RWH053: TROUBLE AHEAD
W/ BILL PRIEST
11 January 2025
In this episode, William Green speaks with Barron’s Roundtable member Bill Priest, who is Vice Chairman of TD Wealth and founder, Chairman, and Co-Chief Investment Officer of TD Epoch. Bill is the co-author of several books, including “Winning at Active Management.” Having prospered for six decades in the financial markets, Bill has seen it all. Here, he talks about his core investing principles & why he believes investors are too complacent in the face of mounting risk & fragility.
IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:
- How Bill Priest fell in love with the stock market.
- Why he focuses relentlessly on free cash flow & cost of capital.
- How he goes about analyzing a business.
- Why growth stocks may start to struggle.
- Why he’s worried about the threat of stagflation.
- How investors can protect themselves from an unknowable future.
- Why AI is unstoppable, not just another bubble.
- Why he’d be “very careful” about investing in China.
- Why you should keep ample cash to ride out difficult times.
- Why his exposure to equities is much lower than usual.
- How to be a successful leader.
- What he’s learned from his daughter about happiness.
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.
[00:00:00] William Green: Hi there, happy new year. It’s great to be back with you again. This is a really exciting week for me as my book, Richer Wiser Happier, just came out in paperback a couple of days ago here in America. So before I introduce our very special guest, I wanted to thank all of you out there who have helped to make the book a success since it first came out in hardcover.
[00:00:21] William Green: I’m really deeply grateful to so many of you who’ve bought the book, or given it as a gift, or who wrote generous comments about it on social media, or took the time to share positive reviews and ratings on sites like Goodreads and Amazon. As you can imagine, all of this support has an enormous impact in terms of spreading the good word about the book and helping to introduce it to a wider audience.
[00:00:45] William Green: It’s truly invaluable. On a more personal level, I have to say your incredibly warm response to the book has also made all of the work that I put into writing it feel hugely worthwhile. I’m always surprised by the number of personal messages I get from people. Saying that the book has helped them and sometimes that it’s actually changed their lives as you can imagine It’s just wonderfully cheering and life affirming for me to realize that the book is out there resonating for a lot of people. So I really just wanted to say thank you truly for all of your support. And now as my good friend Stig Brodersen would say on with the show, our guest today is a legendary investor named Bill Priest. Bill, who’s probably best known as a member of the Barron’s Roundtable, is one of the wisest and most experienced people on Wall Street.
[00:01:37] William Green: He’s spent more than 60 years as a professional investor. He’s built a series of vastly successful investment businesses, including one that had more than 100 billion in assets. He’s currently the executive chairman, co-chief investment officer, and portfolio manager at a big investment firm called TD Epoch.
[00:01:57] William Green: Bill is an expert on how to win at the game of active investment management, which was the subject of one of the three books that he’s co-authored. But he’s also one of the great survivors, having thrived for six decades in the financial markets. As you’ll hear in this conversation, he’s pretty concerned these days that many investors have become too complacent and that we should be careful to position ourselves prudently and conservatively.
[00:02:24] William Green: In an uncertain world that looks increasingly fragile to him. When it comes to investing, Bill has seen it all. So I think it’s particularly worth paying attention to his battle tested wisdom. I hope you enjoy our conversation. Thanks so much for joining us.
[00:03:04] William Green: Hi, folks, it’s a great honor and pleasure to welcome today’s guest, Bill Priest, who’s one of the giants of the investment world. Bill is vice chair of TD Wealth and founder, chairman and co-chief investment officer and portfolio manager at TD Epoch. Before that, he built a previous investment firm into a behemoth with over a hundred billion dollars in assets.
[00:03:25] William Green: He’s also the author of several books about investing, including one titled, Winning at Active Management. Most famously, perhaps, he’s also a member of the Barron’s Roundtable. Today, we’re going to talk about some of the most important lessons that Bill has learned over the almost six decades of his career as a hugely successful investor.
[00:03:44] William Green: Bill, it’s lovely to see you. Thanks so much for joining us.
[00:03:48] Bill Priest: That’s absolutely my pleasure. Thanks very much.
[00:03:51] William Green: Ah, it’s great to see you. You published a book in 2007 called free cash flow and shareholder yield. That is one of a couple of books by you that I’ve been reading over the last few days. And you mentioned very briefly in there that you grew up in a small Ohio town back in the 1950s and cut lawns and trimmed hedges and devoured books about investing.
[00:04:12] William Green: And it piqued my interest because there’s so little out there about your early years and I’d love to know more about what it was like growing up in small town Ohio and how it shaped who you are and also then how you developed this very early fascination with investing.
[00:04:27] Bill Priest: Well, actually, I always enjoy talking to people.
[00:04:30] Bill Priest: When I, when I interview people, I always ask them exactly where your started. Tell me about your family of origin, your parents, your siblings, and whatnot, because it does shape who you are. I was actually born in Pittsburgh, which is 40 miles away from Steubenville. My parents were unusual. My father was more or less an orphan.
[00:04:46] Bill Priest: His siblings and parents had died by the time he was 12 or 14 years old, and he only had a sixth grade education. My mother, on the other hand, had a college education. She graduated from the University of Pittsburgh, and she was a school teacher. I’m still not sure how these two got together, but at any rate, they got together.
[00:05:04] Bill Priest: We grew up in Stoneville, Ohio. My dad worked in the steel mill. He had a white collar job there at the time, and it was a wonderful place to grow up at that time. Well, later, perhaps, we can get into kind of what’s changed there versus now. It gets into some other economic and political issues, but I grew up there, went to public school.
[00:05:22] Bill Priest: It was a pretty good student. I wound up going to Duke University as an undergrad and later Wharton, we can talk about that. But growing up, my dad always stressed the fact that you don’t get something for nothing. If you want your allowance, which at one point was 80 cents a week, which was a lot of money for me at that time, I had chores.
[00:05:42] Bill Priest: I had to cut the grass, we had some hedges I had to trim, and I always had to earn my allowance. Now, even in those days, I would say the work ethic was valued. And I’ve had a W 2 since I was 16 years old. There wasn’t a summer that went by that I didn’t have a job. In fact, my peer group used to think of people who weren’t working as being lazy, good for nothings.
[00:06:06] Bill Priest: It was an amazing group of people at the time, very narrow with hindsight. But we’re talking about the mid fifties and I graduated high school in 1959, but it was also a very positive one in the sense that family mattered. You supported family no matter what, no family is perfect. And whenever there was an issue, my parents were always there to be supportive of me or my sisters.
[00:06:30] Bill Priest: They were remarkable in a crisis, just remarkable. And I was in two automobile accidents before I graduated high school, none of which were my fault, but the way my parents performed in those times, it was amazing. It was just an amazingly supportive period.
[00:06:46] William Green: And how did you go from being this hardworking, young, responsible kid to figuring out, wait a second, if I read all these books about investing and figure out how this game works, I won’t just have to mow lawns and trim hedges. Maybe I can make money more easily. What, what happened? Because it sounded like you actually had a circle of friends who invested.
[00:07:08] Bill Priest: Well, not so much in the high school days, but there was one book in high school I read, called How to Get Rich at a Stock Market. And I told my dad, this sounds a lot easier than forcing me to cut the grass and cut the hedges and do all these chores he had for me. And he said, well, he said, you can’t buy stocks. You know, you’re too young, but he said, if you want to buy something, you tell me what you want to buy.
[00:07:31] Bill Priest: And I’ll do it through my broker. He invested a little bit in the stock market, but it was more like individual securities and there were mutual funds. He wasn’t involved in that world at all. And I just remember saying, okay, dad, I want to buy this company called Hudson Vitamin Products. And I can’t remember too much about it, other than I lost almost half my money on it.
[00:07:53] Bill Priest: And so, it was recommended in the book that, how to get rich in the stock market. I really didn’t know what I was doing, to be honest with you. But that also taught me, don’t, don’t, don’t start spending money in areas you don’t know anything about. And I really didn’t do much with, with stocks until I, I got into at Duke a little bit, but even there, I took an investments course when I was a junior at Duke.
[00:08:16] Bill Priest: And I was so excited about it. I loved it. I just loved the whole concept of how economics and finance come together and how to value companies. But again, it was from an accounting framework, not so much a financial framework. I’ll explain that in a minute, but I was so excited that when it came time, my junior year for spring break.
[00:08:35] Bill Priest: I didn’t leave. I spent the entire spring break in the Lybrandry to writing a paper on Standard Oil of California. I found, I wrote a thesis, a study, I had to write a paper, but it was all about Standard Oil of California, what they did, how they earned their money and what not. And I got into the habit, believe it or not, of collecting annual reports.
[00:08:55] Bill Priest: Now, that’s a nerd. Let me tell you, that is a nerd. I must have collected, by the time I was 24, 25, I literally had hundreds of annual reports. I would peruse, collect, and whatnot. Like, people collect baseball cards, I collected annual reports. Kind of silly when you look back on it, but that’s, that’s what I did.
[00:09:14] Bill Priest: But I did really well in that course, and that that course of Duke kind of set me on my way. I also was an accounting major and a political science major simultaneously there. But it turns out I passed my CPA exam when I was in college, which is unusual. Most of the time you can’t even take it in college.
[00:09:34] Bill Priest: But the way the CPA exam works, exam itself is the same. It’s a nationwide exam. But some of the, when you can take it, and some of the rules regarding experience vary from state to state. But I was able to, I passed the exam when I was a senior at Duke, and I thought, well that’s pretty good. And then I had a couple of summer jobs lined up, and if you had an MBA, you could take one year of experience.
[00:09:58] Bill Priest: And by 23, I had my CPI certificate too. So I’d gone through Wharton, I was a very good student at Wharton. In fact, I And it shows my ignorance. I still think I’m pretty ignorant. I remember being asked if I want to join a fraternity. And I said, no, I have no interest in joining a fraternity. Well, you should join this one.
[00:10:14] Bill Priest: I said, what is it? It was Beta Gamma Sigma. I said, I never heard of that fraternity. Well, it turns out it’s an honorary fraternity. It’s for students that achieve a certain academic level and whatnot. So I said, well, what does it mean? Well, you got to come to this dinner and then you get to join. Then you can join.
[00:10:31] Bill Priest: I said, does it cost me any money? No. So at any rate that was, I mean, I had to be one of the most naive people right through age 22 or 3. I mean, it was head down, get the best grades you can. I got into a lot of business schools. I picked Wharton because they gave me credit. I was absent from all accounting courses because I passed the exam.
[00:10:55] Bill Priest: So I was able to get out of Wharton in three semesters, not four. And then this fourth semester, I actually worked for Cooper’s and Lybrand, and I told them the truth. I think the truth is always the best answer. We can shade it sometimes, but it’s keeping up with falsehoods just usually gets you in trouble.
[00:11:14] Bill Priest: And I told Cooper’s and Lybrand, look, I only want to stay long enough to finish my work requirements so I can get my certificate. I needed seven months in addition to the summers I had. And I told that to all the accounting firms. And no one would hire me, once, because they didn’t want me coming and leaving after seven months.
[00:11:32] Bill Priest: But Coopers Lybrand did. And they said, we’re going to change your mind. So, when I went there, I was there for seven months. They gave me all kinds of interesting jobs. I got into management consulting. I built a cost system for a contractor in the Middle East. I spent eight weeks in New York, pretty much staying at a crappy hotel with a hole in the bed spread.
[00:11:55] Bill Priest: And I had a manager and me, we built this cost system. And I’m thinking, this is pretty cool. At this point, I was 20, I’d be 23 years old when I was working with this guy. And they tried to convince me to stay in the consulting part of Lybrand and I said, no, I want to, I want to go into the stock market and to refinance and research.
[00:12:16] Bill Priest: And they said, okay, I’ll come back, I’ll finish that evolution in a minute. But when I got to actually be in charge of a company, I hired Lybrand as auditor, I paid them back for how they treated me.
[00:12:28] William Green: Ah, that’s nice. And then, and then you left and I guess you entered the investment industry around July 1965 as a research analyst.
[00:12:36] William Green: When it wasn’t a particularly sexy industry, this, this wasn’t where all of your peers from Wharton were looking to go. And you joined a relatively large firm and then left to co found this company. I never know how to pronounce it. Is it B or is it BEA Associates?
[00:12:52] Bill Priest: BEA. So that was an acronym for basic economic appraisals.
[00:12:57] Bill Priest: Well, let me lead up to that with when my first job was an analyst was in San Francisco with a mutual fund group called the Commonwealth Group of Mutual Funds. And at the time, it was the lowest offer compensation wise I had. I graduated near the top of my class award and I had all kinds of offers.
[00:13:17] Bill Priest: And back in those days, a big offer was five figures. So if you were offered 11, 000 a year or 12, 000 a year, that was astronomical. I turned all those down and I took this job in San Francisco where I knew absolutely nobody. And I was married at the time for 7, 500. And my father was irate. He said, are you kidding me?
[00:13:40] Bill Priest: You turned down all these offers and you, I said, dad, I want to be a securities analyst. He has, what in the world is that? So he, so I said, it’s analyzing securities and forecasting balance sheets, income statements, and trying to see if they’re good investments. And I had written my thesis at Wharton back then, you had to have a thesis to get your master’s degree and I’d done a thesis on, on the drug industry and it was, and again, it was an interesting thesis that the title of it is the ethical drug industry, which is, that’s another word for the prescription drug industry, but the prescription drug industry was called commonly called the ethical drug industry.
[00:14:19] Bill Priest: And I said, the ethical drug industry, the last of the robber barons. And then I went through the financials of how profitable they were for the services they provide. I probably would have been a good prosecutor, to be honest with you, once you look at what went on. But at any rate, I found it fascinating.
[00:14:37] Bill Priest: And this whole idea of security analysis leading to opinions on stocks. And there was a guy on the West Coast who I just sent resumes out blindly to these people, because no one recruited. No, there were no institutions of money managers that they’re recruited at Wharton with one or two exceptions.
[00:14:57] Bill Priest: You had the brokerage firms that they wanted you to be a broker or investment bank or what I just wanted to be a security sales. And so I sent resumes out and this guy from California was in the city or it was in it was in New York. I went up and met him. And he hired me. And I went down to Commonwealth Group of Mutual Funds.
[00:15:14] Bill Priest: I was only there, I’m thinking now, almost probably a year, maybe a little less than a year, when I was sold to Fireman’s Fund. And at that point, the guy that hired me had come east, and he worked for a firm called Anchor Corporation, which ran Fundamental Investors, which at the time was a one and a half to 2 billion mutual fund.
