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Pitch Summary:
Part of the reticence towards synergies is that the word is somewhat a euphemism for transformation/change, which in turn often means job cuts (not just employees but Board Directors also!). This reticence was definitely the case with Pointsbet (ASX:PBH), which was a long, but very rewarding arbitrage trade in 2025 (along with New World Resources it has been the standout merger arbitrage trade of 2025 to date). We are generally mor...
Pitch Summary:
Part of the reticence towards synergies is that the word is somewhat a euphemism for transformation/change, which in turn often means job cuts (not just employees but Board Directors also!). This reticence was definitely the case with Pointsbet (ASX:PBH), which was a long, but very rewarding arbitrage trade in 2025 (along with New World Resources it has been the standout merger arbitrage trade of 2025 to date). We are generally more than happy to see takeover timelines extended where they have become contested situations. In the vast majority of cases the time decay effect on annualised returns is more than compensated by higher prices. Pointsbet received its first takeover offer in February 2025 and another horse immediately joined the race, with the potential appeal of synergies helping to drive the final price higher. The Pointsbet takeover event, where you have one all cash offer and a competing cash and scrip offer, which then transformed into an all scrip and selective buy back proposal, is not rare but it’s not overly common either.
BSD Analysis:
Harvest Lane’s thesis underscores the efficiency of merger arbitrage in contested bidding scenarios. The fund profited from escalating offers between MIXI and betr, culminating in a $1.40 final exit. Pointsbet’s valuation uplift reflects bidder competition and synergy premiums. With PBH’s asset-light, technology-driven platform and growing international exposure, takeover appeal remains strong. The case showcases disciplined event-driven execution and effective timing of exits.
Pitch Summary:
In the fourth quarter we took a position in financial services provider Ameriprise7 (NYSE: AMP). Founded in 1894 and spun out of American Express in 2005, Ameriprise currently partners with over ten thousand financial advisors. These independent, entrepreneurial individuals manage the wealth of and provide financial planning for over two million individuals and insitutions and are effectively small business owners who operate withi...
Pitch Summary:
In the fourth quarter we took a position in financial services provider Ameriprise7 (NYSE: AMP). Founded in 1894 and spun out of American Express in 2005, Ameriprise currently partners with over ten thousand financial advisors. These independent, entrepreneurial individuals manage the wealth of and provide financial planning for over two million individuals and insitutions and are effectively small business owners who operate within the framework of the Ameriprise infrastructure. We believe that the wealth management and financial planning business, while facing some temporary headwinds, will remain attractive in the long term. The number of individuals and families with investable assets has grown over recent decades and continues to grow. Unlike many of the bank-owned financial advisory firms8 Ameriprise is a pure-play financial advice company and is a higher-margin, less capital-intensive business than its highly-leveraged bank competitors. With its low valuation, high growth rate and solid operating metrics the company is the epitome of what we call “quality at a reasonable price”9. As is typical of the capital-light compounding businesses which we invest in for the long term, the company has returned over eighty five percent of its operating cash flow to shareholders in the form of stock buybacks and dividends over the past ten years. Ameriprise’s free cash flow per share has grown at a twenty percent annualized rate and its dividend per share has grown at an eleven percent annualized rate over the past ten years.
BSD Analysis:
Amp’s wealth- and asset-management model produces high returns on equity, often above 50% on an operating basis, supported by fee-based advisory revenue and modest capital needs. The shares trade at a mid-teens trailing P/E and a lower forward multiple, which is undemanding given solid double-digit EPS growth and a long runway from aging demographics and rising global wealth. Management is aggressively returning capital via dividends and very large buybacks, with free cash flow yields in the low-teens helping shrink share count and amplify per-share compounding. Scale, a nationwide advisor network, and strong brand recognition create a durable moat versus bank-owned competitors that are more capital intensive and less focused. Key upside catalysts include continued organic asset growth, margin expansion in advice and wealth, and further capital-return announcements, while primary risks center on market-sensitive fee revenue and regulatory scrutiny.
Pitch Summary:
Positive relative performance was driven by macro-thematic measures, which kept the fund aligned with evolving market backdrops. These insights helped identify tariff-exposed European companies and inflation beneficiaries. In aggregate, macro-thematic insights helped to position the fund through overweight allocations to the communication services sector and semiconductor companies, areas poised to capture the artificial intelligen...
