With information now ubiquitous, the primary source of market inefficiency is no longer informational but behavioral. The most durable edge is "time arbitrage"—exploiting the market's obsession with short-term results by focusing on a business's normalized potential over a two-to-four-year horizon.
A fertile source for undervalued ideas is identifying powerful consumer franchises hidden within a parent company with a boring or unrelated corporate name. The market often overlooks the strength of the underlying brand (e.g., Titleist golf clubs owned by Acushnet) due to this name dissociation.
Dominant aggregator platforms are often misjudged as being vulnerable to technological disruption (e.g., Uber vs. robo-taxis). Their real strength lies in their network, allowing them to integrate and offer new technologies from various providers, thus becoming beneficiaries rather than victims of innovation.
Certain "trophy assets," like major league sports teams, defy traditional valuation metrics. Their true worth is determined not by their cash flow, which can be modest, but by their extreme scarcity and the price a private acquirer is willing to pay for the prestige of ownership, as seen in private market transactions.
Identifying a stock trading below its intrinsic value is only the first step. To avoid "value traps" (stocks that stay cheap forever), investors must also identify a specific catalyst that will unlock its value over a reasonable timeframe, typically 2-4 years.
Asset managers can avoid recycling old ideas by running a parallel institutional research service. The need to deliver fresh ideas to sophisticated, paying clients who challenge assumptions creates a powerful forcing function for continuous, contrarian idea generation that benefits the asset management side.
A little-known tax change effective around 2027 will prevent public companies from deducting the salaries of their top five highest-paid employees. For sports teams, this creates a huge competitive disadvantage against private teams, providing a powerful catalyst for them to be sold or taken private.
