Instead of focusing on vague metrics like management or margins, the primary measure of a "good business" should be its fundamental return on invested capital (ROIC). This first-principles, quantitative approach is the foundation for sound credit underwriting, especially in illiquid deals.

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Private Equity investors often misunderstand the VC model, questioning the lack of deep due diligence. They fail to grasp that VCs operate on power laws, needing just one investment to return the entire fund, making the potential for exponential growth the only metric that truly matters.

The quality of public small-cap companies, measured by Return on Invested Capital (ROIC), has plummeted from 7.5% to 3% over 30 years. This degradation means high-growth opportunities now predominantly exist in the later-stage private markets. Institutional investors must shift their asset allocation to venture and growth equity, which has become "the big leagues," not a bespoke asset class.

Success in community bank investing doesn't require complex esoteric analysis. It boils down to four key metrics: high capital levels (equity-to-assets), low non-performing assets (under 2%), stable or growing book value, and a low price-to-tangible book value (under 85%).

Most good investors succeed by recognizing patterns (e.g., "SaaS for X"). However, the truly exceptional investors analyze businesses from first principles, understanding their deep, fundamental merits. This allows them to spot outlier opportunities that don't fit any existing mold, which is where the greatest returns are found.

A common mistake in venture capital is investing too early based on founder pedigree or gut feel, which is akin to 'shooting in the dark'. A more disciplined private equity approach waits for companies to establish repeatable, business-driven key performance metrics before committing capital, reducing portfolio variance.

The true differentiator for top-tier companies isn't their ability to attract investors, but how efficiently they convert invested capital into high-margin, high-growth revenue. This 'capital efficiency' is the key metric Karmel Capital uses to identify elite performers among a universe of well-funded businesses.

The CEO of Judges Scientific uses Return on Total Invested Capital (ROTIC) instead of the more common ROCE. He argues ROCE is an "accounting fiction" because amortization shrinks the capital base over time, artificially inflating returns. ROTIC provides a more honest measure based on the actual capital invested.

A common investor mistake is underwriting a deal that requires 15-20 different initiatives to go perfectly. A superior approach concentrates on 3-5 key value drivers, recognizing that the probability of many independent events all succeeding is mathematically negligible, thus providing a more realistic path to a strong return.

While many investors screen for companies with high Return on Invested Capital (ROIC), a more powerful indicator is the trajectory of ROIC. A company improving from a 4% to 8% ROIC is often a better investment than one stagnant at 12%, as there is a direct correlation between rising ROIC and stock performance.

A credit investor's true edge lies not in understanding a company's operations, but in mastering the right-hand side of the balance sheet. This includes legal structures, credit agreements, and bankruptcy processes. Private equity investors, who are owners, will always have superior knowledge of the business itself (the left-hand side).