Pitch Summary:
Positive relative performance was driven by macro-thematic measures, which kept the fund aligned with evolving market backdrops. These insights helped identify tariff-exposed European companies and inflation beneficiaries. In aggregate, macro-thematic insights helped to position the fund through overweight allocations to the communication services sector and semiconductor companies, areas poised to capture the artificial intelligence (AI), “risk-on” market themes. Fundamental insights then amplified these gains, with growth-focused measures tracking research and development spending and sales growth benefiting from the prevailing style environment. Detractors included a cautious stance toward momentum styles that began in June and weak performance among certain IT stocks. Overall, style leadership reinforced investor belief in the AI theme, powering further positive performance in IT stocks.
BSD Analysis:
BSD interprets this as a continued bull stance on mega-cap technology, led by Microsoft and Nvidia. The portfolio’s overweight in semiconductors and cloud-related names reflects conviction in durable AI demand and expanding capital intensity. With Microsoft trading near 30x forward P/E and double-digit revenue growth from Azure, upside hinges on maintaining margin expansion. The risk is factor reversal if AI enthusiasm fades, but strong cash generation and buybacks provide valuation support. Broader positioning toward communication services adds diversification.
Pitch Summary:
Broadcom’s pivot to AI accelerators and custom silicon is translating into multi-year revenue visibility, underpinned by >$100B backlog and marquee $10B NRE order. Networking leadership (including merchant silicon) complements accelerators, supporting margin durability. Integration discipline and FCF yield add downside support; key watch items are customer concentration and cadence of 2026 custom-chip ramps.
BSD Analysis:
custom s...
Pitch Summary:
Broadcom’s pivot to AI accelerators and custom silicon is translating into multi-year revenue visibility, underpinned by >$100B backlog and marquee $10B NRE order. Networking leadership (including merchant silicon) complements accelerators, supporting margin durability. Integration discipline and FCF yield add downside support; key watch items are customer concentration and cadence of 2026 custom-chip ramps.
Pitch Summary:
NVIDIA remains the linchpin of AI compute with a defensible moat spanning silicon, software (CUDA), and networking. Data-center revenue momentum and expanding customer breadth support elevated growth and cash generation. As-sold backlog and ecosystem lock-in reduce near-term downside, though capex normalization is a medium-term risk; continued platform innovation (Blackwell/GB200) is the catalyst.
BSD Analysis:
AI compute, data ce...
Pitch Summary:
NVIDIA remains the linchpin of AI compute with a defensible moat spanning silicon, software (CUDA), and networking. Data-center revenue momentum and expanding customer breadth support elevated growth and cash generation. As-sold backlog and ecosystem lock-in reduce near-term downside, though capex normalization is a medium-term risk; continued platform innovation (Blackwell/GB200) is the catalyst.
BSD Analysis:
AI compute, data center, CUDA, networking, hyperscalers, backlog
Pitch Summary:
Astera sits in a sweet spot of the AI stack, alleviating data-center connectivity bottlenecks as hyperscaler deployments accelerate. Surging Scorpio adoption signals strong product-market fit and supports rapid operating leverage. With AI infrastructure still early, revenue visibility is rising; execution and competitive moat in PCIe/CXL connectivity are the swing factors.
BSD Analysis:
AI infrastructure, connectivity, hyperscaler...
Pitch Summary:
Astera sits in a sweet spot of the AI stack, alleviating data-center connectivity bottlenecks as hyperscaler deployments accelerate. Surging Scorpio adoption signals strong product-market fit and supports rapid operating leverage. With AI infrastructure still early, revenue visibility is rising; execution and competitive moat in PCIe/CXL connectivity are the swing factors.
BSD Analysis:
AI infrastructure, connectivity, hyperscalers, PCIe, CXL, data centers
Pitch Summary:
I fully exited the Cirata position during the quarter. The investment thesis required clear, repeatable growth in what it now calls “Data Integration,” which ultimately failed to materialize. While I credit management for executing well on controllable items, divesting non-core assets ($2.5m), refocusing the company, and cutting quarterly cash burn from $3.2m to $0.8m, the revenue engine never accelerated. Reported contract wins re...
