Dan Loeb's hedge fund firm Third Point returned 5.9% in the first quarter of 2017. Their Q1 letter to investors was just released and outlines their thesis on stocks such as Honeywell (HON), UniCredit, and E.On.
Honeywell (HON)
Basically, they're looking for the company to spin-off its aerospace division. They think this "would result in a sustained increase in shareholder value in excess of $20 billion. Spinning off Aerospace would transform Honeywell into an industrial growth company with a focus on automation and productivity."
UniCredit
Third Point sees the first quarter as a 'turning point' for European financials as they've traded at lower valuations and UniCredit recently raised 13 billion Euros in capital in March. They write, "We were drawn to UniCredit by its low valuation and the rights issue. We believe in the medium-term story because of its new CEO, Jean Pierre Mustier."
E.On
"Following a spin-off of its generation assets into Uniper last year, the company has emerged as a regulated grids and renewables business that is currently misunderstood by the market and attractively priced."
To see the full thesis on all of these names, check out the full letter.
Embedded below is Third Point's first quarter letter:
You can download a .pdf copy here.
You can also view other recent portfolio activity here.
Friday, April 28, 2017
Third Point's Q1 Letter: Thesis on Honeywell, UniCredit, E.On
ValueAct Capital Takes KKR Stake
Jeff Ubben's activist firm ValueAct Capital has taken around a $750 million stake in private equity firm KKR (KKR). Partner Mason Morfit talked about the position at 13D Monitor's Active-Passive Investor Summit in New York, according to Business Insider.
This is yet another prominent firm that has jumped on the private equity train. We've highlighted recently how Tiger Global has been building a position in Apollo Global Management.
At the presentation, Morfit called KKR a "50 cent dollar" and thinks that big firms will get even larger.
ValueAct recently returned a chunk of capital to investors as they were having trouble finding ideas in a market with stretched valuations. But apparently they've at least found one place to park some capital in KKR.
You can view other recent portfolio activity from ValueAct here.
Per Google Finance, KKR is "a global investment firm that manages investments across multiple asset classes, including private equity, energy, infrastructure, real estate, credit and hedge funds. The Company's business offers a range of investment management services to its fund investors, and provides capital markets services to its firm, its portfolio companies and third parties. The Company conducts its business with offices across the world, providing it with a global platform for sourcing transactions, raising capital and carrying out capital markets activities. The Company operates through four segments: Private Markets, Public Markets, Capital Markets and Principal Activities. It operates and reports its combined credit and hedge funds businesses through the Public Markets segment. The Capital Markets segment consists primarily of its global capital markets business. Through its Principal Activities segment, the Company manages the firm's assets and deploys capital."
Hedge Fund Links ~ 4/28/17
The hedge fund manager that's shorting America's malls [WSJ]
Hedge funds prize open Japan [Bloomberg]
Coatue invests in Domino Data Lab [ZDnet]
On the value of doing site visits in fund manager selection [Research Puzzle]
An activist investment in Whole Foods exposes shifting power on Wall Street [NYTimes]
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
What We're Reading ~ 4/26/17
The downside of managing downside risk [Morningstar]
A short guide to short selling [Dead Companies Walking]
James Montier: market fair value is 50% lower [Finanz und Wirtschaft]
On the many price fluctuations items see on online shopping [The Atlantic]
4 things that set successful CEOs apart [Harvard Business Review]
Using Eisenhower boxes to improve productivity [Quartz]
3 ways to build a culture of better decisions [CFA Institute]
Against all odds, the US tobacco industry is rolling in money [WSJ]
Refuting the short thesis on Apple [Bireme Capital]
Sprint said to look beyond T-Mobile for other deal options [Bloomberg]
Losses are the new black [L2 inc]
The unique advantage of equity investment [Fundsmith]
Profile of the founder of Chobani [CBS]
Millennials and credit: are we missing the real story? [FICO]
On being special in investing [Reaction Wheel]
What separates champions from 'almost champions?' [NYMag]
Berkshire Hathaway Buys More Liberty SiriusXM
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has submitted a couple of Form 4's with the SEC regarding its position in Liberty Sirius XM (LSXMA / LSXMK).
Per the filings, Berkshire was out buying both the Series C stock (LSXMK) and the Series A stock (LSXMA). They purchased over 3.87 million LSXMK shares across April 20th, 21st, and 24th at weighted average prices between $38.7043 and $40.62. After these buys, Berkshire now owns 27.23 million shares of LSXMK.