[00:15:34] Bill Priest: And that was enormous in those days. And so he wanted me to join him and I subsequently did, but I also had a good mentor mentors really matter when you’re young. And the mentor that I had, not only was Al Zesiger was my guy who recruited me to go out there. But there was another individual there who said when the acquisition took place, he said, you need to learn about the industry and you’re not going to learn about it out here.
[00:15:58] Bill Priest: You got to go to New York. And he gave me great advice. I took the job and went back to the New York area and I worked at the Fundamental Investors from 1966 to 1972. And they, they liked me a great deal at Fundamental, they wanted to make me Director of Research. And I said, guys, I’m only 29 years old, you want to make me Director of Research?
[00:16:22] Bill Priest: I, I don’t know about managing people or whatnot. And they said, well, you understand quant? And I said, look, what I understand about quant, Maybe more than what you do, but it’s nothing what quantitative capability really is. And I left there, I took a job cut from working in Elizabeth, New Jersey, which is where Fundamental Investors headquarters were, to a job in New York City where I paid more taxes for less money.
[00:16:50] Bill Priest: And that was in 1972, but I got to own part of the company. And this Al Zesiger, who is controlled, and it was just really a small, he had 300 million. I can tell you a lot of anecdotes about it, but even my first day on a job was just frankly amazing. Al talked me into joining him. Everybody said I was an idiot.
[00:17:09] Bill Priest: I had this secure, safe job with a lot of promise, at Fundamental, and I’m joining this firm that was 300 million, a startup, and it turned out 150 million only paid 10, 000 in fees. I didn’t even have enough cents to answer. My very first day on the job, Al says to me, well, Bill, you have a CPA. I’d like to make you treasurer.
[00:17:31] Bill Priest: I said, Al, I want to be securities analyst and portfolio manager. I don’t want to be treasurer. He said, yeah, but you know, you’ve got a CPA and we need a treasurer. And I said, well, what do I have to do? Well, you have one person reporting to you. Her name was Gloria Lee. And I said, what’s, what’s she doing?
[00:17:48] Bill Priest: Well, she’s our bookkeeper. I said, well, do I have to do anything here? And he says, no, no, she’ll just report to you. And I said, all right, look, that was done. He leaves the room. And next thing I know, Gloria walks in and she says, Hi Mr. Priest and Gloria is like 50 and I’m like 30 or 31 at the time. Gloria said okay, what do you want me to do with these?
[00:18:11] Bill Priest: And she has a fistful of bills. And I said, well, pay, she said, I can’t. I said, what are you talking about? I’ve seen the financial statements. We have current assets, current liabilities are two to one. She says, oh, you can’t believe those statements. I am now panicking. I left the safe job. I’m married with two kids.
[00:18:27] Bill Priest: I’m in New York. I took a pay cut and this person is telling me we can’t pay our bills. And I thought, this is a problem, Gloria. I said, let me ask you another question. In two weeks, you have to pay me a check for my first half month here. I said, how are you going to pay me? She said, frankly, I have no idea.
[00:18:43] Bill Priest: I absolutely panicked. I walked down the hall where Al Zesiger’s office was, and I said, Al, we’ve got a problem. And he was shocked, but he says, we’ll take care of it. So he hauled me across the street, we went to a bank, borrowed some money, and he said, but I also want you to buy stock. And I said, Al, I’m not even sure I’m going to get paid.
[00:19:03] Bill Priest: You want me to take what little savings I had, which was, I think I had 50 or 60,000, and invest everything. And to into BA and he said, yeah, that’s what I’d like you to do. I said, oh, this is, this is every nickel I have and so far this has all been downhill in this story. And he, and I said, no, bank’s going to lend me money.
[00:19:24] Bill Priest: I’m married with two kids. My wife’s a stay at home wife. We’ve got a mortgage. I have, I have no assets. He said, don’t worry about it. We’ll take care of it. I said, how are you going to do this? It’s my father’s going to guarantee your loan. I said, where’s your father lives? Just Cleveland, Ohio. If he’s never met me, don’t worry.
[00:19:39] Bill Priest: He’ll guarantee the loan. So it turned out I needed 80,000. I bought 10 percent of the company for that 80,000. His father never met me, but he guaranteed the loan. And that, that was the beginning, I mean, talk about naive people, that was an incredible period. But around that time, I also got to know Jack Traynor.
[00:20:02] Bill Priest: And I published my first article in the Financial Analyst Journal in 1965. And again, it was called, Rate of Return, Rate of Return on Equity is a Criterion for Stock Selection. And that was, that was a paper. It actually won a mini award or something. It was not a big in hindsight, it was a nothing paper, really.
[00:20:21] Bill Priest: You could do that study in 15 minutes a day. But at any rate, I got all excited about it. And that’s how I met Traynor. Jack Traynor was originally with Arthur D. Little as a consultant. And Jack is, Jack is the single smartest financial guy I, I’ve ever met in my life. He’s passed away.
[00:20:38] Bill Priest: He’s no longer alive, but he was an amazing thinker and a bit paranoid about a lot of things as well. But anyway, I got to know Jack. We both had a similar hobby. We both had collected model trains. And so we went to train meets and whatnot. And then those travels down to the middle of nowhere in Pennsylvania, sometimes we just got to like each other.
[00:20:58] Bill Priest: And then ERISA was passed and ERISA was passed. I believe it was 1974. I have to check the date of that.
[00:21:04] William Green: Yeah, and for people who don’t know, this is, I mean, this changed how pension funds were dealt with, right? Because it was a federal law that basically set standards for pension funds. So suddenly it was a whole new era for pension funds in terms of expanding their size and giving managers of pension funds new opportunities.
[00:21:22] William Green: So sorry, yeah, I didn’t mean to cut you off, but I just wanted to give a little context.
[00:21:26] Bill Priest: No, absolutely correct. So What happened was, the reason ERISA got passed, there was a company called Studebaker, a car company, and it went broke. And Studebaker, they had a pension fund, but they had, Studebaker had an option.
[00:21:43] Bill Priest: They could either pay, pay their pensioners what they owed them, or just give them the pension fund and say, good luck fellows, this is all. So in other words, they might have owed you a dollar, but the pension fund only had 50 cents, and they gave you the 50 cents. That situation actually led to the act itself, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.
[00:22:02] Bill Priest: But the law was flawed. There was a section there called, I think it was section 4023, and that section guaranteed the stock market. Well, there’s no way the government can guarantee the stock market. So, Jack and I and another fellow, Pat Riggio, we wrote a book called The Financial Reality Pension Fund in ERISA, and I testified before Congress.
[00:22:22] Bill Priest: We changed the law. That section 4023 was erroneous, and it was either withdrawn or corrected. But that made BEA in a lot of ways. Here, here we were. BEA was set up for just as you say, the world just took off. All of a sudden these pension funds, they were underfunded by hundreds of millions, billions of dollars.
[00:22:43] Bill Priest: So every year there had to be a large sum and the professional money managers just took off at that point. But because of that book, that book gave us real credibility when we were talking to pension benefit to trustees of pension funds. And we built, we went, we wound up building I think at one point, I think at the height of BEA, we were 10 billion.
[00:23:05] Bill Priest: Well, we really started with like 150 million. I wish we didn’t pay anybody anything.
[00:23:11] William Green: So, so there’s a, there’s a lot to unpack here. I mean, part, part of it is the good fortune of, of this kind of lightning strike that you just happened to be in the right place at the right time. And you went from this, this company with a relatively weak balance sheet, less than 300 million in assets living more or less hand to mouth to suddenly you being kind of riding this wave.
[00:23:30] William Green: So, so luck is a pretty, is a pretty good part of this.
[00:23:34] Bill Priest: Absolutely.
[00:23:35] Bill Priest: I’m a big believer in right time, right place. In fact, I wrote, started to write a piece for Barron’s. I’ll give you two examples. I came up in hiring somebody. This was a few, a few years ago. There was a guy that came in, I was the last person to interview him.
[00:23:49] Bill Priest: He was going to be a pharma analyst or something for us. And everybody convinced Bill, he’s the best we’ve ever seen. You got to hire this guy. And I said, yeah, but there’s two candidates. Don’t worry about this guy. You’re not as good as this guy. You’ve got to hire this guy. So I sat down with him and I started talking to him and he started to bother me.
[00:24:05] Bill Priest: I felt, I saw, I felt that there was a bit of an arrogance in him. And he had gone to Harvard undergraduate, Columbia Business School and Goldman Sachs. So he arrives in my office like, you know, I got all this. You know, I’d like to work here. I like the people I’ve met. So what do you want to talk about? That tone just irritated the hell out of me, to be honest with you. And I said, well, let’s talk a little bit about time and place. And he said, what do you mean? I said, well, let’s take, let’s, what do you think the stock market’s done over a long period of time? And he said, you know, 9 percent or so. I said, well, yeah, actually it’s closer to 10, 10 percent over a long period of time on average.
[00:24:40] Bill Priest: But let’s take a subset of those years. Let’s take 1980 to 2000. What do you think the market did in that period? He said, well, probably a little better. And I said, well, I know the answer. It wasn’t fair to challenge you with that. It’s 17. 6 percent a year for 20 years, a hundred thousand dollars in 1980 became two and a half million in 2000.
[00:25:03] Bill Priest: And he said, what’s your point? I said, well, how old do you think you had to be to benefit from that wonderful market? If you were 20, you were the office boy. If you were 60, you’re getting ready to retire. But if you were 40, approximately my age, right place, right time. Sure, I worked hard, but I always had the benefit of luck, good fortune, never underestimate the value of time and place.
[00:25:26] Bill Priest: And so, and then we passed on him. I passed on him and I was, I had the, I had the capability of doing that. And I hired another guy and he’s actually still with us today. His name is Steve Salzone. And so Steve comes in and he is leaving Alliance Bernstein. He is an analyst with a five star small cap fund that’s closed.
[00:25:52] Bill Priest: And I can’t understand why he wants to leave a quality firm like that, where he doesn’t have to worry about asset growth. Why do you want to come here? This is a startup. It may or may not work, this small cap fund we’re trying to build. He said, well, I just want to, I just want to be part of building something.
[00:26:08] Bill Priest: And it just didn’t make any sense to me. So I said, well, tell me how you got there. Tell me, I like talking about families of origins. I said, tell me, tell me how you got there. The line’s bursting. And I promise you, Bill, I’ll buy you dinner anywhere in the world if you’ve heard of this college. He went to a college called Messiah College.
[00:26:26] Bill Priest: I have never heard of Messiah College. It turns out it’s in the middle of nowhere in Pennsylvania, a kind of religious school. And I said, well, where did you grow up? He said, Long Island. I said, how in the world does a kid from Long Island get to what I think of, and I started to provoke him by saying kind of a right wing religious nutcase kind of a school.
[00:26:45] Bill Priest: And he said, well, it was free. I have a scholarship. I said, oh, okay. And the more I talked to him, he said, well, tell me about your family. Well, my dad was an immigrant from Sicily. I think he was a bricklayer or something like that. His mother was a nurse. He’s firstborn. I love firstborn. I can build a firm around those people.
[00:27:02] Bill Priest: The pressure on them to carry the family forward is just enormous. It’s enormous. And I said, well, how in the world did you ever get to Alliance Bernstein because they aren’t recruiting there. And he said, well, I was on the trading desk as a clerk and but I was a decent athlete. And this summer I played basketball with our basketball team and it turned out they had a small cup.
[00:27:25] Bill Priest: Also, Fund was also on the team, took a liking to him, said, hey, you’re a pretty smart kid, why don’t you get a CFA, and helped him along, and he became a member of that five star team. And I said, I said, so, let me tell you why I think you ought to come here. And he said, what do you mean? I said, well, here’s why I think you want to come.
[00:27:43] Bill Priest: At Alliance Bernstein, you will be forever known as the kid who got lucky. You knew the head DM, and he took you in. You come to Epoch. You come with real street cred. You’re an analyst, a CFA with a five star fund that’s closed. You walk in the door with a level of credibility that you don’t have right now .
[00:28:00] Bill Priest: I don’t think he ever agreed with me, Bill, to be honest with you. But I, but he today is one of the two or three best people I’ve ever hired. He’s a terrific person and he’s a very good analyst.
[00:28:12] William Green: I want to wind back a bit, Bill, and ask you more about Jack Traynor, who you mentioned before, because one of your books, I think it’s at the very start of winning at active management.
[00:28:22] William Green: You mentioned him at the very start, more or less dedicating the book to him and you describe him as the Albert Einstein of finance, a man of great principle, a co author and a friend from whom I learned more finance and economics than any other person. Elsewhere in the book, in a footnote, I think you, you call him the single most brilliant financial mind I’ve known in my long career.
[00:28:41] William Green: And then I was very struck that I, I, I sort of fell down this rabbit hole and started studying him a bit a couple of days ago. And I saw that Peter Bernstein, who I always kind of revered as the author of Against the Gods, which is an amazing book, wrote, Jack Traynor sees what no one else sees, thinks what no one else thinks, explains what no one else explains.
[00:29:01] William Green: And so you got to know him really very well, and obviously he was an important figure in terms of theoretical studies of you know, risk and the like, but also of, you know, the, the measures of value, whether you should be focusing on growth or an accounting standards and the like. And I wondered if you could unpack this for a little and give us a sense of what made him such a powerful influence on you and how he actually shaped your thinking, because in some ways.
[00:29:26] William Green: You kind of lucked out that you landed very early in your career in the early 70s, really, with this guy who was kind of an unusual guy, right? I mean, he didn’t really have an academic, a steady academic job ever. He was more of a practitioner, but he was admired by all of these guys who subsequently won Nobel Prizes for economics and was clearly kind of remarkable.
[00:29:48] William Green: So what did he teach you?
[00:29:51] Bill Priest: That, to me, was curious. He was always curious. And Jack had an unpublished paper that was the equivalent of the capital asset pricing model. There were academics who knew of his paper. Bill Sharpe’s work was done independently of Jack’s. I’m not saying Bill Sharpe stole his paper or whatnot.
[00:30:10] Bill Priest: But there were, these two papers were around at the same time. Jack never published his. Had he published it, he would have shared that Nobel Prize with Bill. And Bill would be the first one to tell you how brilliant Jack was. Jack was, if you ever Bill would have done it. Bill was never, I got to know Bill Sharpe too, and actually back in those days, I left the salary.
[00:30:31] Bill Priest: I spent a lot of time at at CRISP, which was the Center for Research and Securities Prices at the University of Chicago. Chicago to me was the leading center of quantitative academic research at the time. I loved going to those things. And I gave, I gave a couple of papers, but I worked and I, I knew these people when I, when I looked at my, Myron Scholes, for example, I got to know pretty well, he was at my wedding and I was at his wedding.
