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The hosts advocate selling smaller positions in strong businesses like TransDigm and Copart to increase their stake in a higher-conviction holding like Amazon. This simplifies the portfolio and focuses research efforts on their best ideas, rather than managing marginal positions.

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Privat Capital holds a concentrated portfolio of 16-17 stocks. This strategy forces deep conviction in each position and ensures that winners have a meaningful impact on fund performance. Over-diversification can dilute both research focus and the potential returns from a fund's best ideas.

Successful concentration isn't just about doubling down on winners. It's equally about avoiding the dispersion of capital and attention. This means resisting the industry bias to automatically do a pro-rata investment in a company just because another VC offered a higher valuation.

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.

Since it's impossible to know upfront which investments will generate outlier returns, the key isn't picking them but holding them. The biggest mistake is 'cutting your flowers to water your weeds'—selling winners to invest in underperformers. You must 'circle the wagons' around your core assets.

For unconstrained investors, the real leverage ('torque') comes not just from stock selection but from the conviction to heavily weight a few key ideas. The solution to most portfolio mistakes is often internal: reallocate capital by owning more of your best ideas.

Rather than passively holding a stock, the "buy and optimize" strategy involves actively managing its weighting in a portfolio. As a stock becomes more expensive relative to its intrinsic value, the position is trimmed, and when it gets cheaper, it is increased, creating an additional layer of return.

The effort to consistently make small, correct short-term trades is immense and error-prone. A better strategy is focusing on finding a few exceptional businesses that compound value at high rates for years, effectively doing the hard work on your behalf.

Suboptimal selling is often driven by fear: a position gets "too big" or you want to lock in gains. A better approach is to only sell when you find a new investment you "love" more. This forces a positive, opportunity-cost framework rather than a negative, fear-based one, letting winners run.

The trend of running a holding company (a portfolio of businesses) is often a path to distraction and shallow expertise. The wealthiest entrepreneurs typically achieve success by focusing intensely on a single venture for an extended period, mastering its operations before considering diversification.

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.