They also bought over 2.47 million LSXMA shares in total across the same dates at weighted average prices between $38.6046 and $40.795. After these buys, they now own over 13.15 million LSXMA shares.
Liberty Media's Greg Maffei also tweeted: "Nice to have Berkshire, Warren B, and Ted Weschler step up their $LSXMA investment. Thanks. $SIRI. #hearmysiri." And then followed it up with: "Forgot to bow to altar: $BRK.A #OmahaRules."
Given that Ted Weschler was mentioned as the investor involved in this name, it seems natural to draw similarities to a past position of his. At his old hedge fund Peninsula, Weschler previously owned DirecTV and a large part of the thesis there was a levered buyback. Given that Sirius XM seems to be following a similar playbook, it seems plausible that this is one of the reasons Weschler is attracted to this name as there are some similarities. Not to mention, Sirius XM has grown subscribers consistently over the past 7 years.
Per Google Finance, Liberty Sirius XM "owns interests in subsidiaries and other companies, which are engaged in the media and entertainment industries. The Company's principal businesses and assets include its consolidated subsidiaries Sirius XM Holdings Inc. (SIRIUS XM) and Braves Holdings, LLC (Braves Holdings), and its equity affiliate Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. (Live Nation). The Company's segments are SIRIUS XM, and Corporate and other. SIRIUS XM provides a subscription-based satellite radio service. Through its subsidiaries and affiliates, the Company principally operates in North America. The Company also owns a portfolio of minority equity investments in publicly traded media companies, including Time Warner, Inc. and Viacom, Inc. SIRIUS XM transmits music, sports, entertainment, comedy, talk, news, traffic and weather channels, as well as infotainment services, in the United States on a subscription fee basis through two satellite radio systems. "
Foxhaven Boosts Trivago Stake
Michael Pausic's hedge fund firm Foxhaven Asset Management has filed a 13G with the SEC regarding its position in Trivago (TRVG). Per the filing, Foxhaven now owns 11.4% of Trivago with over 3.42 million shares.
This marks an increase of 810,431 shares since January when we highlighted how Foxhaven had boosted its TRVG stake. The latest filing was made due to activity on April 20th.
About Foxhaven Asset Management
Foxhaven is a long/short equity hedge fund that focuses on the technology, media, and telecom sector as well as consumer and internet. Prior to founding the fund in 2013, Mike Pausic worked at Maverick Capital as head of the media and telecom team
About Trivago
Per Google Finance, Trivago is "company based in the Netherlands that operates an online hotel search platform. The platform allows users to search for, compare and book hotels. It gathers information from various third parties' platforms and provides information about the hotel, pictures, ratings, reviews and filters, such as price, location and extra options. The Company offers access to approximately 1.3 million hotels in over 190 countries via more than 50 localized websites and applications in various languages. The Company also offers marketing tools and services to hotels and hotel chains, as well as to online travel agencies and advertisers, among others. Its principal executive offices are located in Germany."
Tuesday, April 25, 2017
Boyar Research Reports on Hanesbrands, Legg Mason, and Liberty Global
Barron’s recently ran a bullish story on Hanesbrands where they argued the stock could advance by 25%. The piece references extensively a recent report published by Boyar Research. Boyar was kind enough to provide our readers with this report as well as additional reports on Legg Mason and Liberty Global.
To receive these free reports, please visit:
http://boyarresearch.com/MF-Apr-2017
Boyar Research takes a private equity approach to public market investing by identifying securities trading at a substantial discount to their estimate of intrinsic or private market value. Since 2009, the average return for each company profiled in their flagship publication Asset Analysis Focus has been 83.7%, compared with an average return of 53.3% for the S&P 500.*
Hanesbrands Inc. (HBI)
- Hanesbrands, the world’s largest basic apparel company, boasts a portfolio of first-rate brands that hold the #1 or #2 market share position in underwear, intimate apparel, hosiery, and active wear in 12 countries.
- Several issues have weighed on HBI shares over the past two years, culminating in a sharp sell-off in the stock after the Company reported poor 4Q 2016 results. HBI’s innerwear segment, which comprises 43% of sales and nearly 60% of operating profit, exhibited surprising weakness during that quarter due to soft retail traffic not being fully offset by their rapidly growing online sales. However, we do not believe that this recent weakness represents a secular shift in the purchasing frequency of HBI’s products. Rather, we believe this is a temporary situation caused by a shift of customer purchasing behavior from brick-and-mortar establishments to online distribution channels.
