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Instead of using an arbitrary percentage, Gorham Thomason of AKO Capital determines maximum position size based on a stock's liquidity. This ensures the fund can exit a large position without crashing the share price if the investment thesis sours, providing a practical risk management framework.
Rather than making a large initial bet, follow the VC model of making a small investment first. Only increase your position size once the company has proven its model, reduced technological risk, or solved major distribution challenges, effectively de-risking the core thesis.
Analysis of Keynes's portfolio reveals a subtle skill: his true value-add came from ensuring his lowest-conviction ideas received minimal capital. Over his career, his bottom five positions shrank from 11.7% to just 6% of his portfolio, demonstrating a disciplined approach to managing risk on less-certain bets.
Many investors wrongly equate high conviction with making a large initial investment. A more evolved approach is to start with smaller at-cost positions, allowing a company's performance to earn its eventual large weighting in the portfolio. This mitigates risk and improves decision-making.
Allocate more capital to businesses with a highly predictable future (a narrow "cone of uncertainty"), like Costco. Less predictable, high-upside bets should be smaller positions, as their future has a wider range of possible outcomes. Conviction and certainty should drive allocation size.
To pursue massive upside, one must first survive. Gardner mitigates risk by never allocating more than 5% of his portfolio to any new position. This discipline prevents catastrophic losses from a single bad idea, ensuring he stays in the game long enough for the big winners to emerge.
Gurevich opposes the mechanical application of stop-losses to every position. Risk management should be at the portfolio level. Some positions become more valuable as they move against you and should be held longer. A trader must preserve the freedom to exit a trade based on a changed thesis, not an arbitrary price level.
A skilled investor avoided a winning stock because his Limited Partner (LP) base wouldn't tolerate the potential drawdown. This shows that even with strong conviction, a fund's structure and client base can dictate its investment universe, creating opportunities for those with more patient or permanent capital.
A powerful risk management technique is setting a maximum percentage of your portfolio that can be invested in a single stock *at cost*. A 5% at-cost limit means once you've invested 5% of your capital, you cannot add more, even if the stock price plummets and its market value shrinks. This prevents chasing losers.
To survive long-term, systematic trading models should be designed to be more sensitive when exiting a trade than when entering. Avoiding a leveraged liquidity cascade by selling near the top is far more critical for capital preservation than buying the exact bottom.
Alexander Roepers advocates actively managing position sizes in a concentrated portfolio. If a stock with a 12-month price target of $50 rises to $45 in just a few months, he will sell out completely. This locks in gains, manages risk-reward, and creates an opportunity to re-enter if the price dips again.