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Investment Community

by Justin Newdigate

Conversations with the most insightful players in the financial markets ecosystem.
newdigate.substack.com

Copyright: Justin Newdigate

Episodes

Investment Community #9

1h 10m · Published 20 Jun 07:09

Deon Gouws, CIO of Credo, was my special guest on the Investment Community podcast.

In this episode, Deon tells:

* How the most formative experience of his career came from being “technically bankrupt” for a few weeks, due to having a long and geared position in a single stock that tanked as interest rates rose sharply.

* How being a good CIO means having to be skilled at both investment management and people management.

* How he learned to wear his own opinions lightly (“don’t believe your own b******t”).

We also discussed:

* That many different investment approaches can work, as long as the manager has a demonstrable process and sticks to that process through the cycle.

* That the key attributes of an excellent investor are intellectual honesty and emotional stability.

* The importance of focussing on our strengths rather than weaknesses, because that’s how we have a shot at being exceptional.

Deon Gouws is CIO of Credo, an independent wealth management business headquartered in London. Deon began his investment career as an analyst at Old Mutual Asset Management. He left to join Capital Alliance as head of industrials before rejoining Old Mutual as head of research. Deon then spent five years in London as CIO of Sanlam Multi-Managers before returning to South Africa to join RMB Asset Management, first as CIO and then CEO. He then returned to London in 2012 to take up his current position as CIO of Credo.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Investment Community #8

1h 10m · Published 23 May 08:00

Sean Peche, PM and founder of Ranmore Fund Management, was my special guest on the Investment Community podcast.

In this episode, Sean tells:

* Why it’s important to be careful about stock stories. The stock price changes long before the story does, and by the time the story changes, you’ve lost your money.

* How value managers are just as prone as growth managers to falling prey to false narratives about stocks and markets.

* How there’s a lack of evidence that larger investment teams deliver better investment performance than smaller teams.

We also discussed:

* The challenge for active managers to convince their clients that their management fee is good value compared to the fees charged by passives.

* Whether performance fees incentivise fund managers to perform better, or whether these fees simply induce them to take more risk.

* The possibility of a backlash against performance fees, and especially against fund managers’ attempts to reset their high water marks.

Sean Peche is PM and founder of Ranmore Fund Management. Sean’s investment career began in South Africa in 1997 when he joined Old Mutual Asset Management as an equity analyst. In 1999 he joined Decillion Capital as one of its founding members and co-managed their successful BigRock Fund, a South African-based hedge fund. In 2001 he relocated to London with Decillion Fund Management and co-managed a US/European hedge fund. In 2003 he joined London-based Orbis Investment Advisory, before leaving in 2008 to establish Ranmore Fund Management.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Investment Community #7

1h 16m · Published 26 Apr 06:31

Khaya Gobodo, MD of Old Mutual Investments, was my special guest on the Investment Community podcast. 

The recording-quality of the more important end of the conversation is unfortunately quite poor. I hope you’ll find that the exceptional quality of Khaya’s engagement more than compensates for my technical deficiencies.

In this episode Khaya tells:

* How it feels to get a call at 11pm from a government minister when your organisation pulls a credit line to a state-owned enterprise.

* How easily conflicts of interest are resolved if you always act in the best interests of your clients.

* How he sees his role at Old Mutual as the curator of an investment ecosystem that comprises five independent units, each with its own unique culture.

We also discussed:

* The challenges of addressing, in an equitable way, the ever-pressing problems of racism, sexism and ageism.

* The problems that arise when skilled investment professionals are promoted into leadership positions without having developed the necessary soft skills.

* The probability that more than half of SA’s investment firms will not survive.

Khaya Gobodo is MD of Old Mutual Investments, where he oversees both the listed and unlisted asset management businesses of Old Mutual. He began his investment career in 1999 at Investec Asset Management (now renamed Ninety-One), before leaving to co-found Afena Capital in 2005, where he acted as CIO. Khaya returned to Investec for a 3-year stint as director and strategy leader, before taking up his current position at Old Mutual.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Investment Community #6

1h 10m · Published 14 Mar 07:39

In this episode Charles tells:

* How he took advantage of his big break to change the arc of his career.

* How he balances logical analysis with intuition.

* How the best way to get rich is … slowly.

We also discussed:

* The degree to which perfectionists struggle as portfolio managers.

* The importance of culture, and cultural fit, in investment teams.

* The probability of failure of smaller asset management firms in SA.

Charles De Kock is co-head of absolute return funds at Coronation Fund Managers. He started his working life as a lecturer in economics at the University of Pretoria. After 7 years he joined the investment division of Old Mutual, where he ultimately became chief investment officer. After 19 years at Old Mutual he joined Coronation, and he’s been there for the past 17 years.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Investment Community #5

43m · Published 31 Jan 09:03

In this episode (the second of two) Dave tells:

* How to finish first, first you must finish

* How being right can be uncomfortable 

* How important it is to know yourself.