- To see Boyar’s estimate of intrinsic value for HBI and to receive their complimentary full report, please click here
Legg Mason, Inc. (LM)
- Legg Mason, Inc. is a formidable player within the asset management industry, possessing impressive scale (~$710 billion of AUM) and a diverse line of well-established products catering to a full range of investment styles and asset classes.
- Approximately 70% of LM’s strategies are outperforming benchmarks from one-year and three-year perspectives, and the figure for the five-year and ten-year perspectives exceeds 80%.
- The Company has also reduced its shares outstanding by 40% and has raised its dividend seven times since 2010. However, LM shares have failed to achieve significant outperformance despite the Company’s strategic advances. In large part, this likely reflects the difficult fundamentals currently impacting the actively managed fund sector.
- LM is trading at approximately 0.7% of AUM, a substantial discount from how comparable firms have historically been valued in transactions.
- To see Boyar’s estimate of intrinsic value for LM and to receive their full report, please click here
Liberty Global plc (LBTYA / LBTYK)
- Liberty Global is the largest European cable systems operator.
- Liberty Global is underpenetrated in its existing network and has plans to expand its footprint by 6-7 million homes in the coming years.
- Liberty Global shares have de-rated to ~9x EV/OCF, below their longer-term average of ~10x—offering a bargain, in our view, for a high-margin, recession-resistant business best positioned to capitalize on the secular growth in internet data usage.
- To see Boyar’s estimate of intrinsic value for LBTYK and to receive their full report, please click here
Monday, April 24, 2017
Marcato Capital's Presentation on Buffalo Wild Wings
Activist investor Mick McGuire's Marcato Capital Management has filed an amended 13D with the SEC regarding its position in Buffalo Wild Wings (BWLD). Per the filing, Marcato has sent a letter indicating they think the board and management at the company needs to be replaced (letter here).
Marcato has also created a separate slideshow presentation and has outlined a multi-step plan to help turnaround the business:
1) Refocus the company on its core brand and value proposition,
2) Sell stores to new and existing franchisees (targeting 90% mix of franchised stores by 2020),
3) Create a capital deployment strategy based on returns and profitability,
4) And finally, realign management incentives to focus on returns on capital and per-share value instead of top-line growth or profit dollars.
Embedded below is Marcato's presentation on Buffalo Wild Wings:
You can download a .pdf copy here.
You can follow Marcato's presentations at the website www.winningatwildwings.com.
Market Strategist Jeff Saut on Gaining Street Smarts
Market strategist Jeff Saut has released his latest weekly investment strategy piece entitled "Street Smarts." The title sums up exactly what his piece is about as he begins by quoting Confessions of a Street Smart Manager by David Mahoney:
"Some people can have a lot of experience and still not have good judgement. Others can pull a great deal of value out of much less experience. That’s why some people have street smarts and others don’t. A person with street smarts is someone able to take strong action based on good judgement drawn from hard experience. For example, a novice trader once asked an old Wall Street pro why he had good judgement. “Well,” said the pro, “Good judgement comes from experience.” “Then where does experience come from?” asked the novice. “Experience comes from bad judgement,” was the pro’s answer. So you can say that good judgement comes from experience comes from bad judgement."
We've said before that investing is a continual education, you never stop learning. And while you can read all the investment books out there and learn from the mistakes of others (which is highly beneficial), sometimes you just have to make a mistake yourself to truly learn from it.
Saut's weekly strategy piece "Street Smarts" is embedded below:
You can download a .pdf copy here.
Bridger Capital Adds To Atara Biotherapeutics
Roberto Mignone's hedge fund firm Bridger Capital has filed a 13G with the SEC regarding its stake in Atara Biotherapeutics (ATRA). Per the filing, Bridger now owns 5.2% of the company with over 1.52 million shares.
This means Bridger has boosted its position size by 725,870 shares since the end of 2016. The filing was made due to activity on April 11th.
