Quality Investing Read online




  Praise for Quality Investing

  “Investing is a continuous process of learning, and it will be a rare investor who does not glean substantive lessons from the notable AKO story of quality investing.”

  – Stephen Blyth, President and CEO, Harvard Management Company, Professor of the Practice of Statistics, Harvard University

  “Capturing both the science and the art that have driven AKO’s success, Quality Investing is equal parts investing handbook and ode to the beauty of truly great businesses.”

  – Peter H. Ammon, Chief Investment Officer, University of Pennsylvania

  “Quality Investing answers the riddle of what you get when you cross Peter Lynch’s One Up on Wall Street with Seth Klarman’s Margin of Safety. By combining a discerning eye for sustainable growth with a disciplined calculus to buy over horizons when the probabilities are favorable, the book articulates a profitable approach to the art of investing.”

  – Jason Klein, Senior Vice President & Chief Investment Officer, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

  “I recommend Quality Investing highly as a guide to harness the power of core investment principles. Shows why the best long-term ‘margin of safety’ comes not from an investment’s price but from the value of a company’s competitive advantage.”

  – Thomas A. Russo, Partner, Gardner, Russo & Gardner

  “Quality Investing, from a team of top quality investors, provides a clear and rigorous analysis of a highly successful, long-term investment strategy. In an increasingly short-term investment world, the book’s insights are likely to remain hugely valuable.”

  – Neil Ostrer, Founder, Marathon Asset Management

  “Quality Investing describes a unique approach to evaluating investment opportunities based on real life examples and experience. Replete with interesting lessons and insights relevant not just for investors, but for any business leader seeking to build an enduring, high-quality company, Quality Investing is an outstanding book and should be required reading for business leaders and MBA students as well as for investors.”

  – Henrik Ehrnrooth, President & CEO, KONE

  “The book is a crisply-written mix of sound investment principles, insightful commercial patterns, and colorful business cases. A real pleasure to read.”

  – Hassan Elmasry, Founder and Lead Portfolio Manager, Independent Franchise Partners

  “AKO Capital were one of the first to recognise Ryanair’s secret formula... An outstandingly handsome CEO, a brilliant strategy, all underpinned with our innate humility. These guys are geniuses. For a better life you must read this book... and fly Ryanair!!”

  – Michael O’Leary, Chief Executive, Ryanair

  “Quality counts. If you are a long term investor, it’s hard to find a more important factor as to what will power your ultimate investment returns. That said, quality is impossible to measure with precision because it often embodies more subjective qualitative factors than easily quantifiable measurements. Quality is also dynamic and changes over time. This book attempts through case studies, descriptions, and quantifiable measurement to help investors think systematically about quality and its importance. Enjoy!”

  – Thomas S. Gayner, President and Chief Investment Officer, Markel Corporation

  “An indispensable addition to any value investing library, Quality Investing will appeal to novices and experts alike. Vivid real-life case studies make for an engaging read that shows the power of compounding that comes with owning high-quality businesses for the long term.”

  – John Mihaljevic, ‘The Manual of Ideas’

  “An excellent read: clear and insightful. Quality Investing is an important aid to shareholders when evaluating any company.”

  – Albert Baehny, Chairman, Geberit

  “Quality Investing is an outstanding resource for all investors seeking to enhance their knowledge of the critical drivers for investment success. Several important concepts for discerning and evaluating outstanding companies are clearly explained and further elaborated upon through many specific company examples. I highly recommend Quality Investing to all prospective investors from beginners to experienced practitioners.”

  – Paul Lountzis, Lountzis Asset Management, LLC

  Quality Investing

  Owning the best companies for the long term

  Lawrence A. Cunningham, Torkell T. Eide and Patrick Hargreaves

  HARRIMAN HOUSE LTD

  18 College Street

  Petersfield

  Hampshire

  GU31 4AD

  GREAT BRITAIN

  Tel: +44 (0)1730 233870

  Email: [email protected]

  Website: www.harriman-house.com

  First published in Great Britain in 2016

  Copyright © AKO Capital LLP

  The right of Lawrence A. Cunningham, Torkell T. Eide and Patrick Hargreaves to be identified as the authors has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988.

  Print ISBN: 978-0-85719-501-2

  eBook ISBN: 978-0-85719-512-8

  British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

  A CIP catalogue record for this book can be obtained from the British Library.

  All rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written permission of the Publisher. This book may not be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise disposed of by way of trade in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published without the prior written consent of the Publisher.

  Whilst every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this publication the publisher, editor, authors and authors’ employers cannot accept responsibility for any errors, omissions, mis-statements or mistakes. Quality Investing is intended for your general information and use; it is not a promotion of specific services. In particular, it does not constitute any form of specific advice or recommendation by the publisher, editor, authors or authors’ employers and is not intended to be relied upon by users in making (or refraining from making) investment decisions. Appropriate personalised advice should be obtained before making any such decision if you have any doubts.

