Rajiv Interview
Rajiv Interview
Rajiv Interview
global markets
Goldman Sachs Exchanges: Great Investors
Rajiv Jain, Chairman, Chief Investment Officer, GQG
Partners
Betsy Gorton, Partner, External Investing Group (XIG),
Goldman Sachs Asset Management
Date of recording: June 7, 2023
One of the other lessons was that I'd become co-CEO at the
end of my tenure at Vontobel. And for sure I did not enjoy
that because there's a clear difference between what is
needed to be a good CEO versus a good CIO. I enjoy
investing. That is my passion. And so, we made a clear
separation between what I call church and state. And to be
clear, I said to Tim, I said, "You are state. I'm the church."
Rajiv Jain: Again, it's been far better than I would have
ever predicted, to be very clear. But I think more
importantly, the fulfilling part has been the caliber of the
team that we've assembled now. And the results that we
deliver for our clients.
Betsy Gorton: In just over six years the firm has now
grown to more than a $100 billion dollars in assets under
management. It's a remarkable feat. Congratulations.
Now, the flip side is that most of the time there's some
areas where the fundamentals are improving. Think about
energy two years ago. You could find businesses selling at
high single digit valuation, almost triple A balance sheets,
fantastic, 100-year-old organizations that had been
through the test of time selling at very attractive valuation
at 6, 7, 8 percent dividend yield. That made no sense.
The other question that you asked was how does the
process evolve? If I look at my own process, it has evolved
dramatically over the last ten, 15, 20 years. And I believe
that is the important part of survival, so to say, in this
business. It has to be adjusting to incorporate new
thinking.
So, our sizing is that whenever you buy anything, it's that
if you are wrong, if you lose 50 percent, how would it
impact the portfolio? What is the exit strategy? Can we exit
these names? What about the methodology?
I think the third big area would still be energy and basic
materials. I think the whole notion that we can live without
fossil is not grounded in reality. And fossil demand is back
to record highs. But the world is not investing enough. So,
these cycles are built on under and over investment. So, we
are still very bullish in commodities.
For example, the more people talk about EV, the base
metal, the copper, etcetera, they're not adding enough
capacity. For example. Or lithium or what have you. So,
we're quite bullish on these few areas on a go-forward
basis.
But if you hire people who are, let's say, 20 years in the
industry. Have worked at five different hedge funds. Three
long-only shops. Chances of them agreeing with you is
zero. Or almost zero. And that creates healthy debate and
discussion. That was the first part of that. And that is why
I did not bring anybody from our prior team because I'd
trained them and there are positives of that. But there are
negatives of that. So, that creates a culture of healthy
debate and discussion. There will never be the name where
somebody's not aggressively trying to short the name. We
don't do shorting, but in a thought process perspective. So,
I think that is probably the most important differentiator
which I thought from the get-go was important to bring in
the team.
So, it's fun to see the debate, how some very talented
journalists go at it in terms of criticizing names that we
either own or we're looking to own. But they typically talk
to the ecosystem, not exactly the management.
At that time, you basically had the phone. You had to call
the broker or go to the office, right? And I remember there
was a senior broker where I was living. He would say, "I
need to talk to dad. How come they allow somebody in 12th
grade to come to my office? That shouldn't be done." But
that actually got me hooked on pretty early days.
And the second part is a bull market helps. So, these
things you get hooked on bull markets when everything is
going up. So, that was one of my first forays in a bull
market. That sort of got me hooked.
Rajiv Jain: Yes. It's a funny story because I did not know
anybody in the business as such. So, I just took up the
CFA directory and started cold calling people. And I would
make a spreadsheet to say, okay, this person seemed
responsive. And this one's not really interested. And that's
how I ended up at UBS at that point. So, the CIO, he
picked up the call and said, "It's interesting. Nobody really
calls me. So, I would love to meet you because nobody
really calls me directly like you did." So, that's how I ended
up getting my first job.
Rajiv Jain: I think there are a few of them. There's not just
one. Some obviously, like Buffett and Peter Lynch, etcetera.
And some are just actually from other areas, not from
investment who have taught me a lot about how to just
think about not just investing, but life.