Per Google Finance, Atara Biotherapeutics is "a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company. The Company is focused on developing therapies for patients with severe and life-threatening diseases. The Company operates through the business of developing and commercializing therapeutics segment. The Company is focused on developing allogeneic or third-party derived antigen-specific T-cells. T-cells are a type of white blood cell. The Company's product candidate, ATA129, is a third-party derived Epstein-Barr virus CTL for the treatment of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). ATA188 is in development for the treatment of multiple sclerosis. ATA520, which is a third-party donor derived WT1-CTL, targets cancers expressing the antigen Wilms Tumor 1 (WT1). ATA520 is in Phase I clinical trials. The Company's T-cell product candidate, ATA230, which is a third-party derived cytomegalovirus-CTL (CMV-CTL), is in Phase II clinical trials for refractory CMV. "
Friday, April 21, 2017
Soros Fund Boosts Sigma Designs Stake
George Soros' family office Soros Fund Management has filed a Form 4 and 13G with the SEC regarding shares of Sigma Designs (SIGM). Per the filing, Soros now owns 10.66% of Sigma Designs with over 4.06 million shares.
The Form 4 indicates Soros was buying on April 12th and 13th at a weighted average price of $5.6371. Their position size is now 2 million shares larger than what it was at the end of January per their previously filed 13G.
Per Google Finance, Sigma Designs is "a provider of global integrated semiconductor solutions. The Company offers media platforms for use in the home entertainment and home control markets. The Company sells its products into markets, including smart television, media connectivity, set-top box and Internet of Things (IoT) devices. The Company's media processor product line consists of a range of functionally similar platforms that are based on integrated chips, embedded software and hardware reference designs. The Company's media connectivity product line consists of wired home networking controller chipsets that are designed to provide connectivity solutions between various home entertainment products and incoming video streams. The Company's IoT devices product line consists of its wireless Z-Wave chips and modules. The Company is engaged in the license of its internally developed intellectual property. It also offers legacy products that are sold into prosumer and other industrial applications."
Tiger Global Adds To Apollo Stake Again
Chase Coleman's hedge fund firm Tiger Global has filed an amended 13G with the SEC regarding its stake in Apollo Global Management (APO). They now own 15% of Apollo Global with over 28.1 million shares.
As we've detailed previously, Tiger has been boosting its APO stake. This latest filing means they've increased their position size by an additional 3.1 million shares. The filing was made due to activity on April 17th through 19th where they purchased shares at around $25.xx per a Form 4 submitted to the SEC.
Per Google Finance, Apollo Global Management is "an alternative investment manager in private equity, credit and real estate. The Company raises, invests and manages funds on behalf of pension, endowment and sovereign wealth funds, as well as other institutional and individual investors. The Company's segments include private equity, credit and real estate. The private equity segment invests in control equity and related debt instruments, convertible securities and distressed debt investments. The credit segment invests in non-control corporate and structured debt instruments, including performing, stressed and distressed investments across the capital structure. The real estate segment invests in real estate equity for the acquisition and recapitalization of real estate assets, portfolios, platforms and operating companies, and real estate debt, including first mortgage and mezzanine loans, preferred equity and commercial mortgage backed securities."
Hedge Fund Links ~ 4/21/17
Paul Tudor Jones says US stocks should terrify Janet Yellen [Bloomberg]
ValueAct's Jeff Ubben giving some money back; feels market is overvalued [CNBC]
Passport Capital shuts down long/short hedge fund [Zero Hedge]
Former Harvard money whiz tries to regain his edge [WSJ]
Hedge fund investors are piling money into failing strategies [CNBC]
New report shows 40% of funds created last year were systematic [Benzinga]
Icahn's big bet against biofuel credits [Reuters]
The fall of Fortress [Institutional Investor]
Balyasny's tip to hedge funds at a crossroads [Bloomberg]
Thursday, April 20, 2017
Special Edition What We're Reading: Amazon (AMZN)
We're trying something new today: a linkfest focused on a single company. This is mainly because we came across a ton of good reads related to Amazon.com (AMZN) recently and it was simply too many links to include in our regular "What We're Reading" post. Here's the links:
The high speed trading behind your Amazon purchase [WSJ]
CEO Jeff Bezos' annual letter [SEC]
The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon [Brad Stone]
Amazon and Walmart are in all-out price war [Recode]
Amazon's ambitions unboxed: stores for furniture, appliances and more [NYTimes]
Amazon wants Cheerios, Oreos and other brands to bypass Walmart [Bloomberg]
Jeff Bezos on how to start up a business [YouTube]
Amazon, the world's most remarkable firm, is just getting started [Economist]
Amazon said to mull Whole Foods bid before JANA Partners stepped in [Bloomberg]
CEO of the world's biggest ad company says Amazon keeps him up at night [Business Insider]
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
What We're Reading ~ 4/19/17
The Attention Merchants: The Epic Scramble To Get Inside Our Heads [Tim Wu]
Why we think we're better investors than we are [NYTimes]
Inside the hotel industry's plan to combat Airbnb [NYTimes]
Two law professors mimic activist hedge fund: a corporate raiding adventure [The Atlantic]
Vanguard is growing faster than everybody else combined [NYTimes]
Q&A with Blackrock's (BLK) Larry Fink [Bloomberg]
Why Facebook (FB) keeps beating every rival: it's the network of course [NYTimes]
A look at the first decade of augmented reality [Ben Evans]
Barry Ritholtz's rules of valuations [The Big Picture]
The making of a brand [Collaborative Fund]
Is American retail at a historic tipping point? [NYTimes]
E-commerce is a bear [Andy Dunn]
American Express, challenged by Chase, is losing the 'snob' war [NYTimes]
The potential of graphene to revolutionize the airline industry [Richard Branson]
A day in the life of a food vendor [NYTimes]
Howard Marks' Latest Memo: Lines in the Sand
Oaktree Capital's Chairman Howard Marks has just penned a new memo entitled, "Lines in the Sand." In it, he addresses the use of subscription lines in private equity, real estate, distressed debt and other fields.