Pitch Summary:
I fully exited the Cirata position during the quarter. The investment thesis required clear, repeatable growth in what it now calls “Data Integration,” which ultimately failed to materialize. While I credit management for executing well on controllable items, divesting non-core assets ($2.5m), refocusing the company, and cutting quarterly cash burn from $3.2m to $0.8m, the revenue engine never accelerated. Reported contract wins remain too small to validate the thesis. Consistent with my evolving approach to be less forgiving when business execution fails to meet expectations, I sold the position and realized the tax loss in applicable accounts.
BSD Analysis:
Management’s operational cleanup couldn’t overcome weak demand; with insufficient contract scale and stalled growth, exiting preserves capital and harvests tax assets. Re-entry would require sustained bookings momentum and evidence of product-market fit in data integration. For now, better risk-adjusted opportunities exist elsewhere. :contentReference[oaicite:17]{index=17}
Pitch Summary:
Fairfax’s fundamental performance remains impressive, despite the modest share price pullback in Q3, a natural consolidation following its significant multi-year run. The Q2 results, reported in July, underscored this strength, driving book value per share up 10.8% year-to-date to $1,158, supported by a disciplined 93.3% combined ratio and strong investment results. The company has established a significantly higher and more durabl...
Pitch Summary:
Fairfax’s fundamental performance remains impressive, despite the modest share price pullback in Q3, a natural consolidation following its significant multi-year run. The Q2 results, reported in July, underscored this strength, driving book value per share up 10.8% year-to-date to $1,158, supported by a disciplined 93.3% combined ratio and strong investment results. The company has established a significantly higher and more durable earnings baseline than before 2021. As I’ve noted previously, earnings quality has also markedly improved, with the majority of income now generated by predictable sources like interest, dividends from associates, and underwriting. This structure makes Fairfax significantly more resilient to the P/C insurance cycle than traditional peers As the hard market inevitably softens, it is helpful to remember Fairfax's strong track record of capital allocation. They focus on buying more of what they already own at good prices. Since 2021, they have deployed $6.5 billion into buybacks ($3.2B) and acquiring minority stakes in core subsidiaries ($3.3B). The buybacks alone cut the share count by 17% well below book value. This approach directly boosts per-share value by increasing earnings while reducing the share count. This discipline is also evident in their counter-cyclical management. They acquired aggressively during the 2014-2019 soft market when assets were cheap and pivoted to organic growth during the recent hard market when margins were high.
BSD Analysis:
Fairfax’s underwriting discipline and investment income have reset earnings power; capital allocation (17% buyback since 2021) amplifies per-share growth. As pricing normalizes, mix quality should defend ROE vs. peers. Track reserve adequacy and asset allocation shifts, but valuation vs. book remains attractive given improved earnings quality and shrinking share count. :contentReference[oaicite:15]{index=15}
Pitch Summary:
The investment thesis for Cogent still hinges on substantial revenue growth from wavelength services. The company is targeting approximately 500 installations per month, with an average monthly revenue per wave of $2,000, implying a potential revenue run rate of roughly $144 million (500 installations x 12 months x $24k/year) at a very high contribution margin of over 90%. While we are seeing positive signs, wavelength revenue grew...
Pitch Summary:
The investment thesis for Cogent still hinges on substantial revenue growth from wavelength services. The company is targeting approximately 500 installations per month, with an average monthly revenue per wave of $2,000, implying a potential revenue run rate of roughly $144 million (500 installations x 12 months x $24k/year) at a very high contribution margin of over 90%. While we are seeing positive signs, wavelength revenue grew 27% sequentially (and 147% year-over-year) to a $36 million run-rate, the headline pace of reported installations, at 147, was still far below the targeted 500/month run-rate needed to validate the thesis. But a closer look at the numbers reveals that Cogent also installed and billed for approximately 330 additional wave connections, which were not yet reflected in the reported revenue. The sum of these two figures, approximately 477, gets very close to the target. CEO David Schaeffer attributes the recent miss not to a lack of demand, highlighting a strong funnel and zero pre-install cancellations, but to a lag in customer acceptance. He argues that customers, conditioned by competitors’ multi-month delays, are “caught off guard” by Cogent’s ability to deliver within 30 days (vs. months for competitors). This creates a temporary gap between installation and revenue recognition as Cogent builds credibility in this new market and convinces customers to change long-held procurement habits. The market has clearly not reacted well to this short-term execution risk. This was combined with the average performance of the rest of the business (strong performance of the IPv4 business, but weaker headline numbers for other divisions due to the final stages of “grooming” low-margin connections from the Sprint acquisition). The next quarter will be important as Cogent must now show actual evidence of execution
BSD Analysis:
Wavelength scaling at 90%+ contribution margins is the thesis fulcrum; near-term revenue recognition lags mask operational progress (installed vs. accepted). If conversion accelerates, EBITDA should inflect and sentiment follow. Risks include integration drag from Sprint “grooming” and execution on installs/acceptance cadence. Monitor bookings-to-bill conversions and churn; upside if run-rate approaches the $144M target. :contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}
Pitch Summary:
Burford’s share price performance remains dominated by the $16 billion YPF judgment against Argentina. In July, US District Judge Preska issued a “turnover order” directing Argentina to hand over its controlling YPF stake to Burford’s clients. This was initially viewed as a major win and the strongest collection tool Burford had to enforce its judgment. However, the US Department of Justice (DOJ), representing the US government, fi...