[00:30:56] Bill Priest: This is the second marriage. I’m not sure that, but not the first one, but at any rate, but he was, I got to know him pretty well. And those people out there and that’s the seventies and eighties. That was just an amazing, amazing period for finance and Chicago led everything. Chicago was the center of all that.
[00:31:15] Bill Priest: And I gave a paper there on trading costs, how to measure trading costs, because most people just thought it was a commission. Well, that really wasn’t the best way to look at it. And the analogy that I often use was, it was a bathtub. Let’s think of the water in the bathtub as being the markets trading and you step in with a big hundred thousand share order.
[00:31:34] Bill Priest: It’s like stepping into a bathtub. The water level goes up. Then when you leave, the water level goes down. So you wanna capture that step up in the water level along with the commission. And I wrote I I, I wrote a paper on that and I, and I won a little prize out there. They ‘re delivering papers in front of those called Prize guys is scary.
[00:31:53] Bill Priest: I, I tell you, they are so smart, but, and Traynor used to, used to be out there too, but he was a maverick. And a couple of things Jack would do, everybody knew Jack was brilliant. So back then you had real blackboards and you had blackboard and chalk and whatnot. So people, Jack was in the blackboards were, were, let’s imagine a square.
[00:32:16] Bill Priest: And so there would be a wall here, wall there, wall over here. So it’d be going, kind of go around the room. And so Jack would start writing his formulas on one side. Then he’d go over here and then he’d stop and he’d say, they go back and erase something on this board and change the term and then everybody else you can see them copy it down and then it would go to the next board and pretty soon the paper was just, you couldn’t understand anything because he had erased so much things and gone back and fixed it and then we’d have his conclusion and people would kind of nod their heads, but it was impossible and Jack did this on purpose.
[00:32:52] William Green: So he didn’t have a lot of respect for conventional ways of doing finance. It has to be said.
[00:32:58] William Green: So I think one, I mean, one of the things that I, that I want to get to that I think is important is, he obviously seems to have influenced your view that simple measures of valuation that took reported earnings without adjustment as gospel, like price to earnings ratios or price to book ratios, was sort of really unreliable, and so it seems, am I right in thinking that that was one of the things that you drew from your relationship with him and your early studies, this sense that if you followed the conventional view, even the conventional view that came out of reading Security Analysis by Graham and Dodd, that you were going to be misled because you were going to focus too much on the accounting.
[00:33:38] Bill Priest: Yes, absolutely. And Jack had and Jack and I, we talked a lot about, I tried to hire Jack as, as director of research at BEA when I got to be senior enough. And I, and I hired everyone from 1972 until 2000. I hired every single person that came to BEA. And that was a good thing, and that was Zesiger did. He let me hire everybody.
[00:33:57] Bill Priest: We built a bond capability. We built a derivatives capability. It was an amazing, amazing period of time and but, but he, and I tried to get Jack to come in. No one liked Jack because he was so acerbic. He was, he was this iconoclastic. It was, he was, Jack was difficult. He’s just, he was a difficult person right away.
[00:34:16] Bill Priest: And I said, Jack, all you got to do is be nice and I can bring you in as head of research. And Jack just had a way of, once he decided he didn’t want to be there, he just, communicated that in a number of ways that people say, I can’t work with this guy. Jack was difficult.
[00:34:34] William Green: So we want to get to some of the really core investing principles that have served you so well over such a long period.
[00:34:40] William Green: You, you, you wrote this book about how to win at active management and your career in a way is a very good test case for this, which is why I want to unpack this at some length because You spent more than half a century, I guess, at BEA and then Credit Suisse Asset Management then briefly a few years at another thing set up called Steinberg, Priest and Sloan, and then at Epoch.
[00:35:03] William Green: And so, in some ways, this has been a really good, it’s been a sort of 50 year test case for these very core principles that I want to kind of, layout for our listeners and viewers so they actually have something sort of tangible to hold on to at the end of this conversation where they, they come out and they’re like, okay, if I want to, if I want to actually play the active investment game and not just invest in index funds or ETFs.
[00:35:27] William Green: These are some of the principles. And so in one of your books, you, you wrote this sentence. You said the bedrock of our philosophy is the belief that the best predictors of long term shareholder return a growth in free cash flow and management skill in allocating that cash. And this seems to me a very central kind of statement, statement of your credo here.
[00:35:49] William Green: Can you talk to us about this whole idea that cash flow is the origin of value in stocks, and that really what you want to be as a stock analyst is someone who forecasts cash flows as the basis for security selection.
[00:36:04] Bill Priest: So given all my background in accounting, I have a background in accounting, finance, and economics. Accounting is astrology. And finance is astronomy. That’s a distinction I would make. So, I can make earnings, anything you want, using a variety of fully, totally acceptable accounting standards. So, I, I often think of accounting as just being a bit of a mythology. But you cannot hide cash. So, let’s give a definition of cash flow and believe me, we batted this around for, we still batted it around occasionally about what is cash flow and what is free cash flow because cash flow often has claims on it.
[00:36:41] Bill Priest: So, free cash flow is the cash available for distribution to shareholders after all cash dividends and all cash taxes. So those are claims. So what are the known claims on the operating cash flow of a business? And that leaves you with free cash flow. Now, there’s only five things you can do with a dollar free cash flow.
[00:37:05] Bill Priest: You can pay a dividend, buy back stock, pay down debt, make an acquisition, or reinvest in your business. If I have a retail setting, I will take that same argument and talk about my granddaughter’s lemonade stand. Because she has the same set of choices at the end of the summer as that CFO that a company has.
[00:37:24] Bill Priest: And depending on the retail, depending on the sophistication of the audience, they kind of identify with that story. I mean, after she’s paid all, bought all the stuff for her lemonade or whatnot, she’s got some money left over. She can basically give it and it to herself. If she has her sister or whatnot, she can split that.
[00:37:43] Bill Priest: She can buy out her sister. That’s like a stock buyback. She can buy out the neighbor’s girl down the street and say, don’t come back next year and I’ll pay you to stay away. That’s, that’s like good capital. That’s like the CapEx thing. And, but those are the five choices. You start with that. That is the beginning of everything.
[00:37:59] Bill Priest: And then the question is, are people any good at it? Because identifying managements that are good capital allocators is part science and, and part part art. Not everybody’s good at it all the time, but the key there then is to understand what’s called return on invested capital, ROIC. And then there’s a phrase called the WACC, weighted average cost of capital, WACC.
[00:38:25] Bill Priest: And so you want to look at the spread between the ROIC and the WACC. Now, again, a lot of times you’re stuck with accounting data, not financial data. To the extent you can get closer to financial data, that’s what you want. And it turns out that that spread really matters and if you can, if that spread persists, you can do very well owning a company that can continue year in and year out, reinvest over and above their cost of capital.
[00:38:54] Bill Priest: And if they can’t earn whatever premium they’re seeking, they give you the rest back in a form of dividends, share buybacks, or debt payouts. That is the heart and soul I think of investing. And we were able to build two products at Epoch with that. The first product we built was something we called shareholder yield, which was it was, we wrote a book called free cashflow and shareholder yield new priorities to global investors.
[00:39:18] Bill Priest: And what that strategy was about was being able to tell someone, we will give you a market return with less volatility. And then you can take that what we save you in terms of volatility, you can spend that you can spend that money on growth or Bitcoin or whatever you want to do. And this product now has over 20 years of history and we’ve delivered.
[00:39:40] Bill Priest: We have given the investor a market return with less volatility. The way that’s measured in what’s called a Sharpe ratio, that product has a terrific long term Sharpe ratio.
[00:39:52] William Green: As I understood it with the shareholder yielding, sorry to interrupt you just to sort of break this down for the sake of clarity, because I, you know, I’m not very economically or financially minded.
[00:40:02] William Green: So I had to read this like about seven times in your books to make sure I internalized it. So my understanding was you were saying, okay, so, so a company has this ability to return cash to shareholders in all these different ways, right? They can do it through dividends. They can do it through share buybacks.
[00:40:18] William Green: They can pay down debt. And so as I understood it, what you were saying is, okay so there’s this three part dividend oriented approach to how a company is actually deploying it’s free cash flow. So you were kind of finding this very kind of elegant, simple, I mean difficult to execute, but simple strategy where you’re saying okay we can actually see, whether this management is good at deploying its free cash flow in a way that actually benefits the shareholders.
[00:40:48] William Green: Have I got that sort of right?
[00:40:49] Bill Priest: Yes. Yes, you got it right. What I left out was the cost of capital is everything. If you cannot earn your cost of capital, but you continue to reinvest or acquire, you’re going to destroy value. So people that reinvest the excess cash flow below the cost of capital are going to destroy their business.
[00:41:10] William Green: So when you’re looking, just to make this kind of tangible and clear for people, when you’re looking at some of the companies that illustrate this best, that Epoch has invested in, like I was looking at some of your funds and I can see there are these companies like Meta or Berkshire or JP Morgan Chase or Zoetis.
[00:41:29] William Green: How do these companies illustrate what you’re talking about here in terms of management’s ability to make smart capital allocation decisions, their ability to invest the capital. In a way that exceeds the marginal cost of capital and increases value. Like, can you take us through one or two businesses like a meta and say, okay, this is sort of what what we look for in a business that we love and this isn’t as a stock pick.
[00:41:55] William Green: It’s more as a as an illustration of the method.
[00:41:59] Bill Priest: Well, what you would do is to basically try to understand the business that they have. Let’s take the drug industry, for example, but that’s that’s where I did my thesis in that area. So you want to make sure there’s demand for the product itself and you need to understand the unit demand, if you will.
[00:42:17] Bill Priest: Are we, are we going after a big market or is it a small market? Well, let’s just say it’s a very large market. Take take these GLP 1, take, take with Govi and all these things. These are enormous markets, just enormous in size. And so once it gets going, then the issue is you can kind of look at what unit demand might be, and then you can take a look at what you might be able to charge, recognizing you have to penetrate a very large segment of society.
[00:42:44] Bill Priest: It has to be affordable. Are there how is this going to be paid for? Is it a government entity? Is it an individual entity? And you look at margins, you look at cash flow that’s left over from all of this. And then you say, what are they going to do with it? Well, they may, they have to decide if they want to reinvest.
[00:42:59] Bill Priest: And drug companies do reinvest a lot in research. And you really don’t know in advance if you’re going to get, you know. What you’re going to get out of that dollar, it’s unclear, it’s often unclear, but you allocate a certain percent of it, but essentially what you’re trying to do is to say, look, if we cannot earn our cost of capital by internal investments or acquisitions, we’re giving it back to the shareholders, we’re giving it back, and it almost doesn’t matter how you give it back, but you give it back by taking down your debt, debt paydowns, buying back your stock, or paying a cash dividend.
[00:43:31] Bill Priest: They’re functionally the same thing. For tax reasons, maybe it’s treated a little differently, but we don’t make a distinction there. But when I think of some of the names that we would own, you really want to get an idea of first the TAM, the Total Addressable Market. Let’s take gambling, for example. We don’t own any gambling stocks here, but I think we should.
[00:43:52] Bill Priest: But at any rate, you take something like, you see all these ads on TV, With with gambling football, you can, it’s, it’s incredible to me. What makes these companies valuable? Well, to me, there’s just an enormous tendency for the average person to want to gamble because she wins a lottery. For example, the number of people that pay the lottery.
[00:44:11] Bill Priest: The expected, if you buy a lottery ticket, for example, the expected return at best is 50 cents. Because the state keeps 50 percent of the money or a big chunk of it. Very little comes back. It’s a bad investment. I personally have never bought a lottery ticket in my life. I just think it’s a bad investment.
[00:44:26] Bill Priest: On the other hand, you can look at DraftKings, you can look at some of these other ones. Those are really remarkable businesses. They’re, they’re the, for whatever reason, legally and society now, we can gamble on anything. And the final demand is just enormous. So when you look at these companies, the key is who has the data.
[00:44:47] Bill Priest: And you want to find the company that has the data on the transactions, the individuals. You can’t compete with these, with these people. And it turns out that once you’ve got the data, you can create what they call parlay structures where you can say, well, you know, on the first quarter, I think the Giants will lose to the Jets by seven points.
[00:45:07] Bill Priest: And you can make that bet. And somebody will give you odds. The problem is you’re making a guess, but the other side’s got the data. They will tell you how often that’s happened or whatnot. I think you’re constantly looking at the total addressable market, how, how, how penetrated is it? And the gambling market in the United States is still in its infancy.
[00:45:27] Bill Priest: So I think you can look at some of these gambling stocks and you can still make an awful lot of money by owning the stocks. Don’t gamble. Just, just own the companies that are casting out the best. They’ve got the data. You don’t. But I think there’s another, I’m thinking of another example that might be, our guys look at units, we look at elasticity of price, if you keep raising prices, can you still sell the same number of units?
[00:45:50] Bill Priest: Well, most of the time the answer is no. At some point, you just can’t afford it. We look at margins, and then, and the sustainability of this. We just had a meeting before we started today, we were talking about the, The Trump administration, you know, the Trump administration is coming in. They have all kinds of new people, new positions.
[00:46:08] Bill Priest: And what does it mean for certain industries? You take RFK Jr. I mean, you take a look at his views and it is, I kind of shake my head, but boy, in a single day, he took down the value of anybody that makes vaccine stocks. In the last, last week or two because of his views on vaccines. This is me, I think this is just noise.
[00:46:26] Bill Priest: Hopefully science prevails where, where it should. There’s no one formula other than just theoretically what’s the total addressable market? What penetration do they have? What kind of unit growth can you expect? Is there any way you can forecast price stability, price growth? And then you look at, you go through your cost of goods sold, then you take a look at your SG&A, and you come up with a model.
[00:46:49] Bill Priest: And one of the things we’ve done, we have a system here, we have, it’s called the Epoch Core Model. We’ve just updated it. One of, and we’ve put all the companies we look at into quintiles. Quintile 1, Quintile 2, Quintile 3, Quintile 4, Quintile 5. And there is a persistency. The amazing thing is that once you get the company that scores in the first quintile this year, it turns out the chances of them being in the first quintile next year is pretty high.
[00:47:20] Bill Priest: There’s a persistency of this spread between ROIC and cost of capital. It doesn’t, it doesn’t, over time it goes away. Over time this thing will, will, they’ll all just anecdotal. They’ll all go to where they’re just equal. But you want to find those companies that have this spread because it’s persistent.
[00:47:39] Bill Priest: So we really try and find those companies where you have the historical data that suggests the spread exists. And then you want to say, is there any reason why that spread wouldn’t exist next year? And to the extent you can’t destroy that argument, you’re inclined to do a little more work if you want to buy those companies.