  No responsibility for loss occasioned to any person or corporate body acting or refraining to act as a result of reading material in this book can be accepted by the Publisher, by the Authors, or by the employers of the Authors.

  Contents

  Case studies

  About the authors

  Acknowledgments

  Preface

  Introduction

  Chapter One. Building Blocks

  A. Capital Allocation

  B. Return on Capital

  C. Multiple Sources of Growth

  D. Good Management

  E. Industry Structure

  F. Customer Benefits

  G. Competitive Advantage

  Chapter Two. Patterns

  A. Recurring Revenue

  B. Friendly Middlemen

  C. Toll Roads

  D. Low-Price Plus

  E. Pricing Power

  F. Brand Strength

  G. Innovation Dominance

  H. Forward Integrators

  I. Market Share Gainers

  J. Global Capabilities and Leadership

  K. Corporate Culture

  L. Cost to Replicate

  Chapter Three. Pitfalls

  A. Cyclicality

  B. Technological Innovat
ion

  C. Dependency

  D. Shifting Customer Preferences

  Chapter Four. Implementation

  A. Challenges

  B. Mistakes when Buying

  C. Mistakes of Retention

  D. Valuation and Market Pricing

  E. Investment Process and Mistake Reduction

  Epilogue

  Appendix

  Endnotes

  Case studies

  ASSA ABLOY: Quality Deals

  Unilever: Geographic Expansion

  L’Oréal: The Beauty of Intangibles

  SGS and Intertek: When It Pays To Be Sure

  Syngenta: Technology Advantage

  KONE: Recurring Revenues

  Geberit: Friendly Middlemen

  Chr. Hansen: The Power of Magic Ingredients

  Ryanair: Low-Cost Squared

  Hermès: Pricing Power

  Diageo: Brand Strength

  Novo Nordisk: Research-Led Innovation

  Luxottica: Forward Integrator

  Fielmann: Market Share Gainer

  Inditex: Global Capabilities

  Svenska Handelsbanken: Corporate Culture

  Experian: The Forbidding Costs of Replication

  Saipem: Long Period Swells

  Nokia: Fast-Paced Innovation

  Nobel Biocare: Good-Enough Goods

  Tesco: Boiling Frog

  Elekta: Accounting Red Flags

  About the authors

  Lawrence A. Cunningham has written a dozen books, including The Essays of Warren Buffett: Lessons for Corporate America, published in successive editions since 1996 in collaboration with the legendary Mr. Buffett; the critically acclaimed Berkshire Beyond Buffett: The Enduring Value of Values (Columbia University Press 2014); and Contracts in the Real World: Stories of Popular Contracts and Why They Matter (Cambridge University Press 2012). Cunningham’s op-eds have been published in many newspapers worldwide, including the Financial Times, New York Times, and Wall Street Journal, and his research has appeared in top academic journals published by such universities as Columbia, Harvard, and Vanderbilt. A popular professor at George Washington University, Cunningham also lectures widely, delivering as many as 50 lectures annually to a wide variety of academic, business and investing groups.

  Torkell Tveitevoll Eide is a Portfolio Manager at AKO Capital. He rejoined AKO in 2013 from SKAGEN Funds in Norway where he spent four years as a Portfolio Manager on SKAGEN’s $9 billion global equity fund. Prior to that Eide had spent three years at AKO Capital as an investment analyst, and before AKO he was a Management Consultant with McKinsey & Company in its Corporate Finance practice. Eide has a first-class degree in Economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science.

  Patrick Hargreaves is a Portfolio Manager at AKO Capital. Before joining AKO in 2011, he spent eight years at Goldman Sachs where he ran the European Small & MidCap Research team before becoming Deputy Head of the Pan-European research department. Prior roles include stints at Cazenove and PricewaterhouseCoopers, where he qualified as a Chartered Accountant. Hargreaves has a degree in English Literature from Oxford University.

  Acknowledgments

  We would all like to thank Richard Pearce, who was instrumental in every phase of the book’s evolution (and who somehow retained his sense of humor throughout the process).

  Cunningham would also like to thank Stephanie Cuba, editorial maven extraordinaire, and Lillian White, for administrative assistance.

  Eide and Hargreaves would also like to thank Myles Hunt, Craig Pearce and Suzanne Tull at Harriman House, Alice Waugh for her sagacious advice and scrupulous copy-editing, and their colleagues at AKO Capital for invaluable input. In particular, they would single out Gorm Thomassen for his wise counsel and Nicolai Tangen for his support, guidance and inspirational leadership. Were it not for their vision and insatiable desire to learn from mistakes, this book would not have been possible. Sincere thanks.

  “Quality is never an accident;it is always the result of intelligent effort.”