Pitch Summary:
Burford’s share price performance remains dominated by the $16 billion YPF judgment against Argentina. In July, US District Judge Preska issued a “turnover order” directing Argentina to hand over its controlling YPF stake to Burford’s clients. This was initially viewed as a major win and the strongest collection tool Burford had to enforce its judgment. However, the US Department of Justice (DOJ), representing the US government, filed an amicus curiae brief arguing that seizing a sovereign nation’s controlling stake in its primary state-owned enterprise would violate principles of sovereign immunity. In August, the US Second Circuit Court of Appeals granted Argentina’s request to stay Judge Preska’s order. As a result, the main appeal has oral arguments scheduled for October 29, with a decision anticipated by mid-2026. Factoring in further appeals, the likely earliest conclusion to the US litigation is 2027, and potentially longer if the Supreme Court takes up the case. Unsurprisingly, these developments have weighed on the share price. Argentina is expending considerable resources to fight the case, aiming to delay and degrade the judgment to force a deeply discounted negotiated settlement. The deciding factors will be the point at which Argentina’s need for international market access outweighs the political cost of paying, and Burford’s ability to successfully execute enforcement. In the meantime, Burford’s underlying portfolio is maturing, and demand for Burford’s capital remains robust. Group-wide new commitments reached $1.1 billion in the first nine months of 2025, and Q3 deployments totaled $315 million, reflecting continued investment discipline. In my view, Burford’s current share price reflects little to no value for the YPF claim. The core business, though lumpy, should continue to grow, with the YPF outcome representing a “free option” for investors.
BSD Analysis:
Core underwriting momentum (commitments/deployments) offsets the long litigation tail on YPF; market is ascribing minimal value to the claim, creating upside optionality. Key catalysts are appellate outcomes and any enforcement breakthroughs; meanwhile, portfolio IRRs and realizations should underpin NAV growth. Position sizing should reflect binary sovereign risk, but risk/reward skews favorably if the core engine compounds. :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}
Pitch Summary:
TVK is a key manufacturer of steel storage tanks, transport trailers, and related processing equipment. They serve a wide array of durable, essential end-markets, including agriculture, energy distribution, and construction. The stock’s decline following its August earnings report was not entirely surprising; given the strong run it has had over the last year, any perceived “miss” was bound to cause a pullback as short-term holders...
Pitch Summary:
TVK is a key manufacturer of steel storage tanks, transport trailers, and related processing equipment. They serve a wide array of durable, essential end-markets, including agriculture, energy distribution, and construction. The stock’s decline following its August earnings report was not entirely surprising; given the strong run it has had over the last year, any perceived “miss” was bound to cause a pullback as short-term holders locked in gains. The third-quarter results did miss expectations. While headline revenues grew due to recent acquisitions, “same-store sales” of the base portfolio businesses actually declined by 2%. Management pointed to several factors for this softness, including reduced demand for certain storage tanks and energy equipment, as well as uncertainty created by recent tariffs. Net income and free cash flow, however, declined 8% and 38% respectively, driven mainly by a significant increase in finance costs. Terravest has had a very active M&A year, including the acquisition of LBT, Simplex, Tankcon, and its largest to date, Entrans. The increased debt taken on to fund this spree has led to financing costs rising 195% in the quarter. Terravest should reduce its relative funding costs as it integrates these new businesses and ramps sales through cross-selling and organic growth. The Entrans acquisition, its largest to date, meaningfully expands TVK’s US footprint and opens up new, high-growth areas, such as defense contracts and a newly developed liquid hydrogen trailer product line. TerraVest’s core business serves durable end markets, providing a relatively stable platform for its high-ROI M&A strategy. Given its relatively small size, TVK can find ample opportunities to reinvest capital and continue compounding for a long time to come.
