[GE] what's in your portfolio?
by Eddie Dalton, Investor at $50bn+ Hedge Fund, Investor at $30bn+ Private Equity Firm, and Exited Startup Founder
Welcome to another Free Friday! Today’s post is a guest essay by Eddie Dalton, the author of One More Thing. Previously, Eddie was an investor at hedge fund with $50bn+ in AUM, an investor at a private equity firm with $30bn+ in AUM, and the cofounder of an exited startup.
Eddie actually reached out to me after I published my piece Anthology #3: Tiger Management: 50 Lessons from 50 Tigers to share some of his experiences working with a number of the Tigers and Cubs.
PS/ Still working on a longer Tiger essay (“Handbook”), so if you worked at Tiger (or at a Cub/with someone who worked at Tiger) and are willing to share your experience, please reach out! I’d love to chat (more than happy for it to be on background or off the record).
Eddie is one of the most thoughtful young investors I’ve spoken with recently, and I encouraged him to write more. Surprisingly, he obliged. But while he’s not writing specifically about investing, he’s sharing an equally thoughtful approach to life, starting with a piece on his personal portfolio.
In Eddie’s own words:
Having spent a near-decade in the finance ivory tower I see it more clearly: (i) a small group of people that made up hard words for simple things that facilitates a (ii) wealth transfer from impatient speculators to patient investors. Keep it simple and let time do its thing. Markets overreact in both directions. “This time it’s different” are the most expensive words in investing. No one cares about your money as much as you do. And remember to never ask for financial advice, just ask “what’s in your portfolio?”
what’s in your portfolio?
“Don't tell me what you think, tell me what you have in your portfolio.”
- Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Talking about money is super important. Making it a regular topic with friends, family, and especially your partner is the best way to learn, have it work for you, and bullet-proof your future by starting early.
The best way to cut through noise is to ask, “What’s in your portfolio?”
What’s in my portfolio?
** Note: Keep in mind, I’m pretty restricted (can’t invest in individual stocks, ETFs, crypto, etc.) given my work. This has been a huge blessing because I’m undistracted by missed opportunities to (likely) underperform the market
70% U.S. Large-Cap Growth: FSPGX, SWLGX
Think about this like a subset of NASDAQ (tech and internet-focused U.S. companies)
There’s no difference between FSPGX and SWLGX, one is just Fidelity (free to trade on Fidelity), and the other is Schwab (free to trade on Schwab)
My favorite part about this mutual fund is that it has a 0.04% expense ratio, and most NASDAQ funds are 0.25-0.50%
20% S&P 500: FXAIX, SWPPX
This is a way to own 500 companies through one investment, specifically, the 500 largest U.S. companies
Again, no difference between FXAIX and SWPPX (Fidelity vs. Schwab versions of the same thing)
Expense ratio, 0.02%
5% Semiconductors: FSELX
With a small percentage of your portfolio, it’s ok to swing for the fences / try your capital at a specific thesis
Keep in mind, thematic or geo-specific funds will cost you more in fees; the reasoning being that it requires more active management for the fund to provide
In my case, 25% of this fund is in NVIDIA, and given I’m restricted from single-stock investing, it is the closest I can get via a mutual fund
Expense ratio, 0.65%
5% China: FHKCX
Similar to the above, this is a small contrarian bet, in some ways as a hedge to my largely U.S. exposure
Don’t overlook overlaps in your allocation. For example, TSMC is 25% of this fund, but also 7% of FSELX above
Expense ratio, 0.91%
Net worth allocation:
The above comprises the majority of my savings, circa 55%
(+) Some of my compensation is in carried interest, profit sharing, and co-invest; those dollars that are “in the market”, another 33%
(+) Retirement accounts (401K, HSA, Roth IRA), another 7%
(=) 95% of my liquid net worth is “in the market”
The remaining 5% is cash (3%), bonds (1%), and some angel investments (donations? 1%)
Mistakes I made:
Trying to beat the market: For years, before I was as restricted in my trading, I tried niche contrarian value investing, speculative stock-picking, and buying things I knew nothing about (crypto), instead of investing in S&P and NASDAQ. I underperformed the market every year, for five years
Not engaging auto-pilot: Every month, I would manually transfer dollars to a brokerage account, watch the market 5 hours a day trying to find the perfect time to invest it, and agonize over every dollar-cost-average decision. I missed big market upswings by not automating withdrawals and reinvestments, and wasted a ton of time which just hurt my returns
Not paying attention to fees: Independent of investment performance, even a 0.50-1% fee (I know, sounds small), is a huge annual drag on your portfolio. Especially in retirement accounts like 401Ks and IRAs, some funds (target date funds, specialized size or geo funds, income generating bond funds, etc.) charge insanely high fees that eat away at your account every year. Pay the absolute minimum in fees, don’t hire a financial advisor, and automate index investing
Panicking and taking profit / covering losses: Even with money I am investing for the long term, I would panic sell secular winners during bad drawdowns (when really, these were great opportunities to buy more = average down). Two mind tricks that work on me: (i) If someone offers you a random price everyday for your house, why do you care / pay attention? (ii) If you liked it at $100, shouldn’t you like it more at $50?
Spending first, investing second: It’s easy in your 20s to benchmark yourself to your co-workers, friends, and spend more as you earn more. Find a mind trick that forces you to cut habitual or mindless spend. For example, is your coffee really $5, or is it $270? When you get paid, invest first » then save » then spend
What I learned:
** Note: Not advice, I’m also just figuring this out
Outfoxing the market is hard
Put saving and investing on auto-pilot
Don’t pay fees to people who care less about your money than you do
Be anti-niche and long-term (buy the indices, ride the volatility and go long)
Grow your chip stack
If you’d like to read more of Eddie’s writing, you can do so here: