Fund managers are like zebras. Those in the middle (owning popular stocks) are safe from predators (getting fired), even if performance is mediocre. Those on the outside (owning unfamiliar stocks) find better grass (higher returns) but risk being the first ones eaten if an idea fails. This creates an institutional imperative to stay with the consensus.
Simply keeping pace with peers is not a valid measure of success. If peers are taking excessive risks in a bubble, matching their performance means you were equally foolish. True skill is outperforming in bad times while keeping pace in good times.
During due diligence, it's crucial to look beyond returns. Top allocators analyze a manager's decision-making process, not just the outcome. They penalize managers who were “right for the wrong reasons” (luck) and give credit to those who were “wrong for the right reasons” (good process, bad luck).
Contrary to popular belief, the market may be getting less efficient. The dominance of indexing, quant funds, and multi-manager pods—all with short time horizons—creates dislocations. This leaves opportunities for long-term investors to buy valuable assets that are neglected because their path to value creation is uncertain.
While institutional capital market assumptions align with objective, yield-based models, their actual portfolio actions can deviate. Many institutions, despite models suggesting caution on expensive US stocks, maintained market weight, benefiting from the prolonged bull market. This highlights a critical inconsistency between their stated process and real-world behavior.
Many LPs focus solely on backing the 'best people.' However, a manager's chosen strategy and market (the 'neighborhood') is a more critical determinant of success. A brilliant manager playing a difficult game may underperform a good manager in a structurally advantaged area.
To achieve above-average investment returns, one cannot simply follow the crowd. True alpha comes from contrarian thinking—making investments that conventional wisdom deems wrong. Rubenstein notes the primary barrier is psychological: overcoming the innate human desire to be liked and the fear of being told you're 'stupid' by your peers.
Contrary to classic theory, markets may be growing less efficient. This is driven not only by passive indexing but also by a structural shift in active management towards short-term, quantitative strategies that prioritize immediate price movements over long-term fundamental value.
The difficulty in going against conventional wisdom isn't just intellectual. According to David Rubenstein, it's rooted in the human desire to be liked and respected. People avoid contrarian bets because they don't want to be told they're "stupid" by their peers, making the psychological and social cost very high.
Industry specialists can become trapped in an "echo chamber," making them resistant to paradigm shifts. WCM found their generalist team structure was an advantage, as a lack of "scar tissue" and a broader perspective allowed them to identify changes that entrenched specialists dismissed as temporary noise.
The institutionalization of venture capital as a career path changes investor incentives. At large funds, individuals may be motivated to join hyped deals with well-known founders to advance their careers, rather than taking on the personal risk of backing a contrarian idea with higher return potential.