BSD Analysis:
Short-term deleverage and integration are the swing factors after a heavy M&A year; financing costs spiked 195%, but synergy capture and cross-sell should restore FCF. Exposure to defense and hydrogen trailers expands TAM and margin mix. If execution normalizes, TVK’s serial acquirer playbook can resume compounding with disciplined capital allocation. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
Pitch Summary:
Melrose Industries continues its evolution into a pure-play aerospace leader. My thesis has been that the market is overly skeptical of the company’s ability to generate cash, focusing on temporary drags from its restructuring while overlooking the powerful, long-term earnings profile of its underlying assets. The company’s recent first-half results offered the first real evidence that this cash flow inflection is now underway. For...
Pitch Summary:
Melrose Industries continues its evolution into a pure-play aerospace leader. My thesis has been that the market is overly skeptical of the company’s ability to generate cash, focusing on temporary drags from its restructuring while overlooking the powerful, long-term earnings profile of its underlying assets. The company’s recent first-half results offered the first real evidence that this cash flow inflection is now underway. For the first half of 2025, Melrose reported a 29% increase in operating profit and, most importantly, a £91 million year-over-year improvement in free cash flow, beating consensus expectations. This performance was driven by strong execution; management completed its multi-year defense contract, repricing it 6 months ahead of schedule, a key step toward improving margins in its Structures division. With the broader restructuring program set to conclude by year-end, a major cash drag is being eliminated, paving the way for structurally higher cash generation from 2026 onwards. The crown jewel remains the Engines division, with its unmatched portfolio of 19 Risk and Revenue Sharing Partnerships (RRSPs) that entitle it to ~70% of global flying hours. While the market has been fixated on the cash burn from two GTF engine programs, these are on track to turn cash-positive by 2028, at which point the entire portfolio becomes a powerful, multi-decade annuity stream. The recent results reinforce my conviction in the future cash generation.
BSD Analysis:
Melrose is crossing a cash inflection as restructuring winds down and Engines’ RRSP exposure scales; FCF acceleration should re-rate the multiple closer to aero peers. Watch GTF remediation timing, but management’s early contract repricing is a margin tailwind. Balance sheet improvement and potential capital returns add upside. Net: a high-quality aero cash compounder emerging from a restructuring penalty box. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
Pitch Summary:
The Brookfield machine continues to compound intrinsic value, delivering robust Q2 results across its diversified platform. Distributable earnings (DE) before realizations grew 13% year-over-year, driven by nearly $100 billion in capital inflows over the last twelve months, demonstrating the strength of its ecosystem spanning real assets, insurance, and credit. At its recent Investor Day, management once again laid out an ambitious...
Pitch Summary:
The Brookfield machine continues to compound intrinsic value, delivering robust Q2 results across its diversified platform. Distributable earnings (DE) before realizations grew 13% year-over-year, driven by nearly $100 billion in capital inflows over the last twelve months, demonstrating the strength of its ecosystem spanning real assets, insurance, and credit. At its recent Investor Day, management once again laid out an ambitious plan targeting a 25% annualized growth in DE per share through 2030. This plan anticipates generating $53 billion in free cash flow, leaving $25 billion in excess cash available for opportunistic buybacks and M&A. Management is aggressively scaling the Wealth Solutions platform and investing insurance float, now calling itself an “investment-led insurance organization.” This makes sense as Brookfield's long-dated, stable life insurance liabilities align well with its expertise in investing in long-duration, essential real assets like infrastructure and renewables. This matching of duration and risk profile enhances capital efficiency and supports the scaling of BAM’s funds without materially altering the overall risk profile. Management is also leaning heavily into the multi-trillion-dollar capital requirements for AI infrastructure. In an environment where “AI” attracts significant hype and speculative investment, Brookfield’s approach is distinctly de-risked. They are building essential infrastructure such as data centers and the renewable power required to run them, underpinned by long-term commitments from the financially strong hyperscalers, such as a 3,000 MW hydroelectric framework with Google and a 10.5 GW renewable agreement with Microsoft.