His piece asks investors to consider the implications of closed-end funds' increasing use of subscription lines. He seems to conclude that subscription lines 'may be adding to risk at a variety of levels.'
Marks also notes,
"The key to financial security – individual or societal – doesn’t lie in counting on things to work in good times or on average. Rather, it consists of figuring out what can go wrong in bad times, and of only doing things that will prove survivable even if they materialize."
Embedded below is Howard Marks' new memo: Lines in the Sand
You can download a .pdf copy here.
For more from this investor, we also just posted Marks' recent presentation: The Truth About Investing.
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Warren Buffett & Jorge Paulo Lemann Talk at Harvard Business School: Brazil Conference
Berkshire Hathaway's Warren Buffett and 3G Capital's Jorge Paulo Lemann sat down for a talk at Harvard Business School for the Brazil Conference 2017. Here are some takeaways:
- Buffett considers it one of the larger mistakes in his life that he didn't team up with Lemann until later in his life
- Buffett: "Who you have as partners in life... it's a lot more fun and a lot more profitable to have good partners."
- Lemann met Buffett at the Gillette board and Buffett said he was very rich in the sense that he had tons of time and was able to do what he loves and that's what Lemann wanted after selling the bank. Buffett: "The two things you can't buy are time and love."
- Buffett tells students to look for the job they'd still do if they didn't need to have a job. Says to always hang out with people that are better than you. You don't need a high IQ to succeed in life... find the place where your talents leave you happiest and produce the best results.
- Lemann almost got expelled his first year at Harvard, went broke his first attempt at business, and he finally started getting going at age 30.
- Buffett says Tom Murphy is his #1 example as a leader. Also cited Amazon's Jeff Bezos and then Jack Welch too. Good leaders have big ideas. "They don't settle cheap."
- Lemann on leadership: have focus, be efficient, have good people, keep costs down, take a bit of risk
- 3G likes to evaluate people in the system by giving them an opportunity to learn from mistakes; wants people that will try hard and do things exceptionally well. "The only thing you cannot accept is somebody who is ethically not totally there."
- Buffett asks himself: do they love the money or do they love the business? (When he looks at leaders for his decentralized model at Berkshire)
- "That's the one thing I've probably improved on over the years: judging the future behavior of people I encounter." - Buffett
- "The first thing I want is a business I understand... where it'll be 10, 15, 20 years from now. Understand if there's some economic castle with a moat, and whether the knight in the castle is any good." - Buffett
- "The ideal moat is something that would be protected by any competition; usually earnings are regulated in businesses like that. Perfect product is something that costs a penny and sells for a dollar and is habit forming." - Buffett
- Lemann says they're "Running things for the long run and building them to last forever."
- "In the food area, there's a lot to be done still... it'll probably be bigger than the beer area possibly ... We have to adjust, we have to be more nimble (to consumer taste)." - Lemann
- "On SAB: the big attraction there is Africa... hot climate, young population, we have to learn how to operate, but the potential is there. Africa maybe 30 years from now will be bigger than the US in beer consumption." - Lemann
- On the current largest market cap companies being tech. Lemann: "The better investments will be in technology. But the problem is technology is very difficult to pick and things change very fast there."
