to navigate these cycles. Focus on businesses where the pattern of disruption and renewal is well-established and management has repeatedly executed through similar challenges.