BSD Analysis:
Brookfield’s growth algorithm—fundraising, fee-bearing capital, and insurance float—supports DE compounding while preserving balance sheet flexibility for buybacks/M&A. The AI-infrastructure angle is underwritten by investment-grade counterparties and long-duration contracts, reducing project risk. The $53B FCF target and $25B excess cash create multiple levers for shareholder returns. Watch insurance ALM and credit cycle risks; otherwise, the setup favors sustained fee and carry growth. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
Pitch Summary:
Alphabet’s shares rose this quarter, partly driven by the resolution of a major regulatory overhang. On September 2nd, Judge Mehta issued the remedies decision in the DOJ antitrust case concerning Search. The outcome was far less severe than feared, as the court rejected the most draconian measures, including the structural divestiture of Chrome or Android and a broad ban on distribution payments. While Google is now restricted fro...
Pitch Summary:
Alphabet’s shares rose this quarter, partly driven by the resolution of a major regulatory overhang. On September 2nd, Judge Mehta issued the remedies decision in the DOJ antitrust case concerning Search. The outcome was far less severe than feared, as the court rejected the most draconian measures, including the structural divestiture of Chrome or Android and a broad ban on distribution payments. While Google is now restricted from paying for exclusive default placement (e.g., with Apple), it can still compensate partners for non-exclusive default status. The enacted remedies, which include tailored data sharing and syndication on commercial terms, appear manageable. With one major legal overhang out of the way (another case on the Ad tech monopoly remains outstanding), focus can now return to Alphabet’s fundamentals, particularly its strong positioning in Artificial Intelligence. Google’s advantage lies in its vertically integrated stack, spanning proprietary infrastructure (TPUs), leading models (Gemini), and scaled global distribution platforms (Search, Android). This full-stack approach allows for optimization and efficiency that competitors cannot easily match; for example, Google claims it has twice the power efficiency of competitors and a 33x efficiency in inference, demonstrating its progress in managing the cost of AI deployment. AI is enhancing Search utility through features like AI Overviews and Lens, driving increased user engagement. Additionally, Google Cloud is rapidly gaining traction, now exceeding a $50 billion annual run rate (growing 32% YoY) with a $106 billion backlog, as enterprises choose Google for its differentiated AI capabilities. This leadership is evident in Google's support for 9 of the top 10 AI labs and its processing roughly 4x the token volume of other providers. The company continues to deliver strong financial performance, with 14% revenue growth and strong operating margins in the last quarter, allowing it to fund an aggressive $85 billion capex plan for AI infrastructure
BSD Analysis:
Alphabet’s AI stack and distribution advantages translate to durable share in search and cloud; the DOJ remedy removes tail risk without impairing the core model. The capex surge into TPUs/data centers is supported by high-margin ad and improving cloud profits, with Cloud’s $50B+ run-rate and $106B backlog providing multi-year visibility. Watch unit economics of AI Overviews and inference costs—management’s claimed efficiency edge must sustain margins as AI answers cannibalize links. Capital returns remain robust alongside reinvestment, and optionality from YouTube/Android monetization persists. Net: a compounding franchise with litigation risk tempered and multiple catalysts in AI and Cloud. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
Pitch Summary:
In an environment of persistently high prices for basic essentials, value is front and center in the minds of consumers. Warehouse clubs like BJ’s have a track record of market share gains, particularly from grocery stores, due to a structural per unit pricing advantage of typically 25%. Such a price gap is possible due to characteristics of the warehouse club model, which involve concentrated supplier buying power, high inventory ...
Pitch Summary:
In an environment of persistently high prices for basic essentials, value is front and center in the minds of consumers. Warehouse clubs like BJ’s have a track record of market share gains, particularly from grocery stores, due to a structural per unit pricing advantage of typically 25%. Such a price gap is possible due to characteristics of the warehouse club model, which involve concentrated supplier buying power, high inventory turns, efficient in-store labor, and membership-funded margins. The model facilitates a powerful flywheel effect: Membership fees and efficient in-store operations fund consistently low prices, which drive higher volumes and create buyer leverage, further enhancing member value and fueling continued membership growth. BJ’s appears to be at an inflection point with membership momentum, an accelerated new store rollout, and a proven management team. The BJ’s membership base today, as measured by tenured renewal rate and higher tier membership penetration, is in a strong position. In addition, the company has refined its new store formula and plans to open 25 to 30 new clubs over the next two years, representing the fastest rate of openings in the company’s history. BJ’s has carefully crafted its new store playbook, and the current approach is working as new stores generate comparable club sales at two to three times the rate of the legacy footprint. Finally, BJ’s CEO Bob Eddy and the management team have demonstrated skill and discipline as capital allocators, consistently balancing reinvestment in member value and store growth with debt reduction and share repurchases. Overall, membership momentum combined with high performing new store openings and proven management should drive a compelling financial picture of strong comparable club sales, impressive free cash flow generation, and cost leverage.
