The Art of Execution: How the world's best investors get it wrong and still make millions
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About this ebook
It seemed like a foolproof plan to make a lot of money. What could possibly go wrong? These were some of the greatest minds at work in the markets today - from top European hedge fund managers to Wall Street legends.
But most of the investors' great ideas actually lost money. Shockingly, a toss of a coin would have been a better method of choosing whether or not to invest in a stock.
Nevertheless, despite being wrong most of the time, many of these investors still ended up making a lot of money.
How could they be wrong most of the time and still be profitable? The answer lay in their hidden habits of execution, which until now have only been guessed at from the outside world.
This book lays bare those secret habits for the first time, explaining them with real-life data, case studies and stories taken from Freeman-Shor's unique position of managing these investors on a day-to-day basis.
A riveting read for investors of every level, this book shows you exactly what to do and what not to do when your big idea is losing or winning - and demonstrates conclusively why the most important thing about investing is always the art of execution.
Lee Freeman-Shor
Lee Freeman-Shor currently manages over $1bn in High Alpha and Multi-Asset strategies. Lee was ranked as one of the world's top fund managers in Citywire 1000 in 2012. He has been AAA rated by Citywire, Gold rated by S&P Capital IQ fund research and is Bronze rated by MorningstarOBSR. He has been at Old Mutual Global Investors since October 2005 and was previously Co-Head of Equity Research. Prior to joining Old Mutual Global Investors Lee worked for Schroders, Winterthur and in private client wealth management and has over 16 years investment experience. Lee holds the Investment Management Certificate and has an LL.B (Hons) law degree From Nottingham Trent University. He currently lives in Maidenhead, England with his wife Michal and their son Adam. In his spare time he enjoys going to the movies and having fun with his family.
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Reviews for The Art of Execution
21 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Investing can be overcomplicated and ultimately unsuccessful or KISS (Keep It Simple Stupid) and highly successful - you decide!!!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5It’s very practical on investments. I need to start executing my best investment ideas.
Book preview
The Art of Execution - Lee Freeman-Shor
The Art of Execution
How the world’s best investors get it wrong
and still make millions
Lee Freeman-Shor
For my son, Adam, and my wife, my soul mate, Michal.
I am truly blessed to be your father and husband respectively. I love you both more than words on a page can convey.
To my Mum and Dad, who are quite simply the best parents a son could wish for. I got lucky in life.
Contents
About the Author
Introduction
The ‘wow’ moment
When the best fail
How this book is structured
Part I : I’m Losing – What Should I Do?
1. The Rabbits: Caught in the Capital Impairment
Jumping in
What the Rabbits did wrong
What the Rabbits could have done differently
It’s all about capital impairment
The lessons of poker
2. The Assassins: The Art of Killing Losses
Never lose money
The code of the Assassins
Don’t sell too soon
Be careful on your next investment
An elusive cadre
3. The Hunters: Pursuing Losing Shares
Success starts from failure
Snatching victory
Hunting for the compounding effect
The advantages of a Hunter
A rare investing style
Conclusion to Part I
Part II: I’m Winning – What Should I Do?
4. The Raiders: Snatching at Treasure
Investing on the edge of ruin
Why do investors sell too soon?
Why you shouldn’t sell early
Is it ever right to sell a winner?
Too professional
Why was one Raider such a successful hedge fund manager?
Resisting the raid
5. The Connoisseurs: Enjoying Every Last Drop
How to ride winners
Clues from the Forbes rich list
Why many fund managers are doomed to fail
Academic support for ‘best ideas’ investing
Dangers of being a Connoisseur
Are you ready to be a Connoisseur?
Conclusion: The Habits of Success
A dinner to remember
The Winner’s Checklist: The five winning habits of investment titans
1. Best ideas only
2. Position size matters
3. Be greedy when winning
4. Materially adapt when you are losing
5. Only invest in liquid stocks
The Loser’s Checklist: The five losing habits of most investors
1. Invest in lots of ideas
2. Invest a small amount in each idea
3. Take small profits
4. Stay in an investment idea and refuse to adapt when losing
5. Do not consider liquidity
Publishing details
About the Author
Lee Freeman-Shor currently manages over $1bn in high-alpha and multi-asset strategies. Lee was ranked as one of the world’s top fund managers in Citywire 1000 in 2012. He has been AAA-rated by Citywire, Gold-rated by S&P Capital IQ fund research and is Bronze-rated by Morningstar OBSR. He has been at Old Mutual Global Investors since October 2005 and was previously Co-Head of Equity Research.
