Sunday, January 26, 2020

Product Based Investing


Introduction

I have wanted to do this since late 2016. "This" means laying out the investing approach I have adopted, often casually, to investing in tech and adjacent stocks. My hope is that I can help budding and seasoned investors alike, look at investing through an alternate lens.

Also, since everything needs a name, I refer to my approach as product based investing. With that, let's get to it:

Foundation

The rough idea underlying product based investing is that companies primarily provide either products or services to a market. Thus the performance of the products that a company has created is a great proxy for the company's performance. 

Additionally, in the stock market, the earlier, than the general market, one can estimate the performance of the product, the better the likelihood of making a winning investment. Ideally, you want to estimate the likely performance of the product even before the product has launched.

The above aspect in conjunction with things like the disruptive nature of the product, it's potential market size and underlying trends form the core of the investment thesis.

The How

Next, let's look into how one goes about implementing this approach:

a. Identify Products

The first step is to identify a company that is about to launch a meaningful product. We'll talk more about "meaningful" later but let's take an example to make this first step clearer. 

In mid December of 2016, AMD announced it's Ryzen CPU chips. These were processor chips to compete with Intel for high end gaming.  They quickly followed it up by introducing Vega GPU chips in early January of 2017. These were graphics chips to compete with Nvidia for again, high end gaming. 

The cannons were lined up. AMD was competing again. The stock was trading at roughly 10$.  

b. Determine their Importance

In retrospect, this was a pivotal moment for AMD. With Ryzen, especially, being a completely new design, they were back to challenging Intel for high end desktop CPU marketshare in almost 10 years. 

It did not take rocket science to figure out this was a big deal. A google search or two would give one everything they needed to determine how important this set of product launches was.

In theory the above steps sound easy, but in reality they require a keen interest in the tech industry and the time commitment to keep up with the news cycle around it.

c. Predict their Performance

This is where things start to get really interesting. There is no equation (Oh how I wish there was one..) that outputs that the products will be a smashing success or dismal failures. 

What this step requires is good old fashioned research which is a combination of google searches and more importantly industry specific blogs e.g. in the case of AMD, something like anandtech.comAlso, one needs to keep up with the news cycle, via sites like The Verge, especially around major tech events like CES.

Basically, what one is doing, is trying to predict how well the product will perform in the market. Again, this is more of an art than science and the more one practices doing this, the better they get.

It turns out these were successful launches. Over the next 3 years, AMD relentlessly enhanced these products to the point that in mid 2019 they had a significant lead over Intel with a 7nm process. The stock was now trading at roughly 50$. A 400% gain in 3 years. Not bad!

The When

It should be pretty clear that in the 3 years I mention above, there would be plenty of opportunities to make an investment. Having said that, the earlier in the cycle one can form a hypothesis, make the investment and then stay in it till the hypothesis changes, the better the returns.

Next Up

Alright, enough talk about the past. In my next blog post (coming soon!), I'll apply this approach to a currently relevant stock, PTON.


• The contents of this blog are the personal opinions and investment choices of the writer. Please don't treat them as investment recommendations.
•  I have a long position in AMD, PTON.