Embedded below is the video of Jorge Paulo Lemann and Warren Buffett at the Brazil Conference 2017:
For more wisdom, we've also highlighted Warren Buffett's 2016 letter as well as Buffett's talk with Bill Gates.
Howard Marks: The Truth About Investing
Oaktree Capital's Chairman Howard Marks has put together a slideshow entitled The Truth About Investing which was posted by the CFA Society. In it, he outlines the nuances of investing and also includes notable quotes from others.
Some highlights include:
"The price of a security at a given point in time reflects the consensus of investors regarding its value. The big gains arise when the consensus turns out to have underestimated reality. To be able to take advantage of such divergences, you have to think in a way that departs from the consensus; you have to think different and better. This goal can be described as “second - level thinking” or “variant perception.”
Also:
"Superior performance doesn’t come from being right, but from being more right than the consensus. You can be right about something and perform just average if everyone else is right, too. Or you can be wrong and outperform if everyone else is more wrong."
As well as:
"To be a successful investor, you have to have a philosophy and process you believe in and can stick to, even under pressure. Since no approach will allow you to profit from all types of opportunities or in all environments, you have to be willing to not participate in everything that goes up, only the things that fit your approach. To be a disciplined investor, you have to be able to stand by and watch as other people make money in things you passed on."
Embedded below is Howard Marks' slideshow presentation: The Truth About Investing:
You can download a .pdf copy here.
For more from this investor, be sure to check out his book, The Most Important Thing, which is highly recommended if you found the above insightful.
We've also previously posted Howard Marks' latest memo: Expert Opinion.
Thursday, April 13, 2017
Bill Miller Wealthtrack Interview
Bill Miller recently appeared on Consuelo Mack's WealthTrack for an interview. He's beat the S&P 500 for 15 consecutive years when he worked at Legg Mason. Then he had a few years of underperformance and has come back with Miller Value Partners, an independent investment advisory firm.
Here are some of the key takeaways:
- Looks for stocks trading at a discount to intrinsic business value (present value of future free cashflow): looks for business that are naturally cash generative and buys them when free cashflow yield is 50% or more higher than the market.
- Noted that typical value investors look for accounting value versus economic value. Cites them missing Amazon (AMZN) as an example over the past 20 years.
- Miller looks for "companies that can earn above their cost of capital through an economic cycle."
- "Where you can really make significant amounts of money is when an industry changes from being one that doesn't generate economic value to one that does." One example of this he cites is the airlines now. Now they've had positive cashflow ever since 2009. He owns Delta (DAL), United (UAL), American Airlines (AAL). Consolidation has played a huge role. As we've noted before, Warren Buffett is also now a large shareholder of airlines.
- Also owns Valeant Pharmaceuticals (VRX) equity in one fund and the bonds in another fund. Notes that Bill Ackman has sold his VRX position. Miller was buying around $30. Thinks "perceived risk is way underpriced to real risk." Thinks it could be a $50-60 stock in 3 or 4 years.
- Miller thinks Apollo Group (APO) and Carlyle Group (CG) are cheap. We've highlighted how Tiger Global has been buying APO as well.
- Miller doesn't think the market is overvalued on a relative or absolute basis. Especially compared to other asset classes it's cheap.
- Likes Intrexon (XON), leading company in synthetic biology (think re-writing DNA).
- If he had to pick one stock to own for the long-term he'd pick Amazon (AMZN). Compared it to Alphabet (GOOGL) and Facebook (FB) and their core business is the $500-600 billion ad market which is growing 5% a year. Whereas AMZN's core business is retail. US retail alone is $5 trillion so the total addressable market is huge. Not to mention Amazon Web Services, etc.
Embedded below is the video of Bill Miller's Wealthtrack interview:
For more recent Wealthtrack interviews, we've also posted Consuelo Mack's interview with Joel Greenblatt.
The Wizard of Lies Movie Trailer: Bernie Madoff HBO Film
HBO has released a trailer for its new film The Wizard of Lies featuring Robert De Niro and Michelle Pfeiffer. This new television movie tells the story of Bernie Madoff's infamous ponzi scheme.
It premiers on May 20th on HBO and also features Hank Azaria, Alessandro Nivola, and Kristen Connolly, among others.
Embedded below is the video trailer for HBO's Wizard of Lies:
There has been a surge of recent documentaries, shows, and films on finance. We've highlighted HBO's Becoming Warren Buffett as well as Showtime's Billions if you're interested.