[00:47:56] Bill Priest: And it works.
[00:47:58] William Green: Is there a downside to your relentless focus on free cash flow? I mean, has it, has it meant that you missed out on certain types of business like a Netflix or something like that because they lost money every quarter for a long time? And what’s the limitation of this very relentless focus on free cash flow?
[00:48:19] William Green: I think businesses in their infancy, I think we can miss with that. The the way I would think about it. Because we did, we missed Netflix. We, we, we never owned Netflix on the way up. We, we just missed it. We just saw the valuation that didn’t meet our estimate. Obviously the facts, the reality is it was an incredible stock to own for a long period of time, but it just didn’t have those cash flows.
[00:48:43] William Green: And the other thing you have is when interest rates are declining, longer duration assets do well. And that’s, that’s, that’s been a benefit to, to growth stocks. If you will, for quite some time, you can still be doing ROIC over WACC. But the present value of that gap changes with interest rates. So once you have that spread, in fact, that was a discussion we were having a short time ago.
[00:49:09] William Green: My view is next year, ROIC is going to struggle a little bit. Why? Not because they might not meet their cash flow numbers, but because if it’s If the, if the if interest rates, if you were to look at the interest rate curve, maybe the short end stays the same when it comes down a little bit, but the long end to me has no choice but to go up.
[00:49:28] William Green: And if the long end is going up and the spread between 2 and 10 years is steepens, that effectively hurts the present value of any investment. But a long duration investment like growth will be impacted more by that. Now, some of my colleagues were pushing back on me with that view. And they may be right.
[00:49:45] William Green: It may be that the earnings are going to grow fast enough that it will offset that. But I would, next year, I’d be, I would worry that you might, you might run into a stagflation problem that we haven’t had in any kind, we haven’t had stagflation of any meaningful amount here for quite some time. But the 70s were formed.
[00:50:02] William Green: When, when you look at the current investment, environment and you think about the various the various risks there are. I, I, I wonder if we could, if we could detail some of these because I think it was in the, in the July 2024 edition of the Barron’s Roundtable, you talked about a lot of the geopolitical risks.
[00:50:22] William Green: You said China has serious internal issues. The government might accelerate its interest in going after Taiwan as a way to distract the popular, the population. It’s a low probability, but still a concern. You also talked about the rise of nationalism and illiberalism around the world. And then obviously there’s an enormous topic to discuss, which is the end of globalization, which is something you’ve been talking about.
[00:50:46] William Green: Can you take us through what it is that you, you as somebody who’s been in the market for 60 years, when you look at this market, what worries you, not as a prediction of where it’s going, but just to sort of, to, to highlight for listeners and viewers what they should be wary of and why they should not take risk, reckless risk at the moment or ever really.
[00:51:10] Bill Priest: Well, actually, where do I start with this? I’m in the process of writing another book, which we can touch on a little later. It’s in its infancy. I do owe people some time, but we’ll see where that goes. At any rate, the idea behind a book, let’s just put it that way. If I were to write another book, what would it be like?
[00:51:31] Bill Priest: Well, first of all, I would start with this, and then a recognition of what happened in 1989. In 1989, the Berlin Wall fell. It was an amazing period. And Francis Fukuyama wrote a great book called The End of History, The Last Man. I read that book, I thought it was fantastic. I’ll tell you, fast forward, it didn’t work out that way.
[00:51:51] Bill Priest: But the point is, behind that book was, think of it, the death of the isms. It was capitalism plus a little socialism. Those are bad. And then in globalization, and there’s something called the Law of Comparative Advantage and just to illustrate that for, for your listener would be, let’s suppose you and I were two countries, you’re country A, I’m country B, we make, we make out two things, we want food and clothing, and it, and the only thing that matters is, is labor.
[00:52:22] Bill Priest: It takes you one day to make a unit of food and two days to make a unit of clothing. I’m country B, it takes me three days for food and four days for clothing. So on the surface, why would we ever trade? Because you are absolutely more productive in both products. Well, it turns out it’s the difference that matters.
[00:52:42] Bill Priest: You’re only, you’re only you’re twice as productive in food, but only 50 percent more productive in clothing. So what happens, the way this would work out, is if we were to take 100 days and reorient those 100 days as to who’s doing what, I get out of the food business completely. All I do with my 100 days of labor is make clothing.
[00:53:05] Bill Priest: You make more food, and you make some clothing. And voila, if you went through that little algebra there, we have more units. We have made more units. Now, I’m not going to trade with you unless I get something, but you will get twice as many additional units as I do. So the law of comparative advantage is what was behind this incredible supply chain that we built from 1989 till recently.
[00:53:33] Bill Priest: It was incredible. We globalized everything. Now, and the Law of Comparative Advantage was, was at work this whole entire time. The problem is, in that little analogy that I just did, we assumed our labor’s interchangeable, that the labor and clothing could be put into food, just move, move people around. That’s not real world.
[00:53:54] Bill Priest: And what happened is, there was a hollowing out, particularly in the Midwest, of major industry that went, that went abroad, that went to China, went to all these. And we, we, we destroyed whole communities with this. And that’s the backlash that we’re seeing right now. You see it in elections. You see it, I see it in my little hometown of Steubenville.
[00:54:14] Bill Priest: And Steubenville, when I grew up, there were three steel mills there. There was good wages. There was a road bus. Now, you go back, there’s half of the steel mill there. Downtown’s been eviscerated. It’s pretty empty. Middle class in Somerville is what a cop makes, or a fireman makes, or a teacher. That’s it.
[00:54:30] Bill Priest: That community is devastated. And so, correct me, so one day, so we had this 18, so what’s happened is you went through this globalization period and we created the most efficient supply chain the world has ever known. Well, now we’re saying, wait a minute. We want security of supply chain. We no longer have a unique polar world led by the, by the U. S. We have a multipolar world. And we got China and Russia and Iran and North Korea. We got all these characters around, we don’t like. So we’re going to onshore now. Well, you cannot onshore with the same cost structure. It’s impossible. It would be like in our little example. We went back to being two independent countries.
[00:55:09] Bill Priest: I’m making food and clothing as best I can. You make food and clothing. Yeah, we, we could do that, but we’re less efficient. We’re less well off. We’re less wealthy. So, this right now, this on shoring that’s going on, it’s going to be inflationary. It is, and I’ve said, I’m, I’ve used the word, it’s impossible.
[00:55:29] Bill Priest: To onshore the way we want us to onshore without it being inflationary. So to me stagflation starts to be a potential problem. We’ll make fewer units and higher prices and unless your, unless your wealth is going up or your income’s going up, you can’t afford some of this. And it gets to another example, and I don’t, and that’s, it’s, what is a government?
[00:55:54] Bill Priest: A government is an insurance company with an army. And the way I would explain that, I did this in a talk recently, I was maybe we’re a hundred people in this audience, and I said, let me, they actually, they asked me what I thought a government was. I said, well, it’s an insurance company with an army.
[00:56:09] Bill Priest: People kind of laugh. I said, no, no, just listen to me for a minute. Let’s imagine that all of us live in a community. The average house is 500, 000. So there’s a hundred of us. Every house on average is 500, 000. But every year, one house burns down. Now what? If you have to self insure, you’re going to live in a smaller house.
[00:56:31] Bill Priest: Because if it’s your house that burns down, you’re nearly wiped out. But let’s suppose everybody chips in 5,000. So 5,000, a hundred houses, we’ve got our 500,000 now. So when that house burns down, we simply take that money and give it to this guy. Or that’s, that’s what I mean by, and so when you take a big risk, like social security, medical issues, these have to be born by a large number of people.
[00:56:59] Bill Priest: The probability of affecting you was small, but if it does affect you, You have a problem. It’s the police force. It’s the fire. We, we, we need that. So now broaden this out to allies. NATO is incredibly valuable to the United States. It’s the same thing. The U. S. can probably take care of itself. But wouldn’t it be nice if we shared some of that cost with Japan, Australia, and maybe Europe?
[00:57:27] Bill Priest: It’s the same principle. Alliances really help you with costs. Now, the question is, you know, I don’t know how that’s going to play out. We have a president who, you know, It’s very transactional, at least. That’s the most, that’s the most, I don’t know how else to characterize it. Very transactional. But if, if you have, you don’t want to be in a position where you’re self insuring every terrific risk you have.
[00:57:51] Bill Priest: It’s just not a good thing. So those are, those would be risks I look at next year. I would worry that we, we, the on shoring is likely to cause, I think, inflation. These tariffs, tariffs are nothing but a sales tax. It’s just another form of sales tax. And sure, you can do it. You can get people to, it’s going to be in reverse.
[00:58:10] Bill Priest: Our farmers are going to be worried about, you know, selling stuff to China because they do sell a lot of stuff to them. I don’t know how that works. Can you have some tariffs? Yeah. But the history of tariffs is they’re rarely any good. They rarely help you.
[00:58:23] William Green: If you’re a regular investor, I mean our listeners and viewers include many professional investors but also many regular investors and they’re all kind of trying to weigh this great uncertainty and figure out how to position themselves you have tremendous perspective having lived through lots of tumultuous times in world history will be at none quite like this what is a sensible rational investor who wants to set themselves up to survive and prosper over the next 1020 years actually do to protect themselves from. The potential for higher inflation, the potential for tariffs, the potential for, you know, tighter immigration policies, or, you know, higher debt levels, lower growth prospects, all the things that seem to be possible, none of, you know, we don’t know what’s going to happen with any of these things, but there’s a lot of fragility there.
[00:59:14] Bill Priest: You’re absolutely right. So one time, I had somebody ask me one time, if you’re so smart, why aren’t you so rich? And I said, smart people diversify. So that’s the truth. You want to diversify. The future, not only is the future unknown, the future is unknowable. So if you’re dealing with something that’s unknowable, diversify.
[00:59:36] Bill Priest: And you need to start saving when you’re really, really young. You need to start saving when you’re in your twenties, it can be a small amount of money, but you just have to start saving and and a balanced fund, the 60, 40 fine, whatever, that’s a perfectly reasonable way to go. But I would say I would highlight one thing.
[00:59:54] Bill Priest: And I think, I hope that paper was sent to you about bits and atoms. Yeah. That, that to me is worth comprehending. And I’ll spend a minute on that. People, when, when you look at return on equity, it’s simply earnings divided by stockholders equity. It’s just a, it’s a formula. And there was something called the DuPont return on equity formula that first year finance people or accounting people, you, you understand that.
[01:00:18] Bill Priest: But the beauty, the beauty of bits and atoms, and it was in that paper we wrote, is that you know, this, my desk, these books, they’re all made of atoms. When information comes to us in the form of bits back and forth, so if I break that return on equity into pieces, there’s a, there’s a profit margin times asset turnover times leverage, profit margins would be earnings divided by sales.
[01:00:43] Bill Priest: So, if I can substitute technology for labor. For example, and hold my revenues constant, my profit margins are going to go up. And if I’m selling something, if I’m a retailer and I can sell over the internet and hold my sales constant, I don’t have to have those hundred physical stores, my sales per dollar of assets go up.
[01:01:00] Bill Priest: And if it turns out the third, the third variable is assets divided by stockholders equity, which is a measure of late of leverage. If I can do the first two things, and I like the leverage I have, I can keep that leverage and have a higher payout ratio. So I would look for companies that actually have an ability to substitute bits for atoms, substitute technology for labor, substitute technology for physical assets.
[01:01:27] Bill Priest: Those companies are going to watch their return on assets go up. Now, is that Trenton fully valued in the stock market by PE and whatnot? I don’t know. You have to make that decision. But I would try and find those companies who actually understand the logic behind that paper. Everyone, we are doing here, we just want to substitute information technology, AI, all that stuff for labor. And that, that is going to be a big productivity boom. If you think of what, two things determine growth in GDP. Growth in the workforce and growth in productivity. Well, the workforce growth in the developed world isn’t going to be very much, you know.
[01:02:07] Bill Priest: It’s a pretty mature planet. And with Africa being the exception, I mean, if you take a look at the population, take a look at the working population, well, it’s going to, it’s not growing very fast. So the workforce growth rate is going to be very low. So the only thing is productivity. So you got to, you got to look at the productivity arguments.
[01:02:26] Bill Priest: So is there a productivity case for anything you’re investing in? Because that’s the only way you’re going to be able to, I think, make money in the future. Find those companies you can reinvest.
[01:02:37] William Green: You’ve written quite a lot about artificial intelligence and you, you co authored a very interesting paper that I was reading yesterday asking whether AI is just another bubble or whether it represents a structural change in terms of margins and returns and free cash flow and the like, and also asking how much the earnings growth is actually already priced into the tech sector when you, when you try to weigh what’s going on in AI, whether as you put it, euphoria is going to turn to disillusionment.
[01:03:09] William Green: What’s your best bet? I mean, what’s your, what perspective can, can you give us to think about this in a kind of rational, non euphoric way?
[01:03:17] Bill Priest: I think it’s kind of unstoppable. It’s you know, going way, way back when you had the luddites going way, way back to when we had the looms. When looms took over the hand waving, I mean, there were strikes and up boomers and all that kind of stuff.
[01:03:31] Bill Priest: We’re, we’re past that here, but you, you need. You’re going to need a comprehension of these, of, of this evolution. There’s an interesting sociological argument here and it’s David Brooks, David Brooks is one of my favorite writers. He has a book out on something called The Diploma Divide. It’s, it’s broader than what we’re talking about, but I would just suggest you take a look at that sometime.
[01:03:56] Bill Priest: It’s really pretty cool. We have placed, when you, when you look at where industries are going. There’s tremendous pressure to substitute technology for labor and physical assets. It’s just, it’s, it’s everywhere. And to me, you want to basically, the jobs are going to be over there. They’re not going to be, you’re going to be at risk.
[01:04:16] Bill Priest: There will be whole professions that will be at risk. I don’t consider myself technology very, very very good at all. In fact, I think I’m pretty terrible at it. But I did happen to write a piece recently for actually it was for Barron said that they said it was too long. So I thought, okay, I can, I’ll shrink it down.
[01:04:37] Bill Priest: Then I thought, you know what? I’m going to go I’m going to go try and use ChatGPT. I was astonished, absolutely astonished. It wasn’t my voice. So I had to rework it into my voice, my verbs and whatnot. But it was incredible to me, just incredible. And so I’m doing this on another project I’m trying to write, just going back to what I mentioned earlier about the the history of going from a unipolar world to multipolar world.
[01:05:06] Bill Priest: What does it mean? What kind of problems are we going to have? We talked about China, for example, China has, China has a lot of issues. I’ll just touch on that for a minute. GDP is made up of four things, consumption plus investment plus government spending plus net exports.
[01:05:20] Bill Priest: It’s kind of like economics 101. Well, China has bet an awful lot on investments, government directed investments and net exports. That’s what’s driven their GDP. They don’t have much of a safety net for the people over there and local consumption. It isn’t anything great either. This is an unsustainable situation.
[01:05:38] Bill Priest: As it becomes more obvious, and there becomes, you know, you have huge unemployment among the youth over there right now, you’ve got this huge real estate problem over there that’s crashing. To me, it’s all about the CCP the Communist Party. And I could see how a situation, particularly with tariffs, could become bad enough That it’s a wag the dog problem, you know, the, the other locals, the local commands and uproar.
[01:06:02] Bill Priest: Although I can’t imagine everybody’s, they know everything about you over there. You can’t go anywhere without being on camera. It’s, it’s, I haven’t been there a long time. I was there maybe 20 years ago is the last time I was in China, but I would worry that, you know, it’s a wag the dog problem. And she has said, you know, sooner or later, they’re ours.
[01:06:21] Bill Priest: We’ll see how that plays out.
[01:06:23] William Green: Do you feel like China has become uninvestable as some people say or I think I saw Bill Miller say recently that it’s kind of become a bargain hunter’s delight. I mean which, would you just not touch it at this point? It’s just too risky?
[01:06:39] Bill Priest: I would be very careful about investing in China.
[01:06:43] Bill Priest: It’s I’m not sure that I’m not sure how sustainable it all is. And I’m sure that with hindsight, you probably could be able to take a look back and say, geez, some of these things worked out pretty well, but there’s no real rule of law over there to speak of. And I think you need a real, a real law to prosper.
[01:07:01] Bill Priest: When you look at democracy versus autocracy, and there’s a couple of really good books on that. Anne Applebaum’s written a book called Autocracy. I thought it was really well done. And the liberal democracies are about process. This is how we resolve things. We resolve it through process, but not autocracies.
[01:07:20] Bill Priest: Autocracies are about identity. And if it’s, and I call it, you’re not my mother. And if I don’t associate you with my mother, I don’t like you. And so that, that brings a whole other dynamic into the world. You can, I thought her book was really, really good. And there’s a couple of other ones out there on it, but I think this whole autocracy versus democracy issue, the West, the liberal tenants of the West, West really, really revolve around making sure we have process.
[01:07:52] Bill Priest: And to the extent you want to get rid of that process and you want a strong man or something like that, not good. I don’t think it’s good for investing. I think process and the laws is good. It’s the kind of environment you want to invest in.
[01:08:07] William Green: So if we live in a pretty fragile world, I mean, it’s, it seems fragile in all sorts of ways.
[01:08:13] William Green: I mean, you know, you’ve talked also about the likelihood of a fiscal crisis at some indeterminate point in the future in the US. There are just so many forms of fragility. And I always come back to this beautiful line from Nassim Taleb who said, the fragile breaks with time. And so it’s not that, it’s not that you can make a prediction about when any of these things will happen or if any of them happen.
[01:08:35] William Green: I mean, we have no idea whether China will, you know, blockade Taiwan or whatever. I mean, what do we know? But it just feels like there are a lot of forms of fragility. And so I, I wondered, you know, when you, when you think yourself about how, how you’re protecting your family financially, or how you’re protecting your firm’s clients financially, beyond diversification, what do you do?
[01:08:57] William Green: Do you buy gold? Do you buy Bitcoin? Do you buy, do you put more in the US? What, what, what, what are you doing to protect against this?
[01:09:06] Bill Priest: I think it would go to me is, is have some interest, whether it’s 5 percent or some small amount, but I think gold, I think gold, gold gold is kind of a default currency for a lot of people and several banks are buying a lot of it.
[01:09:20] Bill Priest: So, I mean, but that’s, that’s small beer. What I would worry about, I guess, is, is what appears to be a tendency for the strong man. When I look at hungry, for example, I mean. I remember reading about, I knew somebody in 1955, when the Soviet tanks rolled in and just rolled right over them, and then there was the uprising and whatnot, and they threw him out.
[01:09:41] Bill Priest: But then I look at what you got today with Victor Orban, you know, he’s pretty much of a dictator. You I think that one of the issues with democracy, and I give Ed Clark, who was one of the best CEOs I’ve ever met in my life, he was, the CEO of TD, he’s retired now. But when I first met him, I just walked in, sat down in front of him.
[01:10:02] Bill Priest: And he says, so Bill, what do you think the biggest problem in the world is? I don’t know. Population? I don’t know. He says, income inequality, it will destroy democracy, and that was 2012, and I actually think he’s on to something. I don’t know what we do about it. If you, if you have a diploma, you live better than someone without a diploma, and that was the whole point of Brooks’s piece.
[01:10:25] Bill Priest: If you read that article, I forget her name, but she called White Working Class. That was the name of the book written in 2016. I thought that was a terrific book. There is this divide in this country. And if you don’t have a college degree, you, you really are left out and left behind as an issue. The only thing I would touch on is, and I give a talk on leadership and maybe I could just bring that up if I may.
[01:10:47] William Green: I’d really like to talk about leadership in a few minutes, but actually I want to wrap, wrap up this portion because you, because you raised something really, really important that I, I feel like I didn’t push you on before, which is important when we were talking about that, that period of the tumultuous years when your career began and, between 68 and 74 if we’re living in a fragile world where you don’t know what’s gonna break and you don’t know when it’s gonna break you don’t know how big it’s gonna be it places a big onus on all of us as sensible investors to try to think about how to prepare for extreme volatility and when I look at your career.
[01:11:23] William Green: You gone through a lot of periods of extreme volatility and so I wanted to unpack that a bit and talk a little bit about how you set yourself up to survive cause if we even go back to BEA, right, that first company that you had, that had a very weak balance sheet, not that, you know, living, living sort of hand to mouth, and then you compare it to when you were at Epoch, and you had to go through 2007, 2008, there was something about the way you set things up to survive A really volatile period that I, I think there are really important lessons to that.
[01:11:58] William Green: Could, could you talk a little bit about that?
[01:12:01] Bill Priest: Sure. Great question. Great intro. I swore if I ever ran a firm again after BEA, I would have a balance sheet. Balance sheets matter. And when 08 happened and Epoch was, we were, Epoch was a publicly traded stock. We were when we started, there were seven or eight of us.
[01:12:20] Bill Priest: We did a reverse merger into a publicly traded vehicle. The market cap of the stock was like 13 or 14 million or something. It was peanuts. And then we had this huge run up and that 07 period. And then 08 struck, and the stock actually hit 17 and went to 4. Now, I insisted that everyone in Epoch have stock.
[01:12:42] Bill Priest: Part of your bonus at the end of the year, we gave you stock. Now, the stock was tradable. It wasn’t private stock. You could sell it on the open market. There was no penalty for selling it. People have kids to send to college or whatnot. There was no, we didn’t penalize people for selling stock. Many of the people did not want stock.
[01:13:00] Bill Priest: They would say, hey, Bill, I got to pay my rent. I don’t want stock. I don’t want to sell it. So the stock went from 17 to four. And when Lehman fell, I put everybody into a room. And a Monday after that, and I am frankly, that was the worst situation I’ve ever personally seen. To me, it was terrifying. It was, it was, the world looked like it could come to an end financially.
[01:13:21] Bill Priest: And I said, look, if you do your job, you will have your job. There’ll be no layoffs at Epoch because we have more cash on our balance sheet than we have revenues. So I’ve always had a balance sheet to get me through difficult times. And even on a personal basis, you don’t want to be too stretched out. When you’re young, you can be stretched out.
[01:13:40] Bill Priest: When you’re older, eh, not so much. You better have some reserves. So, to me, I would say you, in today’s world, I don’t, there is no ideal assets that makes it so, depends so much on, on the individual. But I think, I think getting people to understand that having a balance sheet, that’s what gets you through black holes.
[01:14:00] Bill Priest: It gets you through really difficult times. At the individual level, maybe it’s a disease. Maybe it’s, maybe it’s somebody loses their job. There’s, there are things at the individual level that it just doesn’t go smoothly. If you live long enough, there’s potholes. You will have potholes and you didn’t see them coming.
[01:14:20] William Green: I, I think this is so important what you just said. And I, I, I mean, I, I look back to 2008 when I lost my job editing the European, Middle East and African editions of Time within a few days of Lehman going under, because the magazine business was kind of collapsing. And because I’d survived something like five rounds of layoffs at Time magazine over the years, because it was always a sort of diminishing pie in those years, I had no debt and plenty of cash, and I didn’t have to sell any of my stocks.
[01:14:49] William Green: And I remember one fund that I owned was down 46 percent that year. I didn’t have to sell. And so just that really simple precaution of knowing that you’re going to have cash to ride out unpredictability. I, I think particularly in a time like this, when there’s so much exuberance not to lose sight of that.
[01:15:06] William Green: I just really hope that there are some people in our audience who are taking that message seriously.
[01:15:13] Bill Priest: I would. I’ve also as you say, I’ve seen a lot and you know, that’s that old saying. I forget who said it first, but how do you go broke? Well, slowly. And then all of a sudden, all at once or whatever.
[01:15:26] William Green: Yeah. And Ernest Hemingway said it.
[01:15:28] Bill Priest: And it, and I can just see it. I can see it in my extended family and whatnot. I know the jobs people have so far, but okay. But illness, illnesses is a big deal. Illness can take take, they can bankrupt the family today. It’s, it, it happens, but I, but I think to your point, I wouldn’t, I wouldn’t have a balance sheet.
[01:15:46] Bill Priest: I mean, there’s a lot of uncertainty in the world. And I, I would, I would, I would, on a personal basis, I probably have a much lower exposure to equities today than I had 10 years ago.
[01:15:58] Bill Priest: It’s also really interesting when you look at Buffett and you see him, you know, not market timing, but quietly sitting on what, 350 billion or so of cash, because he just can’t find cheap stuff that he loves.
[01:16:12] Bill Priest: Right, to me, that’s, that’s also, I mean, you have to respect him, you have to respect that guy, I mean, his record is phenomenal over many, many years.
[01:16:22] William Green: I’m always really, I, I mean, look, I, I, I revere Buffett in my own bookshelf, so I’m biased, but I always want to take very seriously people in their seventies, eighties and nineties who’ve survived enormous turmoil in the markets while everyone else has kind of fallen by the wayside and, and I mean, you know, I was reading one of, one of your pieces over the last couple of days.
[01:16:47] William Green: Where you talked about how you’d experience at least six periods of irrational exuberance since your investment career began in the mid sixties, so tech, US housing, China, e commerce, digital currencies, and the magnificent seven, and so, I mean, you’re a sort of connoisseur of irrational exuberance at this point, so when you look at this kind of environment, is there, you know, when you try to put it in context and try to figure out whether people are getting carried away or whether it’s kind of justified by the fact that the new administration is going to be you know, changing rules on regulation and doing everything to kind of gun the engine without necessarily thinking about the longterm.
[01:17:33] William Green: What do you think? I mean, does it feel like a period of irrational exuberance or?
[01:17:39] Bill Priest: It’s I guess my own feeling, and I’ll back up, I want to touch again on this time and place thing, because it does affect me, going back to your family of origin concept. So, both of my parents were born in 1906. So, my dad was basically, well, he was an orphan, as I mentioned, my brother had a college degree, but they turned 21 in 1927.
[01:18:03] Bill Priest: Then, two years to party, the roof fell in, the depression, 25% of adult men were unemployed in the thirties, and then you had World War II. That generation went through hell. I mean, they, they didn’t spend any money on anything. They, they hated debt. I think my dad saved, I don’t know, I think the first house, we, I, the house I grew up in cost like 10, 000.
[01:18:25] Bill Priest: He sweated and saved the 10th house. He never had a mortgage, which is unbelievable today. I mean, you just can’t, you can’t live like that. So to me, that’s part of my history. Part of my family of origin is that story of what my parents went through. Still carry that around with me. Albeit it’s, it’s it’s different.
[01:18:42] Bill Priest: My view today is, again, it depends on where you are. I think my view, and I’ve tried to get my grandchildren to this, start, save today. Save every single day. And try and save a little. Get in that saving habit. Take a 60 40 portfolio go to Vanguard or something like that. You can choose other vehicles whenever.
[01:19:03] Bill Priest: But, but get started with the idea that don’t consume a hundred percent of what you take off. It’s, it’s silly. It will not. And life’s long life, you know, li life, life is long. You don’t wanna wake up one day when all of a sudden you’ve got a, a health problem that you can’t afford. Or some other family member may have an issue.
[01:19:22] Bill Priest: It’s complicated as you get older, these extended families have, you know, if, if you are the most successful person in your family, whether you realize it or not, you’ve given every family member a foot. They will call you up when there’s an issue. Trust me, they do. And I’m not going to abandon them. I just, this is not, it’s not who I am.
[01:19:42] Bill Priest: So it isn’t just taking care of you. There’s a broad definition of you and it includes a lot of people.
[01:19:50] William Green: There was something very interesting that I was, that I was reading about in one of your books where when, when you were talking about how to win as an active investor over the longterm, it wasn’t just having this investment approach that makes sense that’s built on cash flow it wasn’t just having the discipline to stick to it you also wrote a lot about a winning culture and and I think you were about to touch on it when i interrupted you a few minutes ago. You, you, this whole idea of culture and leadership to create a a successful investment firm.
[01:20:22] William Green: And in one of your books, you said, you said that culture is the bedrock of success for any firm. And I was very struck in, in one of the articles that you wrote, and also a chapter of one of your books, that you talked a lot about the, the Duke University basketball team and Coach K, who coached the team from 1980 to 2022.
[01:20:40] William Green: And what we can learn from him about how to create a team that’s that’s successful you’ve built a couple of in well two or three enormously successful businesses in the investment space with just vast amounts of assets under management. Can you talk to us a bit about how you, how you try to create a team within the investment business that succeeds, given that the priority here really is, as you put it in one of your books, the effective exchange of knowledge.
[01:21:16] Bill Priest: Yeah, so I would say the way I think about it, I made a joke about this when I first got to be a CEO, I just wanted to hire the smartest people I could find. And I hope they were decent. When I started Epoch, I just wanted to hire decent people and hope they were smart. I actually think that’s a better way to go.
[01:21:39] Bill Priest: And when you get into leadership, a really good leader to me has to be able to do three things. First of all, you got to have empathy. Empathy. Now just in this interchange that you and I are having, I I can, I totally see you. You are an empathetic person. You, you’ll, you’ll draw people out ’cause you’re trying to accomplish something here.
