The DIY Investing Podcast
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info_outline 136 - Selling Stocks for Value Investors (Part 1: Strategy Matters)The DIY Investing Podcast
Want Investing Research Directly to your Inbox? Sign-up for my Free Substack: Mental Models discussed in this podcast: Second-Order Effects Mean Reversion Factor Investing Please review and rate the podcast If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience. Follow me on Twitter and YouTube Twitter Handle: YouTube Channel: Show Outline Selling Series A lot of time is spent on buying stocks. Yet, almost just as important, if not more is knowing when to...
info_outline 135 - Investing in the Face of UncertaintyThe DIY Investing Podcast
Want Investing Research Directly to your Inbox? Sign-up for my Free Substack: Mental Models discussed in this podcast: Second-Order Effects Mean Reversion Factor Investing Please review and rate the podcast If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience. Follow me on Twitter and YouTube Twitter Handle: YouTube Channel: Show Outline Today’s podcast will focus on a single precept: You can’t predict the future First and Second Order Effects ...
info_outline 134 - Dollar Cost Averaging into Individual StocksThe DIY Investing Podcast
Want Investing Research Directly to your Inbox? Sign-up for my Free Substack: Mental Models discussed in this podcast: Look-Through Earnings Dollar Cost Averaging Earnings Yield Opportunity Cost Please review and rate the podcast If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience. Follow me on Twitter and YouTube Twitter Handle: YouTube Channel:
info_outline 133 - How to Solve the Dead Money Problem?The DIY Investing Podcast
Mental Models discussed in this podcast: Dead Money Opportunity Cost Time is Money Intrinsic Value Compounding Please review and rate the podcast If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience. Follow me on Twitter and YouTube Twitter Handle: YouTube Channel: Show Outline The Dead Money Problem and Solution “If you remember only one thing today: Time is Money” What is Dead Money? Any asset you own that is not growing intrinsic value...
info_outline 132 - Is it better to pay management fees or performance fees?The DIY Investing Podcast
Mental Models discussed in this podcast: Incentives Skin-in-the-Game Accredited vs non-Accredited Investors Please review and rate the podcast If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience. Follow me on Twitter and YouTube Twitter Handle: YouTube Channel: Show Outline Key Concepts for thinking about compensating a Portfolio Manager Management Fees Management Fees are priced a percentage of the assets under management. A 1% management...
info_outline 131 - How to choose an Investment Manager?The DIY Investing Podcast
Mental Models discussed in this podcast: Opportunity Cost Alpha Superpower of Incentives Competitive Advantages Process vs Results Please review and rate the podcast If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience. Follow me on Twitter and YouTube Twitter Handle: YouTube Channel: Show Outline Key Concepts for selecting a Portfolio Manager Choosing an investment manager is a lot like choosing a stock Don’t invest in anything you don’t understand...
info_outline 130 - How to invest during a crisis?The DIY Investing Podcast
Mental Models discussed in this podcast: Stress Testing Time Horizon Stoicism Please review and rate the podcast If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience. Follow me on Twitter and YouTube Twitter Handle: YouTube Channel: Show Outline The full show notes for this episode are available at Key Concepts for Investing during a Crisis Stress Testing - Bankruptcy Risk? Goal: Survive Stress test businesses not stocks Focus on Fundamentals ...
info_outline 129 - What is the role of a Catalyst in Value Investing?The DIY Investing Podcast
Mental Models discussed in this podcast: Catalyst Activation Energy Please review and rate the podcast If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience. Follow me on Twitter and YouTube Twitter Handle: YouTube Channel: Support the Podcast on Patreon This is a podcast supported by listeners like you. If you’d like to support this podcast and help me to continue creating great investing content, please consider becoming a Patron at . Show Outline...
info_outline 128 - Key Investing Ratios: P/E, P/S, ROA, ROE, Gross MarginThe DIY Investing Podcast
Mental Models discussed in this podcast: Investing Ratios Break Points Please review and rate the podcast If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience. Follow me on Twitter and YouTube Twitter Handle: YouTube Channel: Support the Podcast on Patreon This is a podcast supported by listeners like you. If you’d like to support this podcast and help me to continue creating great investing content, please consider becoming a Patron at . Show...
info_outlineMental Models discussed in this podcast:
- Deferred Tax Liability
- Skin-in-the-game
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Twitter Handle: @TreyHenninger
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Show Outline
The full show notes for this episode are available at https://www.diyinvesting.org/Episode108
Coffee Can Portfolio
- Seeking "Never Sell" stocks - only certain companies qualify
- Benefits from a deferred tax liability (Can become quite significant over time)
- Preferable for individual investors. Hard to implement professionally
Characteristics of a Coffee Can Stock
- An industry that lacks disruption risk
- Banking (Example)
- Stable and high returns on capital/equity (15% or higher)
- Long-term sustainable organic growth of at least 5% but preferably 10-15%. (You don't necessarily want 20%+ growers that will eventually lose all growth)
- Low competition, could be regulated monopoly or oligopoly
- Founder led company or a long-term CEO with skin-in-the-game
- Zero or low debt/leverage policies
- The ability to be a ten-bagger or a 100-bagger
- Usually small with the ability to grow large.
- A small competitor with a competitive advantage (cost perhaps) over larger competitors in a big market.
- Think early Walmart, Costco, Home Depot, GEICO
- Intelligent capital allocation strategies that benefit shareholders
- Lack of dilution
- Growing dividends or buybacks over time (Dividend Champion type stocks)
- Unless it is a roll-up strategy, an average to acquisitions can be helpful, because they often destroy shareholder value.
You can't think of your stocks as a "Portfolio"
- You are a true business owner
- Judge your success by the performance of individual companies, not the overall portfolio return.
- Logical point: If every individual company compounds at 10% per year or more, then the portfolio as a whole by definition must also compound by at least 10% per year.
- Position sizing no longer matters. Your greatest winners may eventually become 50%, 75%, or 90% of your total portfolio. That's okay. That's how the strategy works. This is how the strategy outperforms.
How to implement a Coffee Can Portfolio (The Process)
- Buy one new stock a year, each year you work.
- Put all of your savings for the year into that company.
- Never sell.
- Ideally register for the shares in direct certificate form. It can be electronically held at a transfer agent, but after the year, don't hold the shares directly with a stockbroker.
- This limits your ability to sell the shares and is a huge psychological boost in implementing the strategy.
Summary:
In this episode, I discuss the coffee can portfolio approach to investing. This investing strategy involves never selling a stock once it is bought. Therefore, you must seek high-quality companies with long runways for growth and high returns on capital.