TIP 039: THE GREAT MINDS OF INVESTING PART II

W/ WILLIAM GREEN

31 May 2015

In this second part episode with William Green, Stig and Preston continue discussing the extraordinary people William has interviewed for his book, The Great Minds of Investing. William’s book features profiles of 33 of the most accomplished investors of our time.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Who is William Green?
  • Who is the greatest mind of investing?
  • William Green’s personal experience with value investing
  • William Green’s impression on Mohnish Pabrai and Joel Greenblatt

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Preston Pysh  1:03  

Hey, how’s everybody doing out there? This is Preston Pysh and I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast. And as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host, Stig Brodersen, out in Denmark. This is our second part interview with William Green. So what we’re going to do is we’re just going to transition to the recording that we have for the second part.

Stig Brodersen  1:19  

So both Chris and I, we are big fans of Mohnish. And he’s really someone that we’ve been looking into. Even though, he’s kind of a private person, not to say, I don’t know what your impression is, but that’s at least what the impression that we have. But I would actually like to hear if you can give us any background information on Mohnish. 

I mean, he’s obviously a smart guy. He is having 26% annually for 19 years, and soon he’s going to launch his new company that’s been listed here in the fall, or that is at least what the rumors are saying, but could you give us any background information on Mohnish?

William Green  1:54  

Yeah, Mohnish is absolutely fascinating. I flew to Irvine, California to meet Mohnish and spent the best part of six hours interviewing him. I would say for the next couple of days I was kind of buzzing, you know, because he’s so larger than life and so full of personality. He has such a brilliant mind that you are almost on a high after talking to him. 

And one of the things that’s really fascinating about Mohnish is that basically he started out as a tech guy, right? He studied engineering, and he took a class at Clemson College. He was an immigrant from India, and he took a class at Clemson College, not a very well known University in finance. He said he just thought the finance students were idiots and he said, none of them would be able to cope with this electrical engineering class. 

And so, he totally dismissed the idea of an investing career. And his finance professor saw his grades and just he was so off the charts that he came [out with] such a wide margin that his finance professor said, “No, you got to become an investor,” and Mohnish dismisses this. He set up a tech company which ultimately he sold for about $6 million. 

And along the way, I think it was in 1994, he reads about Buffet, really because I think Mohnish has been in an airport and he stumbles across a book by Peter Lynch, reads: Peter Lynch talking about Buffett, started studying Buffett, and starts to think, well, wait a second, how did this guy accumulate money at such high rates of return? 

And so, he starts to sort of reverse engineer what Buffett did. He said, basically, I figured out that Buffet was laying down the laws of the investing universe. What’s fascinating about Mohnish is that he has this idea that you really don’t need any original ideas in life at all to do brilliantly. And so, Mohnish describes himself as a shameless copycat, and so he just dissects what Buffett does and later, what Munger does. 

He launches a 30-year game to turn $1 million into $1 billion by compounding a 26% a year. What’s fascinating to me is this idea that you can kind of reverse engineer the great minds and figure out: how do I apply this to my own life? And Mohnish has done this in this sort of maniacally focused way in every area of his life. The structure of his fund is based on the limited partnerships that Buffett had in the 1950s. 

So, you have an annual hurdle where you have to make 6%, I think, and after the 6%, you just get 25% of all of the profits, and there’s no management fee–no annual management fee. So if you do really, really well, in your investment returns, you make an enormous profit as the money manager, but if you’re a bad investor, you make nothing. So, it’s a really nice alignment between the interests of the shareholder and the interest of this fund manager. 

Likewise, he looks at the degree of concentration in a small number of holdings that people like Buffett had. He’s like, yeah, I’m going to do that. Why would I want to portfolio the hundred stocks? If I had a hundred stocks, there’s no way I’m going to beat the market because I’m going to really be matching the market. I’m just going to be a closet indexer. 

So I think what’s really fascinating about money shares is this very important fundamental idea of how you rip off other people’s great ideas. And what Mohnish said to me is that we have this kind of obsession with being original thinkers, we all kind of feel like there’s something almost holy and righteous about having our own ideas. 

He said, “Look, I have no shame at all about going through the portfolios of someone like Bill Miller or David Einhorn or Buffett and saying, “Why is this terrible company in this guy’s portfolio?” And he said, if you look at someone like Miller’s portfolio, when you know that Miller’s really smart and he’s made an incredibly dumb bet on airlines, you’ve got to say, “Why the hell has he invested in airlines? He’s got to have seen something that I haven’t seen.” 

Stig Brodersen  6:10  

Yeah. 

William Green  6:10  

So part of what he does is to look for things that we know are terrible, like Buffett and Munger had always said that airline stocks are terrible. And here’s Miller, saying, they’re wrong and I’m making a massive bet on airlines. And Miller, of course, made a fortune in the last few years betting on airlines. 

So to me, there’s something very, very profound about this idea of copying and mimicking other people’s best ideas. So when I left Mohnish, part of what I was excited about was this idea, and so how do I apply this to my own life?  So one of the things that I did, which maybe I shouldn’t say but I thought, there’s a certain poetic beauty and cloning the Cloner, and so I went off and bought one of the stocks that Mohnish’s portfolio–you can see, it’s a 13F filings. 

And so, I thought, “Well, that’s really interesting. He’s got 47% of his money in just two stocks. I’d be pretty smart to *inaudible* stocks. So I kind of cloned the Cloner. I copied the Copycat. It sort of gave me a poetic pleasure. 

But then, I started also to think, “What do I learn from all of these people if I applied this idea of copying the great ideas? What do I learn from, say, spending time with Tom Gaynor, who runs the Markel Corporation or John Spears, who’s a well-known value investor to Ed Browne in it?” 

You start to look at these questions like “How do you give away money?” for example. And you think, “Well, that’s really interesting because when I interviewed all of these great investors, the happiest one seemed to be more philanthropic.” And maybe it’s an absurd generalization, but I think, actually, to some degree, it’s really true. So, I think you can apply this idea of reverse engineering and copying great ideas really in any area of your life, and it’s a very, very powerful concept.

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