[01:21:58] Bill Priest: But in order to do that, you communicate empathy that’s very important. So it, a person without empathy, you can be, you can be a dictator leader. You could do that. But boy, I don’t, for me, it’s certainly not any fun, but empathy, empathy is, is, is a requirement. The other thing, which a lot of people get hung up on, is you need to be able to make tactical decisions.
[01:22:21] Bill Priest: Not necessarily philosophical ones, but tactical ones. My favorite example might be, example I use in the discussion is, Let’s suppose you and I both play golf. We belong to the same club and on some busy Sunday afternoon in August, you show up with the foursome at two o’clock and I show up with the foursome at two o’clock and.
[01:22:40] Bill Priest: Well, wait a minute. I got the floor at two o’clock. You got the starter has to make a tactical decision. He might say, but you know what? No, you take the day at two, Bill Priest. I don’t know what happened. We don’t have time to go back and look who called in first. Who sent the emails? Cause he’s got a line of people back there.
[01:22:57] Bill Priest: He cannot admire the problem. So he makes a decision. I come back tomorrow that clubs it’s free because they treated me. You go, but that’s a tactical decision. A lot of executives get tied up and trying to do the right thing. Or don’t admire the problem. Some things have to be addressed now that, so a good leader has to, but the third thing is inspiration.
[01:23:20] Bill Priest: You have to be able to inspire people. Now it’s easier to inspire young people than older people. Cause the older people, you battered back and forth a little bit. It’s about setting, Hey, if we do a, B and C, we can go from this place to that place. Sports are like that a lot. You know, if we can have the defense and the offense and special teams all do well, we can be in the playoffs.
[01:23:44] Bill Priest: But it isn’t just saying that, it’s kind of living it, it’s showing the example. And I think you’d be hard pressed around here. I had somebody, in fact, the kid that I was telling you about that we ultimately hired. He said at the end of his interview with me, he said, I’ll outwork anyone in your firm. And I said, all but one.
[01:24:01] Bill Priest: And he said, who’s that? I said, me. So no one, everyone here admires my work ethic, notwithstanding achievements and title and all that. You have to respect effort. Effort alone doesn’t guarantee, doesn’t guarantee achievement. But, but, but effort is honorable. And this gets to my two movies. So the two movies that I think leaders need to watch is, first of all, Miracle on Ice.
[01:24:27] Bill Priest: That’s, that’s the story of the U. S. when they beat the Russians and and, and that, that movie has a real learning moment in it. The U. S. team was a mess for a while, prima donnas, coaches, finally they all get together and there’s a Christmas party before, before the Olympics. And the teams come together, everybody feels good, it’s maybe 11 o’clock at night, or 11, I don’t remember exactly what time it was, the coach gets up to leave, and the player comes over and says, Coach, where are you going?
[01:24:53] Bill Priest: The party’s just getting started. He has to leave. He’s not one of them. They’re the players. He’s the coach. You have to have this little gap between you and the others. Then you get to another movie, Master and Commander, which was Russell Crowe’s in that. And that’s, that’s a story of a ship that’s been struck by lightning, and it’s in the 19th century.
[01:25:17] Bill Priest: It’s a three masted ship, and the main mast is hit by lightning, it’s in the water, and the ship is starting to capsize. So, and they have to start cutting the line, they’re trying to cut the line, it’s not working. So, his second lieutenant, best friend, jumps in, swims over to where this thing is, and starts hacking away, but it’s not working.
[01:25:33] Bill Priest: And the ship is even listing even more. So, Russell Crowe is a captain, cuts the line, shipside. His friend dies. But the ship is saved. And the moral there is the institution matters more than anything else. You’ve got to save the institution. And if you cannot make that distinction as a leader, you don’t deserve the job.
[01:25:54] Bill Priest: You just don’t. Recently, I have a guy, he’s, he’s, he’s retiring. Can’t believe he’s retiring. I said, Mike, you’re retiring when I, at my age, when I started out. And so he said, I never understood why you appointed me president in the first place. As it might. You have the capability to fire me. And he said, Bill, I don’t want to fire you.
[01:26:13] Bill Priest: You’re my mentor. I said, that’s not the point, Mike. You have the capacity and capability. You, you, you, as the leader of the firm, nothing matters more than the firm. And I, and that’s the kind of my talk on leadership. And that’s, that’s, that’s how you got to be. Yeah, I’ve met people who think they know it all.
[01:26:32] Bill Priest: They’re pretty smart, probably smarter than me, smarter than anybody I know. But they come down like a ton of bricks on our people and their staff. It takes, you know, I don’t, I think I forget who said this, but it takes ability to win, you know, it’s a community work as a community where, and I, I spent a lot of time thinking about this, but I personally need a community and the community, it can be family, but I need other people.
[01:26:58] Bill Priest: I mean, we we’re social beings, but we need a community. I’d like the work community to be one where people have a purpose, but we have a good time and wants to work somewhere where. You just don’t want to be there. You just don’t want to be there. It’s just too unpleasant.
[01:27:14] William Green: When you’re in a business like investing, and it really is all about the transfer of knowledge, right?
[01:27:21] William Green: You’ve got to be able to share opinions and share data freely, and you’ve got to kind of incentivize people for it. So I know that you’ve actually structured your incentives so that You know, part of, you know, people are awarded based on the firm’s overall results. How do you ensure that you’re not closing yourself off to competing views and dissenting views because it must be very tempting when you’ve had a long successful career to say no, no, look, Sonny boy.
[01:27:51] William Green: I I know what’s going on here and I’m just wondering how you actually protect against that danger.
[01:27:58] Bill Priest: I tell people no one has made more mistakes than me. I’ve been around longer than most people. I’ve made more mistakes than anybody I know. And we have a guy here, his name is Steve Blyberg. Steve is like 60 or 61 years old.
[01:28:12] Bill Priest: Steve was a summer student for me. I think it’s really pretty amazing. He’s, he left, he came back. He’s the smartest guy, one of the smartest guys I’ve ever met. And I never have a conversation, I usually go in with a half baked idea. Hey Steve, I’m thinking about this, what do you think? And then in about 10 minutes, he destroys my argument.
[01:28:30] Bill Priest: I, I always, there’s not a conversation I have with him that I don’t come out being smarter when I walked in. I don’t need, I, I don’t need the adulation. I don’t need the, I don’t need people to suck up to me. I just, I just wanna get better. And, and I know, and believe me, that people that make fun of me a little bit, I really don’t know very much about anything.
[01:28:55] Bill Priest: And I start with that. So I, my base, I’ve had a lot of experience, but I really don’t know a whole hell of a lot. And so I’m, I’m, I try to, I, I try to say, oh yeah, I hadn’t thought about that. Let’s work that in. And, and I think it’s one of the reasons we’ve had relations until we, and this is another thing we, this is a tough lesson to me, well, and one of the first times were difficult, but when you sell a firm, like, what happens is we, we, we sell a firm, you trade governance for money, you get the money, they get the governance.
[01:29:26] Bill Priest: So, when you do that, you have to know that’s what’s going to happen. Because they have a dream too. They have a dream of how you fit into their big picture. And you need to respect that because that’s, that was part of the trade. And I think, I think one of the things that I spent the last year with McKinsey, I was chair of the Wealth Strategy Committee for TD.
[01:29:45] Bill Priest: And it was really pretty interesting. McKinsey and there’s others, they have a lot of data and whatnot. But then you have to say, okay, so two things in strategy matter. And I’m thinking, it’s business strategy. The way to, the way to think about strategy, the goal is winning, but you have to answer two questions, where to play and how to win.
[01:30:07] Bill Priest: If you can’t answer those two questions up front, you’re going to fail. So, when you use a firm like McKinsey and whatnot, and you kind of look at where to play and how to win as you go forward as best you can. But then once that’s done, you got to get people behind you to see this is the strategy that’s going to work.
[01:30:26] Bill Priest: This is how it’s going to play out. So that, and that was really enjoyable. I really, I really liked that. I wouldn’t want McKinsey to be doing the execution, but I think they’re good at it. Kind of giving you here, here, here’s, here’s the whiteboard. Here’s, here’s what, here are the things you have to do.
[01:30:44] Bill Priest: And it’s, I could easily send you, I wrote this one page on, on, on winning on, on the strategy, which I think is, if you can’t answer those two questions, your strategies don’t fail.
[01:30:54] William Green: There were some other questions that I really liked that you ask internally with your, your team. I remember seeing that in the year end reviews at Epoch, you said you asked two questions.
[01:31:05] William Green: One of which is what can we as management provide to allow you to do your job more effectively? And the other is what can we do to make the organization more effective? Can you talk about your decision to ask those two questions? What, what’s going on there?
[01:31:21] Bill Priest: Well, we still ask it. I would say, depending on your own history some of, some people are more data centric and computer literate, tech literate than others.
[01:31:35] Bill Priest: But I think you, your organization has to become very, very tech literate and we try to weave that into virtually everything we do. I consider myself one of the most illiterate tech people in the firm. I’m always saying, hey, I think I accidentally deleted this work and I find it all that kind of stuff.
[01:31:53] Bill Priest: But, I just think it’s about being open minded to change. There’s every single day, I think you’ve got to earn your place in the world again. And I, and I do think a lot of it has to do with how you treat people. I think that there’s a level of respect that human base just should provide one another.
[01:32:11] Bill Priest: There’s a, you very, you occasionally, I wouldn’t say it’s always, but you occasionally run into this. Like this guy that I interviewed. I still remember him. I, you know, Harvard, Columbia, Goldman Sachs. Like I got all the tickets. There’s an arrogance there. Arrogant people can’t listen. They cannot listen and they will get you in a ton of trouble.
[01:32:30] Bill Priest: So to me, I always think if you don’t know what you don’t know, you do get everyone in a lot of trouble. But, and I think knowing, knowing it’s very helpful to know what you don’t know.
[01:32:40] William Green: I want to underline this decency point, cause I think it’s interesting. And I think it’s very easy for people to miss. And I, I, I actually want to read a quote from bill that really struck me away.
[01:32:52] William Green: You, you got at this a little before, but it’s worth emphasizing this. You said, I used to set out to recruit the smartest people we could find, hoping they would turn out to be decent as well, but after a few particularly painful lessons in my career, where people brought in for their extreme smartness turned out to be destructive to the organization, I came to realize that decency takes higher priority.
[01:33:15] William Green: I think that’s an unusual insight.
[01:33:18] Bill Priest: True. For me, it’s true.
[01:33:19] William Green: Can you give us an example of someone, without naming them or identifying them, just something where you just saw? This is, this is toxic when you bring in people who can’t. Who aren’t decent.
[01:33:31] Bill Priest: The problem is they can’t listen. They come in with a frame of reference or a frame of mind that they think is all encompassing. But it’s the rare view that’s all encompassing. It’s the rare view. So what you want to do is just find people who are, that have a point of view. I like having points of view. But it’s not the end point of view. I mean, life’s a learning journey. And to me, you can learn something every day.
[01:33:58] Bill Priest: So to me, it’s all about basically saying, look I may have thought this way once, but I’ve changed my views. Don’t be wedded to the past, wedded to the old views. You’ll have to be open. You just have to be open minded. I can think of I can tell you a funny story that happened. It was it had to do with at days of BEA when we, we, I hired everyone at BEA for the longest time.
[01:34:20] Bill Priest: And when we decided we had a problem, we had a problem of transitioning of leadership. There were three senior people, Al, John, and myself, and then three younger people that I hired, and they were getting pretty ambitious and wanted to run the firm. Well, the problem is the value of the firm had gone up so much, they didn’t have the capital to buy anybody out.
[01:34:38] Bill Priest: So you almost, you have to have a transaction to kind of facilitate the continuance of the firm. And Al in particular just didn’t wanna have anything of it. I said, Al, this just isn’t gonna work. And I said, and I had, by this time I had become the CEO, but he was the founder. Founders cast long shadows.
[01:34:55] Bill Priest: They, they affect firms from, from day one. And he was a mentor to me in many ways. And so I worked out a away with them and he now says, I’m not signing any non-compete, non-solicit. And I said, okay. He said, but, but they want all six of us to sign it. And I said, I know. Well, I’m not signing. I said, what if I can get you out of those, out of that?
[01:35:16] Bill Priest: And he said, you’ll never get me out. And I said, well, will you, if I can’t get you out, you all have a non solicitor or non compete. Well, will you go along with us? And he said, yes. So I said, but I have one condition. You’re not allowed to meet with them. He said, what do you mean? I said, this was the Credit Suisse spot, the company.
[01:35:36] Bill Priest: I said, so you can’t meet with them. And he said, why is that? I said, I just don’t want you meeting with them. And he said, okay, so they, we, we, I talked them into it. Al was turning, I was like 62. In their world, you had a 60 and out problem. If you were a C level executive, they retired at 60. So Al was over 62.
[01:36:00] Bill Priest: And I basically said, look, I don’t worry about him. You know, and, and they, and, and I was able to talk them into it because their culture was very different. Everyone wanted out of 60 or knew they had to go out, but now it’s kind of made up a little bit like I was where, you know, you don’t want to work forever if you can’t anyway, it worked, got Al up.
[01:36:20] Bill Priest: And then the other thing he did there, which I think affected people a lot, Al had the corner office. I’ve never wanted a corner office. I think corner offices are problems. Now I’ve had a corner office, but I’ve never had the best corner office. And, and I, the reason for that, you need people. I want to speak truth.
[01:36:40] Bill Priest: One of the problems with big organizations, two things that I’ve watched, you happen to Credit Suisse, but I haven’t seen it elsewhere. No one speaks truth to power and to get along, go along. That’s definitely an investment firm. You cannot have that. So people will always respect you if you have the corner office and either one that makes higher fire and comp decisions or whatnot, they are really nervous around you.
[01:37:04] Bill Priest: You gotta get rid of that. You just have to get rid of it. So create committees of compensation, create groups of this, but don’t put, don’t allow one person to become so preeminent that basically the whole firm rides on that decision. It, it, I rarely, it has succeeded. I can think of firms where it has succeeded, but it’s never been one that I aspire to.
[01:37:25] Bill Priest: I, I I’ve always said I made sure that the best corner office I never took. And I just it’s a funny thing, but I had Mike Wellolder, you wouldn’t know him, but he’s the guy that’s retiring now. I, he had the best corner office at Epic for like a decade. And he said, why don’t you get him? I said, I had my offices on Lexington Avenue.
[01:37:41] Bill Priest: His office is on Park Avenue, a big corner office, big windows. He said, why do you want, I said, Bill, I’m uncomfortable here. I said, Mark, you can carry the office. The person in the corner office has to be able to carry it. Doesn’t have to be the CEO. I needed to be somewhere else. I need people to walk in and talk to me like, I lived next door to them that, that I was, you know, I, I need honest information.
