MI REWIND: PETER LYNCH & GARP INVESTING

W/ ROBERT REYNOLDS

23 June 2023

In this MI Rewind episode, Clay Finck chats with Robert Reynolds about who Peter Lynch is and how he invests, the advantages individual retail investors can have over Wall Street, why active investors might be in a good position to outperform passive investors over the coming years, how Robert thinks about portfolio concentration, why Facebook and Google are potentially compelling stock picks, and much more!

Robert Reynolds is an investor that creates content on The Popular Investor YouTube channel which has over 40k subscribers and currently manages over $10 million of outside capital.

SUBSCRIBE

IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Who Peter Lynch is and how he personally invests.
  • How individual retail investors can have an advantage over Wall Street.
  • Why active investors might be in a good position to outperform passive investors over the coming years.
  • Why Facebook and Google are potentially compelling investments.
  • And much, much more!

TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Robert Reynolds (00:03):

For argument’s sake, if I look at Amazon, which is a company I own, I’m not going to look at the price-to-earnings. I’m going to look at the enterprise-value-to-EBITDA because they’re in a massive reinvestment cycle. It’s like $60 billion. So, if I look at price-to-earnings, it comes in really high, but I’m sort of penalizing the company for reinvesting in the future.

Clay Finck (00:23):

On today’s episode, I sit down to chat with Robert Reynolds. Robert is an investor and a content creator for The Popular Investor YouTube channel, which has over 40,000 subscribers. During our conversation, Robert and I chat about who Peter Lynch is and how he invests, the advantages individual retail investors can have over Wall Street, why active investors might be in a good position to outperform passive investors over the coming years? How Robert thinks about portfolio concentration, why Facebook and Google are potentially compelling stock picks, and much more. I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did with Robert Reynolds.

Intro (01:03):

You are listening to Millennial Investing by The Investor’s Podcast Network, where your hosts, Robert Leonard and Clary Finck interview successful entrepreneurs, business leaders, and investors to help educate and inspire the millennial generation.

Clay Finck (01:23):

Welcome to the Millennial Investing Podcast. I am your host, Clay Finck. And today, I am joined by Robert Reynolds. Robert, pleasure of having you on the show.

Robert Reynolds (01:32):

Thanks for having me.

Clay Finck (01:34):

Before we talk about Peter Lynch and a few other topics, could you talk to our audience about your journey as an investor? What led you to getting started as an individual stock investor, and what led you to eventually starting your YouTube channel?

Robert Reynolds (01:49):

I started investing back in 2009. That was the first year I started investing. And when I started investing, it was driven more so by materialistic reasons. I come from a lower-middle-class family. And I didn’t really know much about investing, but I knew that people were making an awful lot of money. My cousin used to work for Merrill Lynch, and Merrill Lynch shut down their offices in Ireland. She moved over to New York. She met a portfolio manager, married that portfolio manager, and that was the first time I realized what stock investing was.

Robert Reynolds (02:18):

In Ireland, there’s not really a culture of investing or there wasn’t any way. When I started, nobody really invested. There was no real education or anything on it. So it was really firsthand understanding of the stock market and investing that I got from family members that moved over to the US, and were in that sort of ecosystem.

Robert Reynolds (02:36):

I started investing back in 2009. Perfect time, really, right after the global financial crisis, asset prices were mean-reverting. The first couple of years, I kind of felt like a genius. It didn’t really matter what you bought. Very similar to March 2020, it didn’t really matter what you bought. Everything was going to go up. And I made quite a decent chunk of change between 2009 and 2011. And then like all things, I mean, you get hit with a bit of a roadblock. You have the sovereign debt crisis across Europe, and had a little bit of a drag on global growth. A lot of volatility increases, and as Mike Tyson says, “Everyone has a plan until you get punched in the face.”

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