When i was younger, i was a real proselytizer. When i found something that i thought was like, really, oh man. I got to tell everybody about this. And so i did. Just proselytize, proselytizing. But over time, that ability be incredibly dispassionate about most things and yet still driven by this passionate obsession with how do you figure out how that works? That's what makes me such a fantastic investor. You can make your own luck. Ye, you ave to put yourself out there. The fact is tough that if you retain that agency as what i like about you, and why i've always been interested in following
Ian Cassel is the founder of MicroCapClub, a community where hundreds of investors have discussions on US and Canadian microcap companies. They also help you become better investors with educational content covering investing strategies, intelligent fanatic CEOs, great investors, and more. Ian is also Founder and CIO at Intelligent Fanatics Capital Management, whose goal is to own the smallest, most illiquid, least institutionally owned, misunderstood businesses that are run by intelligent fanatics.
Show Notes:
- Microcaps are boons for quants
- How Ian fell in love with microcaps
- Managing other people’s money
- Advantages and risks of microcap investing
- Profitability, scarcity, and great stories
- The top-down and bottom-up investment framework
- Not being limited by minimum market caps
- Being a hands-on investor
- Turnovers in microcap portfolios
- PE taking over microcap firms
- Increasing the flywheel of serendipity
- Preparing to be effortless
- Not getting into arguments with people with made up minds
- Being honest about your investment approach
- The “mute” button hack
- Identifying bad management
- Importance of base rates
- Educating about microcaps
- Optimism beats pessimism
- Do macroeconomic factors really matter?
- What is chasing you?
Books Mentioned:
- The Psychology of Money, by Morgan Housel
- The Tao Jones Averages, by Bennett Goodspeed