TIP612: INVESTING IN FEAR: PROFITING FROM MAXIMUM PESSIMISM

W/ LAUREN TEMPLETON

02 March 2024

On today’s episode, Kyle talks to Lauren Templeton about the many investing and life lessons she learned from investing legend Sir John Templeton, how she sets up her daily life to stay disciplined and avoid biases, how to utilize the scientific method for investing purposes, how we can use lessons from history to improve our decision making today, the importance of utilizing multiple evaluation tools to find great investments, sectors that are facing maximal pessimism today that might be the winners of tomorrow, and much, much more!

Lauren C. Templeton is the founder and CEO of Templeton & Phillips Capital Management. Additionally, Lauren serves on the Board of Directors for publicly traded corporations like Fairfax Financial Holdings, Fairfax India Holdings, and Canadian Solar. Before founding the firm in 2001, Lauren was employed with Morgan Stanley, Homrich Berg, and New Providence Advisors. She is a lifelong student of her great uncle, Sir John Templeton, and co-authored the international best-selling book about him, Investing the Templeton Way.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Why we should combat “home bias”.
  • How Lauren fights confirmation bias.
  • How Lauren created her life to stay disciplined.
  • How to utilize the scientific method in investing.
  • The strengths of lowering how reactive you are.
  • What Sir John Templeton thought about quality.
  • How savings rates have changed with the times.
  • The importance of looking at unpopular sectors.
  • How Lauren has decreased the effects of FOMO.
  • Why you should look at sectors with bad outlooks.
  • The importance of removing yourself from the crowd.
  • Why Lauren sees an opportunity in small caps right now.
  • Why maximum optimism is a risky place to deploy capital.
  • The hurdles you need to overcome for investing in Japan.
  • How Sir John Templeton offset value traps using his strategy.
  • How Lauren has used inversion to help her investing strategy.
  • Why you should use multiple evaluation tools in your analysis.
  • Why high savings rates are so important for new opportunities.
  • The importance of living a disciplined lifestyle to improve yourself.
  • The importance of alignment between your daily life and investing philosophy.
  • How Lauren’s investing strategy has altered given the current macro backdrop.
  • Why you should understand maximum pessimism and how it creates opportunities.
  • The historical returns in small caps after having the valuation gap we are seeing today.
  • Why Lauren thinks China is showing maximum pessimism based on her observations at ValueX.
  • How Sir John Templeton tinkered with his portfolio while staying true to his core philosophy.
  • And so much more!

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.

[00:00:02] Kyle Grieve: In today’s episode, I’m talking to Lauren Templeton, the CEO of Templeton and Phillips Capital Management, and also the great niece of one of the most successful investors of all time, Sir John Templeton. Sir John Templeton had an incredible track record, compounding capital at 14.5% over 38 years between 1954 and 1992. Turning a $10,000 investment into $1.7 million over that period. And throughout much of Lauren’s life, Sir John Templeton mentored her on his ways of thrift, saving, thinking, investing, strategy, and frameworks. Templeton and Phillips Capital Management are focused on three investing philosophies that were passed down to Lauren from her great uncle.

[00:00:41] Kyle Grieve: One, focus on value. Two, contrarian behavior is key. And three, trouble is opportunity. Sir John Templeton was a pioneer of international investing, starting with his investments into Japan when nobody else would touch a stock in that country with a 10-foot pole. He thought differently than other investors and is one of the best examples out there of how rewarding it can be to think differently.

[00:01:04] Kyle Grieve: One of Sir John Templeton’s biggest ideas was that times of maximum pessimism offered the best time to buy stocks. In today’s episode, I’ll talk with Lauren about the many investing and life lessons she learned from investing legend Sir John Templeton, how she sets up her daily life to stay disciplined and avoid biases, how to utilize the scientific method for investing purposes, how we can use lessons from history to improve our decision making today, the importance of utilizing multiple evaluation tools to find great investments. Sectors that are facing maximal pessimism today that might be the future winners of tomorrow, and much more. This was an enlightening chat, and I hope you enjoy today’s episode with Lauren Templeton.

[00:01:45] Intro: Celebrating 10 years, you are listening to The Investor’s Podcast Network. Since 2014, we studied the financial markets and read the books that influenced self-made billionaires the most. We keep you informed and prepared for the unexpected. Now for your host, Kyle Grieve.

[00:02:11] Kyle Grieve: Welcome to We Study Billionaires. I’m your host, Kyle Grieve. And today we bring Lauren Templeton onto the show. Lauren, welcome to the podcast. 

[00:02:18] Lauren Templeton: Hi, Kyle. Thanks for having me. 

[00:02:20] Kyle Grieve: So as many of the listeners probably know, Lauren comes from some of the finest invested in lineage out there. Her great uncle was Sir John Templeton.

[00:02:28] Kyle Grieve: She’s done an incredible job sharing stories from his life and how his investing philosophy has helped shape how she runs Templeton and Phillips Capital Management. Now, I know you get asked questions all the time about Sir John Templeton, so I’ll try and come at this from what he’s taught you from some different angles today, but let’s start off with his attraction to being thrifty.

[00:02:45] Kyle Grieve: You wrote, quote, “He never had a mortgage, never borrowed to buy a car and always had enough savings to make it through a rough patch”, unquote. It’s funny because this is what hundreds of personal finance books have been written about and Templeton doing it decades ago. So what’s his love of savings in an attempt to avoid the ups and downs that he observed his father going through as a child?

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BOOKS AND RESOURCES

  • Join the exclusive TIP Mastermind Community to engage in meaningful stock investing discussions with Stig, Clay, Kyle, and the other community members.
  • Buy Lauren’s book, The Templeton Way here.
  • Listen to Lauren’s podcast, Investing The Templeton Way here.
  • Subscribe to her newsletter, the Maximum Pessimism Report here.
  • Learn more about the Berkshire Summit by clicking here or emailing Clay at clay@theinvestorspodcast.com
  • Check out all the books mentioned and discussed in our podcast episodes here.

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