Host Kyle Grieve analyzes the book "The Compounders" and explores why a small group of exceptional businesses can compound capital at high rates for decades. He explains the central importance of maintaining returns on invested capital above the cost of capital, sustaining high reinvestment rates, and leveraging time, while highlighting the roles of decentralization, culture, incentives, and working capital discipline. The episode walks through multiple case studies, including Nvidia, Lifco, Indutrade, Bergman & Beving, AdTech, Constellation Software, Heico, Ametek, and Judges Scientific, to illustrate how great compounders turn time into a superpower.
Sustainability investor Steve Howard outlines four hard truths about capitalism and climate change, arguing that businesses, financial markets, and policies must be rewired to enable large-scale decarbonization. He explains how companies are structurally resistant to change, how short-term profit focus and unpriced environmental externalities distort markets, and why long, loud, legal climate policies are essential to drive investment into cleaner technologies. Drawing on examples from Temasek, IKEA, Singapore, and emerging climate-tech firms, he shows how better (cleaner, cheaper, higher-performing) solutions can scale quickly and calls on policymakers, asset owners, businesses, and individuals to actively redirect capital toward climate solutions.
The episode examines the push to open private equity and other private markets to retail investors, especially through 401(k) plans, following a Trump administration executive order. Law professor Elizabeth DeFontenay and economist Steve Kaplan explain how private equity works, its historical outperformance versus public markets, and why that outperformance has likely diminished as the asset class has matured and become crowded. They warn that high fees, opaque pricing, illiquidity, and second-tier access mean that ordinary investors are unlikely to benefit from this shift, and that expanding retail exposure could change private markets themselves and increase systemic risks.
Host Clay Fink interviews Andrew Brenton of Turtle Creek Asset Management about why he believes public markets have become less efficient and how that shapes his value-oriented investing approach. They discuss Cliff Asness's "The Less Efficient Market Hypothesis," behavioral biases, bubbles, and the impact of passive flows and short-termism. Brenton then walks through Turtle Creek's investment theses and valuation approach for Floor & Decor and Kinsale Capital, and explains how he thinks about cyclicality, intrinsic value, portfolio optimization, and sticking with a high-active-share strategy through periods of underperformance.
Host Kyle Grieve provides a narrative deep dive into the origins and growth of Home Depot, drawing heavily from the founders' book "Built from Scratch". He traces Bernie Marcus and Arthur Blank's early careers, their firing from Handy Dan, the creation of the Home Depot concept, the role of key partners like Ken Langone and Pat Farah, and the company's early financing and expansion challenges. The episode then examines Home Depot's competitive strategy, supplier relationships, management philosophy, and long-term performance, extracting lessons for entrepreneurs and investors about culture, pricing, competition, and disciplined growth.
Host Clay Finck presents Interactive Brokers (IBKR) as his quarterly best quality stock idea, analyzing its business model, economics, and long‑term growth prospects. He covers the firm's history and founder Thomas Pederphy's automation-focused culture, its revenue drivers like commissions and net interest income, and its unique low-cost, tech-heavy positioning versus competitors such as Charles Schwab and Robinhood. The episode also explores IBKR's competitive advantages, management incentives, valuation, key risks, and why Clay holds a 2% personal position in the stock.
The episode is a quarterly mastermind discussion where Stig Brodersen, Tobias Carlisle, and Hari Ramachandra each pitch an investment idea and stress-test each other's theses. Hari presents Sanofi as a relatively cheap, dividend-paying global biopharma with durable vaccine and immunology franchises that he views as a "T-bill with growth" type holding. Stig analyzes Remitly, a fast-growing digital remittance platform, weighing its strong unit economics and underbanked niche against strategic drift, intense competition, and heavy stock-based compensation, while Toby pitches Crocs as a deeply undervalued, cash-generative footwear brand facing fashion, tariff, and acquisition risks but offering significant upside if issues are managed.
Host Kyle Grieve explores how ideas from major philosophers can improve investing decisions, emotional control, and definitions of success. Drawing on Ethan Everett's book 'The Investment Philosophers', he connects thinkers like Spinoza, Nietzsche, Hume, Voltaire, Pascal, William James, Baudrillard, Schopenhauer, Montaigne, Kierkegaard, Camus, Martin Buber, and Bruce Lee to practical investing mindsets and behaviors. The episode blends philosophical concepts with real investing examples from Kyle and well-known investors such as Warren Buffett, Howard Marks, George Soros, and David Einhorn.
Host Kyle Grieve shares his personal investing philosophy, tracing how early speculative losses in cryptocurrencies led him toward disciplined value investing in equities. He explains his return goals, focus on absolute rather than relative performance, a two-bucket framework (quality compounders and microcap inflection-point stocks), detailed criteria for evaluating management and capital efficiency, and his sell and portfolio management rules. Kyle also covers concepts like circle of competence, behavioral biases, environment design for inaction, and reflects candidly on mistakes of commission and omission to illustrate how he continues refining his process.