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r/valueinvestingr/valueinvesting· u/Aggravating_Share761· 3d agoDiscussion 2

Recent Portfolio Swap (20M - $40-50K)

Investor summaryBullish

Author swaps cyclical CAT for wide-moat MSFT and META, plans to exit GS post-IPO wave, and avoids memory chips lacking pricing power.

Bull points
  • Wide moat companies with pricing power offer predictable, non-cyclical cash flows.
  • Investment banks benefit from record high activities and upcoming IPO waves.
Bear points
  • Cyclical industrials at high valuations lack conviction and are prone to profit-taking.
  • Memory chip stocks are commodities with no pricing power, leading to margin pressure.
MSFTMETACATGSSNDK半导体价值 / 回购
Post body

Portfolio:

Hyperscalers: GOOGL, AMZN

Semiconductors: TSM, NVDA, AVGO

Financials: SPGI, GS

Industrials: GE, GEV, CAT, NOC

Some of the stocks I hold I bought a long time ago with significant amount of gains, so I wouldn't buy them at today prices.

This year being overweight on Industrials have been a major success with my portfolio almost outperforming the Qs, I would argue my portfolio is at a higher quality than the Qs, and these stocks I bought just this year. I bought Sterling Infrastructure (STRL) that doubled in a month, so I took profits immediately. During Iran Dip, I pointed out that buying investment banks like GS and MS would be prudent from record high IB activities, which panned out exceptionally. I will be taking profits on GS after wave of IPOs like Anthropic, OpenAI, Databricks, Canva, or SK Hynix moving to US stock market.

This quarter, I decided to take profits on Caterpillar (60% gains in 3-4 months), because although it a momentum winner I lack conviction holding a cyclical Industrial at PE of 50. The swap for this would be Microsoft and Meta, which I will buy $5000 each. We can go into details why each of these names, but I supposed about 1000 other posts already mention why, so my thesis will be as simple as these stocks have wide moat with pricing power. Buying stocks that valuation go down while balance sheet strengthen (overtime) cannot go wrong.

Even though I am quite young, I try my best to follow Chris Hohn's investing principles. When the AI super cycle end, I would want to be in these forever moats that will outlive any crises. These principles value predictability, non-cyclicality, consistent cash flow, pricing power (non-commodity). This is why I will never want to hold memory like Micron, Samsung, SK Hynix, Western Digital, Sandisk because of commodity (no pricing power - margin pressure) and unpredictable cash flow, so I can't care less if these stocks go up into the right to me these businesses are inherently low quality. The same applies to utilities like Vistra Corps, NextEra, CEG high CAPEX to build out with low margin selling commodities so low quality businesses. Another example could be NVIDIA and AVGO, which is unpredictable cash flow, but more consistent because they don't sell a commodity.

Over the long term, I want to be holding long term predictable cash flow wide moats like S&P Global, Moody's, Visa, Mastercard, GE Aerospace, Ferrovial. The only semiconductor I think is almost forever moat would be TSMC. Of Course the hyperscalers.

STRONG BUY LIST: SPGI, META, MSFT

BUY: NVDA, GOOGL, NOC, AVGO

Watch List:

FER (Ferrovial) - wide moat, transportation, extremely high quality

V (Visa): wide moat, networking effects, extremely high quality

Discussion · top comments2 selected
u/dAn_tHe_mAn7 3· 3d ago

Most of what you mentioned is not value plays. The only two right now are msft and meta

u/Connect_Address_2755 3· 3d ago

S&P Global is arguably better value play than both MSFT and META? The company moat is wider?