Applying Ben Graham's "unpopular large caps" principle to well-known companies like Meta is a powerful strategy. When the market punishes a fundamentally strong large cap for temporary concerns, it creates an attractive entry point. Unlike less-followed stocks, US large caps often rebound quickly once the narrative proves to be an overreaction.

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Marks frames contrarian investing not as simple opposition, but as using the market's excessive force (optimism or pessimism) against itself. This mental model involves letting the market's momentum create opportunities, like selling into euphoric buying, rather than just betting against the crowd.

Graham adopted philosopher Baruch Spinoza's idea of viewing things "in the aspect of eternity" to teach investors to focus on long-term intrinsic value rather than getting caught up in the market's daily emotional swings, promoting a disciplined, long-term perspective.

Despite Meta's core business strength and Reels' massive success ($50B run rate), the stock is hampered by a lack of investor confidence in Mark Zuckerberg's long-term, costly metaverse strategy—a stark contrast to how investors eventually embraced Jeff Bezos's AWS bet.

Contrary to the belief that mega-cap stocks are efficiently priced, behemoths like Alphabet can see 100% price swings in a single year. This volatility creates massive opportunities for patient investors who ignore market noise and focus on fundamentals.

Zuckerberg categorizes AI players by their AGI timeline predictions (optimist, moderate, pessimist), which dictates investment. He positions Meta's strong cash flow as a durable advantage to survive a potential bubble burst that would bankrupt unprofitable competitors like OpenAI.

The classic 'margin of safety' isn't limited to tangible assets. For modern, asset-light companies, safety is found in predictable, high-growth earnings. A business with strong earnings visibility, high switching costs, and rapid growth can have a massive margin of safety, even with a high price-to-book ratio.

While holding a long-term deep value thesis, ARK Invest actively trades high-conviction stocks. They trim positions when a stock like Tesla surges to 13-14% of the portfolio and buy back in during dips. This strategy uses the market's inherent volatility and controversy around a stock to rebalance and improve their cost basis.

Weakness in speculative, low-quality stocks and assets like Bitcoin often marks the beginning of a market correction. The final phase, however, is typically characterized by the decline of high-quality market leaders (the “generals”). This sequential weakness is a historical indicator that the correction is closer to its end than its beginning.

Zuckerberg compares the current AI build-out to historical infrastructure bubbles like railroads. He anticipates a potential collapse where over-leveraged companies fail, allowing well-capitalized firms like Meta to acquire valuable data center assets at a discount. It's a long-term strategic play, not just a fear.

The dot-com bubble didn't create wealth in 1999; it destroyed it. Generational wealth came from buying and holding survivors like Amazon *after* its stock had fallen 95%. The winning strategy isn't timing the crash, but surviving it and holding quality assets through the long recovery.

Ben Graham’s "Unpopular Large Caps" Strategy Is Ideal for Buying Tech Giants During Temporary Panics | RiffOn