Searching for high-quality, durable businesses with robust competitive advantages, runways for growth, and a history of creating value for shareholders.

Joined January 2022
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Here's the current state of the Durable Value Creators investable universe. Spent some time recently narrowing down the focus. Primary themes include picks & shovels of secular trends, recurring revenue, razor-razorblade model, mission-critical, and/or relatively asset-light.
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Intuitive Surgical $ISRG is starting to pique my interest. Not cheap, but *cheapest* multiple since 2022. Incredible moat, kind of like a more dominant version of IDEXX Labs - growing an installed base and selling recurring consumables. Anyone else looking at it?
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$ADBE is certainly an interesting case. It looks incredibly cheap relative to the growth and profitability. Yes there are some potential AI risks but this seems like an insane overreaction. That said, if it's really as cheap as it looks, where is the insider buying?
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One of the great things about investing is if you don’t trust, understand, or have conviction in a name… you simply don’t have to buy it. Find your own strategy and stick to it.
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A few I'd be interested in: Mars (private) - animal healthcare Clean Harbors - hazardous waste Entegris - Microcontamination control Lockheed Martin - Missiles/Fire control Moody's/S&P - Ratings
What company divisions/business units would you love to own if they were independent stocks? I'd love to own Sephora if it was an independent company
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To summarize the $V/$MA headwinds I've noted (not all are equal magnitude): Legislation and regulation (esp. CCCA in US) Ex-US domestic networks Regional collaboration (ex. SE Asia Nexus) Stablecoins BNPL Agentic commerce Counterpoint: They're continuing to grow LDD top line
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I think my verdict is, while they probably continue to grow at respectable rates, I'm not sure I can confidently hold against the growing list of challenges. But it's worth emphasizing these companies aren't even hitting an inflection point where grow stalls/declines, still LDD.
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I don't own $V or $MA but come back to them frequently because they seem like such high quality businesses. That said, it also feels like they're being poked and attacked from multiple angles both domestically and internationally. How do shareholders reconcile the risks?
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Insurance brokers have been having a rough go of things lately, especially $BRO. I understand that insurance markets tend to go in cycles but what's driving such an extreme correction in the stock? Largest drawdown since 08/09. Losing market share? Industry permanently changing?
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Any other companies/industries out there with similar dynamics to drug packaging ($WST $STVN) where there are volume tailwinds but also favorable mix shift? More biologics = higher spec, higher margin content. Maybe semicap, such as rising litho intensity per chip? $ASML
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Man I sure hope Claude is telling me accurate information, because I've either been learning a lot of good stuff lately or am being confidently mislead on various businesses and industry dynamics.
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Looks like the AI "bubble" is that companies pushed AI spending too hard without results, which in turn overestimates AI company projections for customers and ARR. Everyone went too big too fast. The technology is real and beneficial, but potential has outrun productivity so far.
NEW: Amazon has reportedly scrapped its internal AI leaderboard as costs soared, with a senior executive telling staff: “don’t use AI just for the sake of using AI.”
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HEICO Q2 earnings call summary and Q&A $HEI Strong organic growth, raising operating margin guidance, and multi-year defense tailwind. Management argues newer generation aircraft with more expensive parts will create more PMA opportunity, not less.
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Some good looking numbers coming out of HEICO’s Q2 earnings release $HEI
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This seems kinda crazy to me. I don't know anyone at work using more than several hundred dollars worth of Claude tokens per month. Even with only using Opus and mostly using max effort I've still haven't hit the $500/mo mark using it most every day. What are these people doing?
🦔Microsoft canceled its internal Claude Code licenses this week after token-based billing made the cost untenable, even for a company with effectively infinite cloud resources. Uber's CTO sent an internal memo warning the company burned through its entire 2026 AI budget in just four months. American AI software prices have jumped 20% to 37%, and GitHub (owned by Microsoft) is dropping flat-rate plans for usage-based billing across its products. My Take The AI subsidy era is ending in real time. The same company that put $13 billion into OpenAI and built the Azure infrastructure powering most of Anthropic's compute just looked at the bill from a competitor's coding tool and decided it was not worth paying. That is not a productivity failure on Anthropic's end. Token-based pricing is forcing every enterprise customer to confront the actual cost of running these models at scale, and the number turns out to be far higher than the flat-rate experiments suggested. This ties directly to my Gemini Flash post yesterday. Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google all raised effective prices in the last six months. Enterprises that built workflows assuming AI costs would keep falling are now watching annual budgets evaporate in months. Two outcomes look likely from here. Either enterprises scale back AI usage to fit budgets, which slows the revenue ramp the labs need to justify their valuations ahead of IPOs, or the labs cut prices and absorb the losses, which makes the unit economics worse at exactly the wrong moment. Both paths land in the same place, the numbers stop working, and somebody has to take the writedown. Hedgie🤗
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Or perhaps the alternative view is, maybe myself and the people around me aren't using AI enough... But I don't use AI just for the sake of using AI, must have a purpose or task in mind. Feels like some people are just setting tokens (and money) on fire for the sake of it.
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We see these posts every year now yet $NVDA revenue and profits continue to rip higher. Let's think for a second. In 2020 they spent $2.8B on R&D. This latest Q alone? $6.3B. TSMC makes all their chips so not much to spend on capex. What are they supposed to do besides return it?
$NVDA increasing their dividend is a very bad sign in my opinion. To me, it signals they don’t know what to do with the cash anymore. Nobody owns NVIDIA to collect a 0.5% dividend.
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"Just reinvest it" is a common argument. But R&D CAGR over the last 5 years is ~40%. They're pouring massive amounts into new projects. New projects take time to start and ramp up. They aren't a light switch you just flip on. Dividends and buybacks are good in this situation.
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A name worth flagging, Sunbelt Rentals $SUNB (formerly Ashtead Group) has been popping up quite a bit this quarter on 13Fs. They're the 2nd largest equipment rental company in the US behind $URI. Maybe activity related to the listing change but interesting nonetheless.
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I've always thought United Rentals was the better run company (and they've consistently had the higher margins). Checking Dataroma's site for $URI activity doesn't show much, so it makes me curious why the big names would be more interested in $SUNB, regardless of listing.
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Buffett taught Abel well. Buy one generational business ($GOOG) to cement your legacy, then a bunch of junk (joke) On a serious note, I largely support the consolidation but dumping $V and $MA while buying stuff like $DAL and $M wouldn’t inspire confidence if I was a shareholder
Berkshire Hathaway Q1 26’ 13F (Dataroma) Top 5 holdings: $AAPL $AXP $KO $BAC $CVX Top Buys: $GOOGL $GOOG
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