[01:38:03] William Green: I think that’s really interesting and I really, it’s, it’s such an important tell when you go into interview someone and you see, you know, because this is one of the things you have to do as a journalist, right? You go into people’s offices and it’s just really, it is really revealing to see how, how they’re set up I think of these two guys Nick Sleep in case the carrier that I wrote about it in my book, Richer, Wiser, Happier.
[01:38:23] William Green: And they, you know, they didn’t live, they didn’t set themselves up in Mayfair or in the city of London. You know, they were, they were on the King’s road above, you know, basically a pie shop. And then it became, I think, a Chinese herbal shop. And they just thought so independently. They just didn’t play the game the way everyone else did.
[01:38:41] William Green: And so I, I think these little choices that seem incidental, like not having the best office, are so important.
[01:38:49] Bill Priest: I do too. And I also think, now, when you get into big organizations, whether it’s a bank or insurance company, they have, they have, they have 80, 90, 000 employees, you can’t manage an organization that size without a lot of process.
[01:39:05] Bill Priest: And compensation is complicated. You got this matrix from A to Z, and numbers from 1 to 200 that Joe Smith is a C62. So we make him a C41. It’s, it’s, it’s foreign to me. It’s really, I wound up in big organizations, but the bureaucracy is just so stultifying.
[01:39:26] William Green: Well, it was fascinating to me that the BEA got bought out by Credit Suisse.
[01:39:30] William Green: And so you spent an enormous part of your career Credit Suisse asset management and, and built the US business into an enormous business. It was very successful. And then I, I was, I was thinking how. Ironic in some ways it is that credit suisse collapsed in twenty twenty three after all these years of of scandals and and I think ended up being bought out by ubs for a little over three billion dollars mean nothing.
[01:39:55] William Green: And I was wondering given that you’re one of the great survivors of the investment world you know you’re a sort of emblem of of longevity when you look at the story of Credit Suisse dying. What is it, because there any morals. Any lessons for us in terms of how to build something that survives and how not to behave in a way that’s likely to lead to a premature death?
[01:40:21] Bill Priest: Well, most companies go out of business. That’s the truth. Most companies go out of business. When you get in and the ones that survive tend to be larger ones, they tend to be a corporate structure rather than a partnership. Partnerships are really hard to continue, just really, really hard. But they can, they, they can do that.
[01:40:40] Bill Priest: They usually are private rather than public and it’s not that they don’t have their problems too. I think with Credit Suisse, I learned some things from Credit Suisse though. The one that we, during, they had bought us and then shortly thereafter, a year or two after, they, they called me up and said, well, congratulations, you have another company reporting to you.
[01:40:58] Bill Priest: I said, what are you talking about? Well, we just bought Warburg Pincus Asset Management. I said, I don’t know. I didn’t, I didn’t know anything about that as well. He said, well, we bought it from the private equity firm, private equity firm owned, Warburg Pincus owned Warburg Pincus Asset Management.
[01:41:14] Bill Priest: And I said, and I said, well, does anybody at Warburg Pincus Asset Management know about this? They’re going to find out tomorrow. I was shocked. I said, you can’t make an acquisition of another, as a management company without an advocate inside the inquiry. And they said, Bill, that’s not a helpful comment.
[01:41:32] Bill Priest: And I said, that’s a truthful one. And I said, they’re going to report to me. He says, yeah. I said, my life was hell for a week. They hated me. I was a very involved in this, of this horrible Zurich firm. It took me over a year to have them trust me. And the cultures were so different culture. It was Peter Drucker that said his culture and strategy for breakfast.
[01:41:54] Bill Priest: That he’s, he’s a hundred percent right. You have to get buy in from the workforce. Otherwise the culture, you can’t dictate culture. The culture bubbles up. You can have aspirations up here, but the culture has got to be lived by people. And it was, it was a nightmare with those people. And we were in an institutional firm.
[01:42:11] Bill Priest: They were more of a retail firm. Well, the problem that that’s a cultural factual difference, there’s also a cultural difference. Those people were more concerned about their personal account, their PA and anything else. We had all kinds of rules around that. You couldn’t trade. You can do anything really without getting clearance from, and I’ve never been sued by a client or employee in my entire career.
[01:42:31] Bill Priest: And I’m proud of that, but it speaks to the culture that we had and we created we, we’ve never written a check to anybody.
[01:42:41] William Green: One of the things that struck me that’s really interesting about your career is that you were forced to retire at 60 because of that rule at Credit Suisse. And so, and, and I was thinking about that line from F. Scott Fitzgerald from the last tycoon, where he famously said, American lives don’t have second acts. And then you went and had this hugely successful second act where, you know, you, you end up setting up Epoch and, and building it to, you know, over a hundred employees and over 50 billion in assets. I don’t know where it is now, but, you know, it became a huge success and, and ended up being sold to TD.
[01:43:16] William Green: Do you have any advice? I’m asking this somewhat selfishly as a 56 year old man. On how to continue thriving from middle age on with like what you’ve learned about continuing to succeed instead of kind of, you know, being on a downslope from the age of 50 something onwards.
[01:43:37] Bill Priest: Well, that’s an interesting question.
[01:43:38] Bill Priest: I’m lucky to have my health. I was starting with that. I am, I am for being as, oh, I’m, it’s hard for me to believe. I don’t, I’m like, I’m 83 years old, which is freaking amazing. It really is. I’ve got a lot of energy. I even my, my, and I recently had a physical again, whenever a year and a guy said, you know, there’s an old saying age is only a number, but in your case, it’s the absolute truth.
[01:44:03] Bill Priest: I think I’m a weird dude in that respect. I, I, other than taking Lipitor, I don’t take the drugs of any kind. And I like being engaged, but I would say people like me, we’re a challenge in a way. Most people. work in order to live, but a few people live to work. I would put myself in that category. The problem with people like me, we are, we can be very difficult on relationships outside of what matters to us.
[01:44:34] Bill Priest: And my wife came up to me as I, along goes some evening when she goes, knock, knock, remember me, I’m your wife. And you just get wrapped up in what you’re doing. It has some pluses, but it has a lot of negatives. And I don’t know what I am sure that I will time out and at TD at some point, I mean, it just, I am by far the oldest employee by a mile and I don’t know. I mean, I would say that, that era will, will come to some end, but doesn’t mean my work era is going to come to an end. And someone’s asking, are you just starting another firm. And I said, I might have the interest. I might even have the energy, but the other has to be another side that says, hey, you know what?
[01:45:17] Bill Priest: This guy may be old, but he’s still got. You can still think. So that’s, that’s kind of where it all is. I don’t really, the advice I have is, I always say, I’m curious. I, I, being curious and I read a lot. I, I am a big reader. And again, another, I mean, I just read well, Ruchir Sharma. Ruchir Sharma just wrote What Went Wrong With Capitalism.
[01:45:40] Bill Priest: That is a great book. That is an absolutely great book. And then I have these grandchildren, not this person’s tour. I’m so ticked off Adam, some regards. I don’t give them, you know, buy them stuff anymore, but I I gave him a book. I buy them books. This generation doesn’t read as far as I can tell. So, I’m a real fan of of Harari.
[01:46:02] Bill Priest: He wrote Harari wrote, you know, yeah, Sapiens. And he also wrote a book called 21 Lessons for the 21st Century. I think that’s a great book. So I got every one of my grandkids this book and so I said, now, you know, you know, I’d like you to read the book. This is last Christmas. I’d like you to read the book.
[01:46:18] Bill Priest: And, and when you’re done, I’ll buy dinner and you don’t have to agree with the book or my views at all, but I’d like to talk about the book and after dinner and we have a conversation, I’m going to give you a check for 500. This is November 18th. But we’ve read the book, so I’m thinking, wait a minute here, I took care of education and all this stuff, and I’m a little irritated with this, to say the least.
[01:46:44] William Green: There’s a really interesting shift, I think. I mean, my kids who are 23 and 26 both read a tremendous amount, but I think that’s unusual. But I was talking to someone yesterday who, who, I had dinner with someone who used to run a, one of the, the departments at Columbia, and she was saying she looks at her students now at Columbia and that they seem like they’re not paying attention that they have a really short attention span you can see them on their phone and she said actually they’ll be on their phone and they can answer the question that she asked them perfectly like they’re able to multitask in different ways like their way of absorbing information has totally changed and so it’s not one of those things I think where it’s really simple and you can just say oh and my day we did it better. It’s like the way the way that people are consuming information and juggling, juggling is just. It’s just different. I don’t know.
[01:47:36] Bill Priest: I think you’re right about that. And I think I don’t want to be this old curmudgeon that says, you know, my way was the best. So I, I think you have to adapt. I mean, if you don’t get this adapt, you die. But I do believe that I don’t think just listening, well, tick tock and all that kind of stuff. I don’t, there’s an old saying seeing is believing.
[01:47:58] Bill Priest: But the reverse is true. Believing is seeing and once the belief is established and all that social media is coming in to reinforce it, it’s hard to get people to think differently. It’s really hard. And I’d rather read, you know, it’s can you hold two competing ideas in your head? I’ve always felt that was a good way to be.
[01:48:18] William Green: Yeah, and that again comes from F. Scott Fitzgerald. He’s the one who talked about holding two competing ideas in your head simultaneously and still being able to function. So I think even an idea like that, like it helps to be, to be reasonably well read. So you know, you know that there’s a provenance for the, you know, it’s like people like F. Scott Fitzgerald figured out really smart stuff. Hemingway, you quoted before saying, you know, how do you go bankrupt? Well, slowly at first and then very quickly. It’s like, yeah. These, these were the smartest people of their generation, they figured stuff out, we should listen to them, we should study them.
[01:48:53] Bill Priest: We should, and I, I think this I, I guess I don’t, I don’t feel really great about what’s happening in the West, if you will. I think there’s this kind of a decay going on and there’s kind of this default to strong people or rich people. Again, getting back to these, some of the people, you look at all these people in some of the current administration, they’re all billionaires, a billion dollars.
[01:49:16] Bill Priest: If you had a million dollars, that was used to be considered super rich. But people with billions and the problem with the tendency of many of those people is I earned it. It’s mine. I did it. To me, right time, right place. You want to be born anywhere, you know, to when I was born, you want to be born in the United States.
[01:49:36] Bill Priest: After World War II, the world was a mess. The United States is nice, pretty nice place to be born and then you get an education. So time and place really, really successful people often don’t have a perspective to say, hey, yeah, I worked hard, maybe I got lucky boy, right time, right place.
[01:49:55] William Green: Yeah. It’s huge. I mean, Buffett always talks about winning the ovarian lottery, right?
[01:49:59] William Green: Just being born when he was in the U S.
[01:50:02] Bill Priest: Right. Absolutely true. It’s absolutely true. I think when you I only go in my, my parents were born or what they went through. I mean, look at life expectancy.
[01:50:10] William Green: When you look back now in your eighties at your career, and you said, try to draw lessons that you sort of wish you had.
[01:50:17] William Green: You had known before and one one thing obviously that comes to mind is what you said before about the difficulty of being very successful having a very intense work ethic and still having good relationships and you mentioned near the start of the conversation that you’d been divorced once that that’s something I think about a great deal because so many of the best investors I interview ended up divorced mean this is one of the things manga said after reading my book was you know he was just struck by how many of them got got divorced or separated do you have any thoughts about how how to be extraordinarily successful. Professionally and financially and yet and yet not to screw up relationships to be successful in multiple dimensions so that you give back to society you help your family your good friend you don’t don’t screw up your health like how is it possible to do that or is it just one of those things where to be extraordinarily successful, you have to be really extreme.
[01:51:21] Bill Priest: No, I think you’re right. I don’t think you have to be extreme. I’ll give you a little additional background. I mean, I was married when I was 20. When I was 22, I had two kids. I married my high school sweetheart. We were married for a long time.
[01:51:33] Bill Priest: And it worked for a long time. And then it’s, it’s again, it’s probably the heading of TMI, but when we sold BEA to Credit Suisse, Ken Bialkin was it was a lawyer that I knew, a real mentor that Ken’s passed away. So she shows up with this entourage, a lawyer, Ken, I just wanted to talk to you. He’s this is going to be the team, blah, blah, blah.
[01:51:55] Bill Priest: So there’s this woman on a team. She didn’t have any tax partner. So it took forever to do this deal, like nine months. And at one point, I just said, would, would you have dinner with me? And she said, why? Do you have a tax question? And I said, it’s a social invitation. So kind of time went by and no response.
[01:52:12] Bill Priest: And then she called up and she said, with respect to your invitation, I don’t know how many weeks ago. The answer is, okay. That was the enthusiasm, but she’s really smart. And I think, What was missing for me was an intellectual companion and a long time and talking to another very good friend. He said, so, so what do you see in her?
[01:52:33] Bill Priest: Why do you like her? And I said, and this is, you know, I was probably in my close to 50 when all this happened. I said, I’d rather have dinner with her than anyone I know. And that’s still true. We have our day where it’s just like stops just can’t, but it’s still a true statement. And I find that ability to have converse and discuss issues.
[01:52:55] Bill Priest: And now we do have our side of the pie, but that matters to me. The the other stuff, you know, we don’t have children together. I mean, she doesn’t have any children at all, but there’s no, we don’t have children. That’s why, but but my, what’s interesting to me is both of my kids really, really like her.
[01:53:12] Bill Priest: And that’s, that’s important when you go through one of these things.
[01:53:16] William Green: And do you think it was possible to be as successful as you’ve been professionally and not screw up your kids? Like, were you able to actually be present for your kids or is that really, really hard?
[01:53:28] Bill Priest: No, I coached low league baseball for a dozen years.
[01:53:32] Bill Priest: I love coaching my son. And my son runs another investment firm. He runs, he’s the CEO of General American Investors. He’s a better investor than I am. He’s really good. We need to get him on the podcast, too. And my daughter is a hospice worker. My daughter, I know too, again, this isn’t a philosophy, I think the most important thing in life is relationships.
[01:53:52] Bill Priest: Nothing else really matters. Everything else is secondary relationships. So, I know two really, really happy families. One is an ex partner, Tim Taussig, who’s no longer with me. I mean, he retired. He had cancer, but he’s okay. You retire and my daughter’s family. And when you’re around those families, I don’t care when you’re around them.
[01:54:10] Bill Priest: There’s laughter. There’s joy and joy. Joy is a wonderful thing. It’s, it’s a wonderful thing to experience. There’s laughter, there’s jokes, and people chip in to do the dishes or cook or whatnot. It’s but again, I’ve lived a long time, I only know two really happy families, so maybe I should get a broader set of friends, but I don’t mean, it’s not that people are fighting all the time, but there’s, happiness is, happiness matters, it’s, it’s, happiness is a wonderful feeling, and it comes and goes, it comes and goes.