Prior to joining Old Mutual Global Investors, Lee worked for Schroders, Winterthur and in private client wealth management and has over 16 years’ investment experience. Lee holds the Investment Management Certificate and has an LLB (Hons) Law degree from Nottingham Trent University. He currently lives in Maidenhead, England, with his wife Michal and their son Adam. In his spare time he enjoys going to the movies and having fun with his family.
Introduction
"I hope you weren’t planning on a long career in the investment industry."
My colleague gave me a look of concern as he finished reviewing my research – an investigation into the performance of some of the very best City and Wall Street investors.
Make sure you double check your findings,
he continued. If they’re correct, you have made a discovery that will shock the public and make waves throughout the financial world.
I double-checked my findings. The results were confirmed. This book was born.
The ‘wow’ moment
Over a period spanning more than seven years, from June 2006 to October 2013, I examined 1,866 investments, representing a total of 30,874 trades made by 45 of the world’s top investors – all of whom I had the privilege of managing as part of my job as a fund manager at Old Mutual Global Investors.
What was unique about these 1,866 investments was that each one of them represented the best money-making ideas of these investment titans during those seven years.
I had given each of these leading investors between 20 and 150 million dollars to invest for my Best Ideas fund, with strict instructions that they could only invest in ten stocks that represented their very best ideas to make money.
The rationale for doing so was the simple belief that the greatest possible returns on capital could be achieved by hiring the best investors in the world and getting them to invest in their best ideas.
These were ideas that they had significant confidence in, and were often the result of hundreds of hours of research by some of the smartest people on the planet.
Given all this, I was sure that I would make a lot of money.
It might surprise you, then, to be told that most of their investments lost money.
When the best fail
Personally, I was shocked to discover that only 49% (920 investments) of the very best investment ideas made money.
Even more shocking was that some of these legendary investors were only successful 30% of the time.
I had employed some of the greatest investment minds on the planet and asked them to invest in only their very best, highest-conviction, money-making ideas. And yet the chances of them making money were worse than tossing a coin and betting on heads coming up every time.
[A]fter studying forecasting day and night for over 30 years … I’ve yet to find anyone who could consistently and reliably forecast an uncertain future.
¹
– Ned Davis
What really surprised me wasn’t the discovery that so many investing legends – earning tens of millions every year and appearing in annual rich lists – had feet of clay. What really fascinated me was the fact that, despite some of them only making money on one out of every three investments, overall almost all of them did not lose money. In fact, they still made a lot of it.
This begged the question:
How are they making lots of money if their ideas are wrong most of the time?
How are most of these investment legends able to be wrong more often than they are right and still make incredible profits?
What was the secret of their success if it wasn’t down to an elusive Midas touch?
This question made me burn with curiosity. It led me to analyse every single trade they had made over a seven-year period to try and uncover their secrets. I simply had to know what it was they did.
The results of my investigation are revealed in this book.
In the process I discovered that successful stock market investing is not about being right per se – far from it. Success in investing is down to how great ideas are executed.
I have come to understand that if successful property investing is all about ‘location, location, location’, success in equity investing is all about ‘execution, execution, execution’.
Vision without execution is hallucination.
– Thomas Edison
I have also learned that investing need not be the preserve of the so-called experts. Until now, the skill of good execution in investing has been largely hidden from the general public. This has led to a widespread false belief that great investors are great because they have ideas that at the time elude the rest of us mere mortals.
This couldn’t be further from the truth. It is why this book has been carefully written to have appeal to investors of every level, both private and professional; no specialist knowledge is required.
As you will see later in the book, you don’t even have to worry about whether an investing idea works or not if you focus on how to invest in that idea: how much money you allocate to it and what you will do when you find yourself in a losing or winning position.
Of course, in some ways I am not the first person to discover this.
Leo Melamed, the pioneer behind financial futures, once said: I could be wrong 60% of the time and come out a big winner. The key is money management.
Likewise, legendary billionaire hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones II – a man who made his fortune from investing – is reported to have said that the reason for all the Wall Street success stories he knew was down to: money management, money management, money management
.²
And George Soros – a similar self-made billionaire trader – once pointed out that:
It’s not whether you’re right or wrong that’s important, but how much money you make when you’re right and how much you lose when you’re wrong.
What is different about this book is that, for the first time ever, I have detailed evidence of how investment titans go about their money management.
I know what their secrets are. And soon you will too.
How this book is structured
My findings show that the key to successfully executing great ideas and making lots of money comes down to the actions you take after you have invested in an idea and find yourself losing or winning.
For that reason, I have split this book into those two scenarios.
Part I is called ‘I’m Losing – What Should I Do?’ The chapters in this part deal with being in a situation