We also discussed:

* How crypto is a con that works if everybody believes, and how that is also true for gold and fiat currency

* How negative real interest rates means we no longer have a yardstick of risk-free return, but rather return-free risk

* How regulation is a massive tax on the investment industry, which delivers no safety benefit for the end-investors.

Dave Foord is CIO of Foord Asset Management, a firm he founded in 1981. He began his investment career in the late 1970s with a three-year stint as an industrial analyst at Old Mutual.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Investment Community #4

54m · Published 17 Jan 08:45

In this episode (the first of two) Dave tells:

* How the highlight of his career is to have survived in the industry for 40+ years

* How it felt to be seen as an idiot for not loading up on tech stocks on the DotCom Bubble

* How he still tap-dances to work every day.

We also discussed:

* How the decision to turn down money had the effect of turning the gatekeepers against him

* How most people are not good investors because they don’t properly understand probability and time

* How investment people are prima donnas, and too many of them together is a recipe for chaos.

Dave Foord is CIO of Foord Asset Management, a firm he founded in 1981. He began his investment career in the late 1970s with a three-year stint as an industrial analyst at Old Mutual.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Investment Community #3

1h 3m · Published 06 Dec 09:01

Rob tells:

* How feeling helpless in the wake of 9/11 enabled him to strip away illusions of control

* How market conditions change but the human psyche does not

* How attacking an analyst is not the same as interrogating an investment thesis.

We also discussed:

* How the green economy is attracting real capex, and is an investable phenomenon

* How tough it is to manage money and manage an investment firm at the same time

* How an ability to listen well is characteristic of excellent investment teams.

Rob Oellermann is a portfolio manager at Laurium Capital, and is responsible for the firm’s global equity offering. 

Prior to this he was CIO of Tantalum Capital, a firm that he co-founded, and which was later merged with Laurium.

Before starting Tantalum, Rob was both a fund manager and head of research at Coronation Fund Managers. He started his investment career in 1994 as an analyst at Allan Gray.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Investment Community #2

1h 1m · Published 08 Nov 12:12

Delphine tells:

* How gender and race are proudly part of her identity, but they don’t define her

* How meritocracy is not compromised when you pursue diversity

* How much hypocrisy surrounds ESG investing.

We also discussed:

* How the job of an analyst is changing dramatically

* How easy it is to confuse confidence and conviction and competence

* How having the wrong owners can destroy an investment firm.

Delphine Govender is co-owner and CIO of Perpetua Investment Managers, a firm she founded in 2012. 

She started her investment career as an analyst at Old Mutual Asset Managers, after she’d completed her articles at Deloitte. 

She later moved on to Allan Gray for 11 years where she became executive director and portfolio manager, before founding Perpetua.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Investment Community #1

58m · Published 12 Oct 08:23

Anet and I had a wide-ranging conversation that I found fascinating.

Some surprising moments:

* How it felt for her to be mistaken for the tea-lady

* How repositioning a portfolio can feel like swapping children

* How important empathy is for investment professionals.

We also discussed:

* How to change the trajectory of your career

* How to develop a psychological edge

* How to create a winning culture.

Anet Ahern is CEO of PSG Asset Management, a position she has held since 2013.

She started her investment career in 1986 at Allan Gray, after which she became a fund manager at Syfrets Managed Assets.

She later moved on to be CIO and CEO of BOE Asset Management, and then became CEO of Sanlam Multi Manager International, before taking on her current role at PSG.

Anet is the longest-standing female CFA charterholder in South Africa.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Introducing "Investment Community"

2m · Published 22 Sep 09:14

Newdigate Insights is getting an upgrade. I’m adding a podcast to the existing newsletter.

To keep things clear and simple, I’ve created two sections in Newdigate Insights:

* In My Opinion. This is the existing newsletter, which is a series of articles to help investment professionals get better at dealing with the soft issues of investment management.

* Investment Community. This is the forthcoming podcast, which is a series of conversations with the most insightful players in the financial markets ecosystem. It’s a podcast for investment professionals.

Investment Community

In the podcast I’ll be in conversation with: 

* The most experienced fund managers and analysts

* The CEOs and CIOs of investment firms

* The asset consultants who evaluate those managers and firms

* The multi-managers who allocate to them.

Most of the conversations will be about life in the public markets. And I’ll also be in conversation with players who operate in the private markets, and with entrepreneurs who have taken their private companies public. Each of these different members of the investment community has a unique perspective on the financial markets.

As a subscriber you will receive both the newsletter and the podcast directly into your email inbox as they are published. 

If you’ve not yet subscribed, please do. It’ll make a difference to the results that you achieve.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newdigate.substack.com

Investment Community has 20 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 18:53:19. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on November 20th 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on March 26th, 2024 01:44.

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