[01:54:42] William Green: So if you look at your daughter’s family, like what’s, what’s the lesson? Like, cause it sounds like in some ways she, she nailed it. They figured out the recipe. What do they do? Right?
[01:54:47] Bill Priest: Well, my daughter, I always tell people the best thing that ever happened to me is my daughter married her husband.
[01:55:00] Bill Priest: And Steve is is, is just a wonderful person. And again, I’ll give you a little more color. She was dating a guy. And I didn’t know her in that she was, this is a long time ago now. They were in their twenties or something. And you know, she hadn’t really dated a lot of people. I was just encouraging her to, you know, meet other people or whatnot.
[01:55:19] Bill Priest: It’s over Christmas dinner or whatnot. She just kind of folded her arm like this. Dad. What do you want me to do? Marry a cow like you? Because I haven’t seen anything. And I said, I found someone I can share everything with. She goes through this. I thought, holy cow, he’s 25. She knows more about relationships than I do.
[01:55:37] Bill Priest: And so then I met him. And he, he went to the New York Institute of Technology. I’ve never even heard of that place. I said, gee, Steve and he’s, well, I’m going to graduate school there too. I said, well, most people want to go somewhere else. And he says, well, it’s free for me. Cause if I taught, they let me, they let me I said, oh, okay.
[01:55:55] Bill Priest: And I said, have you ever thought about going to business school? And he said, no, I can’t afford it. And I said why don’t you take the GMAT? So he takes the GMAT. He didn’t want the 98th percentile. I am so excited. I said, Steve, forget my daughter. I will pay for your education. I will pay for you to get an MBA.
[01:56:11] Bill Priest: I’ll part of this with songs. I think I’m going to pay no matter what, but if you have an MBA, I pay less. There’s time to spy. So he went to Columbia, did really well. He’s been, he’s been a reasonably successful guy, but he is just a wonderful person in the family. They’re just, it’s a, it’s a nice family to be around.
[01:56:29] Bill Priest: So, and my daughter is also one that reminds me of, you know, just she grounds me. She grounds me a lot. And she’s a hospice worker. Right now, every one of her patients has ALS. I don’t know how you do this. I really don’t. But she’s a happy person. She feels this is what she does. I, I think if she, I think she if she makes 70, 000 a year, I’ll be surprised.
[01:56:53] Bill Priest: But, you know, they don’t aspire. They, they live in a nice suburb. It’s not a super fancy suburb, but it doesn’t matter. The relationships matter. It’s not the house.
[01:57:06] William Green: You were never super money motivated. I think, I mean, I was struck by a quote where you, you said philosophically, I’ve never done anything because it paid well.
[01:57:14] William Green: In some cases I’ve been rewarded, but the initial reason for doing it was the curiosity and engagement.
[01:57:20] Bill Priest: True. I think that’s the best way to go through life. You know? I actually am one of these people that got this born. I, I really believe right time right place. And if you think about it Had Orissa not gotten passed, in 1974, if you went back and looked at that stock market, it fell 50%.
[01:57:36] Bill Priest: I mean, the market collapsed in 1974. I mean, I looked, I, every, I came home one time and thought that the dumbest decision I ever made was to go to BEA. I married with two kids, stay at home, I, we had, I don’t, I don’t even know if I had 10, 000 in savings. But if that bear market had continued, I said, look, we’re going to lose, we’re going to lose a house, and we may have to move back to Stoneville.
[01:58:00] Bill Priest: That was, that was really, that was a realistic thing. And then, you know, it worked out, but I mean, I’m not sure, I’m not sure that if you put all the facts of some of my decisions in front of somebody else, they would do what I did. That would characterize it.
[01:58:15] William Green: I often feel like, you know, I’m sort of mystical about these things.
[01:58:19] William Green: So I tend to feel like there’s some degree of protection that because I made some decisions that was so stupid where I would, I would move country without really thinking about it. I, you know, my wife and I got married at 25. Nobody got married at 25 in my generation.
[01:58:36] Bill Priest: Yeah, well, my parents were 35 when they got married, which was also really weird.
[01:58:41] Bill Priest: That’s very unusual. And my father never, and my mother got married once, but only lasted a year then. But that was very, they were just very typical. Nowadays we have some friends that are, I mean, and I, I’ll give you my theory. It’s all good. So I’ll give you this real quick. So I think it’s all good.
[01:59:01] Bill Priest: Starts around 21. That’s when you graduate college. Maybe went to military, business school, so 21. So at 25, you have four years of adulthood. But at 30, you’ve got nine. You’re twice the adult at 30, you were at 25. And at 40, you’ve got 19 years of adulthood. And there’s something magical about 40. Four years when your life experience comes together.
[01:59:21] Bill Priest: And you’ve had enough things happen that you actually have judgment. I mean, up until then, judgment can come and go. And then what happens if you get to be 65, and if you have your health, it’s fantastic. Because if you have your health and enough money to sustain your lifestyle, It’s wonderful. You’ve got all this other stuff behind you.
[01:59:42] Bill Priest: You’ve learned a lot. You hopefully have a set of friends that you value. And and that, that to me, so I, I gave, I gave this talk with the commencement speaker in my high school that’s a while ago. And I also and I was, I had the, they, they have a, they have a jumbotron in the football stadium where, where I was.
[02:00:01] Bill Priest: So anyway, I put on my high school picture behind me and the kids are sitting in front of me. And , parents, and I said, you probably want to know that guy is behind me. That was me when I was your age. This is what you have to look forward to. And of course the parents laugh and the kids grow.
[02:00:18] Bill Priest: And then at some point I’m going through a little life lessons or whatnot. And I make the point, I said, look I’d like to buy every one of you here, a tattoo. Now, some of you already have tattoos, but in my day, no one had a tattoo unless you rode a motorcycle or something like that. And I said, so let me buy a tattoo, but I get to pick it out.
[02:00:35] Bill Priest: And it’s really pretty simple. It’s just four letters. WYAO. You put on your knee, your arm, wherever you want to go. WYO. What does that stand for? Work your ass off. The parents stood up and applauded the kids grown. It was to follow up some examples of how you grow and how to be open to growing.
[02:00:57] Bill Priest: And don’t be afraid of new experiences when you’re 21 or 22. That’s all you’re going to get. You’re drinking from a fire hose at that age. You don’t know it, but everything’s new. Everything’s new to you at that age.
[02:01:08] William Green: Is it shocking to you when you look back and you do something like go for that commencement speech?
[02:01:13] William Green: Is it shocking to realize how successful you’ve been? Like does are, are you sort of surprised at it or do, do you look back and it kind of almost feels inevitable because of how hard you worked?
[02:01:24] Bill Priest: I think there’s a lot of luck involved. I’ve, I’ve, I go back there a lot. I, I, another example would be, I actually was back for a high school reunion last June, and there’s a friend of mine is still there.
[02:01:38] Bill Priest: He never left. And I said, Pete, we got to do better than last reunion. And we, the wine was terrible. The food was terrible. And I said, let’s, I’ll make it, keep it anonymous. I’m going to send it 5, 000. Just keep it anonymous, but let’s get a band, some better crew. And you know, about more than half the class is dead at this point anyway, but they moved on.
[02:02:00] Bill Priest: So I thought, okay, how many people we got? And I said, well, it’s a plus one thing. So, you know, maybe we’ll have 50 people, 60 people, something like that. Oh, that’s okay. There’s 200 was in the graduating class. And I said, we’ll get a band. So it turns out 5,000. We got a five piece jazz band in Stoneville, Ohio.
[02:02:17] Bill Priest: They played for three hours, 700 dollars. They were fantastic. We got wired, actually heard of, and we fed people, and we had 2, 300 left over. I’m sorry, 1, 300 left over, which we gave to the school. 3, 700! And Stoneville, Ohio is like 20, 000 or something in New York City. I mean, and when you, when and some of those people, some came from other places and I am, I am by far the most successful person financially in it.
[02:02:47] Bill Priest: And I don’t, I try not to make any of it. I did start a scholarship with there, but with my mother and my father, I’ve, I’ve sent a hundred kids to school now. But partial runs on full scholarships. Back in 79 when my mother was sort of semi invalid and I had this issue with her and she what do you get done an older lady who’s infirmed and whatnot.
[02:03:06] Bill Priest: So I started a scholarship. The problem with the scholarship, it wasn’t going to any black people. Well this really ticked me off because I was raised in part by a black woman. Anyway, she was more of a mother than my own mother. So then I started a scholarship for the for black students, but only black students could get it fast forward to today. Now My mother’s scholarship goes to anybody But the only this one black woman who had a lot to do with raising me It still has to go to a black because that’s how I worked So it’s really pretty funny now. So when I look at who gets it in scholarships, it used to be I wanted to make the difference between that kid going to a local college and let’s say an Ivy League school or some more prestigious and make a difference.
[02:03:50] Bill Priest: It doesn’t work out that way today. The way it’s all funneled, you get pieces. There’s probably five, six, seven people who share in something. And it’s all about managing all the other scholarships that they get, work study scholarships. It’s this whole scholarship award thing is really complicated. But in any rate, that’s I’ve done that.
[02:04:10] Bill Priest: And I used to demand two things. I want a Christmas card from you and I want, I want to get a Christmas card and a thank you note. That’s all I’ve ever asked. Christmas cards, a long stop. Thank you. I want it. So thank you notice I get, but now, believe it or not, they Google them. I got, I get, I got 2 people send me the same.
[02:04:28] Bill Priest: Thank you. Note identical word for word. They Google thank you notes.
[02:04:33] William Green: It’s productivity improvements. Well, it’s, it’s what you were praying for that. The technology would bring all these productivity improvements. It’s finally kicked in.
[02:04:43] Bill Priest: Anyway. And also, I notice once you get one generation removed from who you’re talking to.
[02:04:50] Bill Priest: It’s a bit more challenging to make the connection. You know, when you get, you know, within, within 20 years, you can, once you get, I noticed this sometimes now, I mean, usually most people, they don’t really guess my age, you know, guess I’m, you know, north of 60 or whatnot, but most of them don’t guess I’m north of 80.
[02:05:10] Bill Priest: And so, but once I do notice that there’s, there is a gap, there’s a comprehensive gaps of time and conversation.
[02:05:19] William Green: So just one last question, do you, because I’m aware that I, I, I don’t, I don’t want to keep you for about nine hours, but the when you think about your legacy and you think about how you would want to be remembered, is, do you, do you have a sense of how you would want to be remembered?
[02:05:38] Bill Priest: You know, honestly, I’ve never thought of it. Or the kind of tri statement, you’d like to leave the place better than when you found it. That concept, I think that’s a nice concept. I think I think I’d like to think that the people I touched Enjoy my company or maybe and I think you need to be pretty fierce about upholding righteousness that you, you want to live in a liberal democracy and don’t let anyone take that away from you.
[02:06:08] Bill Priest: Off the top of my head. That’s what I would say.
[02:06:10] William Green: Yeah, no, that’s a nice note on which to end. I think you’re right. We need to, we need to value liberal democracy. I, I think there’s a, there, there have been a lot of lessons from, from this conversation, but I, yeah, there’s, there’s, there’s a lot for me to sit and ponder.
[02:06:25] William Green: So, thank you for, for sharing so many rich insights about investing, about business, about life, about family. It’s been really lovely getting to chat with you.
[02:06:35] Bill Priest: Well, that’s great. And let me leave an open invitation for you sometime. If it turns out you’re free for dinner sometime, I’d love to take you to dinner and we can even bring a colleague or two along.
[02:06:46] William Green: I would love that. It would be a real delight. Thank you so much. It’s been a great pleasure. Alright folks, thanks so much for listening to this conversation with the great Bill Priest. If you’d like to learn more from Bill, please check out the resources in the show notes for this episode. Bill has co authored three books, including one titled How to Win at Active Management.
[02:07:09] William Green: He also writes some excellent white papers that are well worth reading. I’ll be back very soon with some more terrific guests, including a wonderful conversation that I recently had with the author Pico Iyer, who was one of my favorite guests on the podcast over the last couple of years. I’m also gearing up to interview the famous British investor Terry Smith.
[02:07:28] William Green: In the meantime, please feel free to follow me on X at WilliamGreen72 or connect with me on LinkedIn. And as always, do let me know how you’re enjoying the podcast. I’m always delighted to hear from you. Until next time, take good care, and stay well.
[02:07:44] Outro: Thank you for listening to TIP. Make sure to follow Richer, Wiser, Happier on your favorite podcast app and never miss out on episodes. To access our show notes, transcripts or courses, go to theinvestorspodcast.com. This show is for entertainment purposes only. Before making any decision, consult a professional. This show is copyrighted by The Investor’s Podcast Network. Written permission must be granted before syndication or rebroadcasting.
HELP US OUT!
Help us reach new listeners by leaving us a rating and review on Spotify! It takes less than 30 seconds, and really helps our show grow, which allows us to bring on even better guests for you all! Thank you – we really appreciate it!
BOOKS AND RESOURCES
- Bill Priest’s investment firm, Epoch Investment Partners.
- Bill Priest’s book, “Free Cash Flow & Shareholder Yield.”
- Bill Priest’s book, “Winning at Active Management.”
- Anne Applebaum’s book “Autocracy, Inc.”
- Ruchir Sharma’s book, “What Went Wrong with Capitalism.”
- William Green’s book, “Richer, Wiser, Happier” – read the reviews of this book.
- Check out all the books mentioned and discussed in our podcast episodes here.
- Enjoy ad-free episodes when you subscribe to our Premium Feed.
NEW TO THE SHOW?
- Join the exclusive TIP Mastermind Community to engage in meaningful stock investing discussions with Stig, Clay, Kyle, and the other community members.
- Follow our official social media accounts: X (Twitter) | LinkedIn | | Instagram | Facebook | TikTok.
- Browse through all our episodes (complete with transcripts) here.
- Try our tool for picking stock winners and managing our portfolios: TIP Finance Tool.
- Enjoy exclusive perks from our favorite Apps and Services.
- Learn how to better start, manage, and grow your business with the best business podcasts.
SPONSORS
Support our free podcast by supporting our sponsors:
- Hardblock
- Found
- Unchained
- The Bitcoin Way
- Vanta
- Fintool
- PrizePicks
- Onramp
- SimpleMining
- TurboTax
- Fundrise
Disclosure: The Investor’s Podcast Network is an Amazon Associate. We may earn commission from qualifying purchases made through our affiliate links.