  John Ruskin

  Preface

  This book began as a small internal project at AKO Capital, an equity fund based in London that has enjoyed a compound annual growth rate more than double that of the market (9.4% per annum versus the MSCI Europe’s 3.9%)1 and delivered excess returns of approximately 8% per annum on its long book2 since inception a decade ago. The project’s initial scope was to institutionalize lessons learned from refining the fund’s quality-focused investment philosophy over that time. What we have come to understand is that successful investing involves a degree of pattern recognition: while industries and companies are diverse and economic environments endlessly changing, strongly performing investments tend to have commonalities. Making sense of these commonalities can help build a strong investment portfolio.

  After amassing a substantial body of material to share with new members of the AKO team – and to remind veterans of what they had once learned but might by now have forgotten – it became obvious that the results should be shared with the fund’s investors as well. Clients have the right to know as much as practically possible about the stewardship of their funds. After all, a strong long-term partnership, in business as well as in private life, works best when based on trust and openness.

  As the project expanded, AKO recruited Lawrence A. Cunningham, the noted American author of investing and business books, to join us. As we refined and honed the material together, it appeared suitable for a yet wider audience of investors and business analysts, as well as managers. The result is the book you are reading, which offers an account of quality investing along with numerous case studies to illustrate the attributes of quality companies.

  We do not posit that a quality-based strategy is the only route to investment success. But we maintain that taking time to understand the fundamental attributes of a company – from its industry position to its sources of long-term growth – is relevant for all investors, regardless of style. The concept of this book is to distill a considerable body of practical knowledge developed through long-term ownership of some great companies – as well as a few that flattered to deceive.

  While the genesis of the book lay in identifying the patterns evident in quality companies, we have supplemented this with additional material to provide context. This includes explaining what quality is from both a financial and an operational perspective, examining the characteristics that help to foster quality, and finally outlining the challenges and some potential mistake-reduction strategies.

  There are quality companies everywhere, from America to Asia. The examples given in this book are primarily of European companies, largely due to AKO Capital’s deeper heritage in the European equities market. We believe that lessons from one continent can be applied on a global scale and are therefore relevant to all investors as well as to managers and business analysts.

  A cynic might say that writing a book about investing is playing odds that prudent investors would normally disfavor in financial markets: only a small number of investment books stand the test of time or even remain worthwhile reads for long. Examples of great companies can suddenly seem outdated or just plain wrong, and observations that appeared insightful when written can end up looking foolish.

  We appreciate that some of the assertions made in this book will almost certainly be disproved or become obsolete. As with most important and interesting things in life, investing is a continuous learning exercise and all any book can do is reflect the knowledge or beliefs prevailing at the time of writing. While we are confident that the fundamental principle of long-term ownership of quality companies is a sensible one, new lessons and patterns will keep emerging. We, like other investors, will continue to adapt to them.

  London and New York October 2015

  Introduction

  The concept of quality is familiar. P
eople make judgments about it every day. Yet articulating a clear definition of quality is challenging. Open most dictionaries and you will see a dozen or more sub-definitions for the word; none of which, incidentally, makes any reference to quality in a corporate or investing context. Despite the shadowy semantics, it is still a powerful word. Everyone has strong opinions on quality. One of our favorite explanations appears in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, in which Phaedrus tells his students that “… even though Quality cannot be defined, you know what Quality is!”3

  By comparison, value investing is relatively simple and well-understood (if tough to execute). Ask professional investors what they take value investing to mean, and responses will likely be consistent; but ask the same people what they think quality investing means, and responses will vary widely. Core answers might coalesce around some key themes, such as strong management and attractive growth. But beyond these central elements, interpretations tend to diverge. This is because in investing as well as in other fields, ‘quality’ resists a tidy definition, involving as it does an overlapping matrix of traits and, ultimately, judgment.

  The best companies often appear to be characterized by an ineffable something, much like that of people who seem graced by a lucky gene. Think about those of your peers who seem a lot like you but somehow always catch a break. They are not obviously smarter, smoother, richer, or better-looking than you, yet they are admitted to their university of choice, get their dream job, and earn considerable wealth. Try to discern what they have that you don’t, and you are stumped. Chalk it up to fate or plain dumb luck.

  Businesses can be similar. For reasons that are not always evident, some end up doing the right things with better results than average. They may not appear to be savvier acquirers, more adept marketers, or bolder pioneers, yet they integrate new businesses better, launch products more successfully, and open new markets with fewer mishaps. Perhaps through some combination of vision, scale, or business philosophy, these companies uncannily come out ahead. They seem to be governed by Yhprum’s Law, so that if anything can go right, it will. But it is unlikely that such corporate success is the result of mere providence. Quality investing is a way to pinpoint the specific traits, aptitudes and patterns that increase the probability of a particular company prospering over time – as well as those that decrease such chances.