BSD Analysis:
BJ’s offers a defensive growth profile backed by recurring membership income and value-led positioning. Trading around 17x forward earnings, its capital discipline and store expansion strategy support double-digit EPS CAGR. The company’s structural pricing advantage versus peers and accelerating membership metrics underpin durable comp growth through 2026.
Pitch Summary:
ITT is a diversified industrial company with three segments, led by Motion Technologies, which contains ITT’s market-leading brake pad business with margins and returns well above competitors. Motion Technologies has very high share in electric vehicles and Chinese automakers, translating to above-market growth as both categories win greater share in the global automotive market. The Industrial Process segment includes ITT’s pumps ...
Pitch Summary:
ITT is a diversified industrial company with three segments, led by Motion Technologies, which contains ITT’s market-leading brake pad business with margins and returns well above competitors. Motion Technologies has very high share in electric vehicles and Chinese automakers, translating to above-market growth as both categories win greater share in the global automotive market. The Industrial Process segment includes ITT’s pumps and valves businesses, where ITT has also gained market share in both customized pump solutions as well as attractive aftermarket revenues. Industrial Process’s growth will be further driven by a new innovative motor with patented embedded variable drive functionality that significantly increases power efficiency (an increasingly important focus area for many customers including energy and chemical companies). The Connect and Control Technologies segment includes ITT’s electrical connectors and cable assemblies, primarily for the aerospace and defense end markets. Connect and Control Technologies has renegotiated decade-long supply agreements to aerospace customers at significantly higher prices starting in 2026 and has exposure to growing new aircraft builds and global defense spending. CEO Luca Savi and CFO Emmanuel Caprais have proven to be excellent operators and capital allocators, with further mergers and acquisitions building on a successful track record to supplement the CEO’s “healthy paranoia for continuous improvement”. Over the next five years, ITT expects to deliver double-digit annual organic earnings growth with further upside from successful capital allocation.
BSD Analysis:
ITT’s diversification across EV, aerospace, and industrial efficiency themes underpins steady growth. With strong balance sheet, mid-teens ROIC, and expanding aftermarket mix, the company offers consistent compounding potential. Valuation at ~18x forward P/E remains fair given its double-digit EPS growth outlook and capital discipline.
Pitch Summary:
Bruker declined -18.4% during the quarter through the date of our exit. Bruker is a leading provider of high-performance scientific instruments, analytical and diagnostic solutions, and related services. BBH Mid Cap has long admired Bruker’s innovative track record that has allowed the company to consistently grow its revenue alongside operational excellence that has facilitated strong margin expansion and earnings growth. Bruker i...
Pitch Summary:
Bruker declined -18.4% during the quarter through the date of our exit. Bruker is a leading provider of high-performance scientific instruments, analytical and diagnostic solutions, and related services. BBH Mid Cap has long admired Bruker’s innovative track record that has allowed the company to consistently grow its revenue alongside operational excellence that has facilitated strong margin expansion and earnings growth. Bruker is diversified across a wide variety of end markets including academic, government, biopharma, industrial, and semiconductor. However, this diversification has provided no safe harbor from academic and government life science funding cuts and prolonged tariff uncertainty. These include restrictions on federal research funding to colleges and universities; efforts to cut the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and National Science Foundation (NSF) budgets and limit the pace of grant disbursements; tariffs on China, the EU, and Switzerland; and policy to re-shape the biopharma industry via sector-specific pharmaceutical tariffs and most-favored-nation drug pricing. While the impact was initially contained to direct funding cuts among academic customers in the US (approximately 10% of revenues), more recently we have seen a sharp slowdown in activity across Europe and China, and in industrial and biopharma end markets. Given continued policy uncertainty, both at the country and healthcare sector level, we have chosen to step aside at this time while we await a stabilization of the policy landscape and to redeploy proceeds to readily available opportunities.
BSD Analysis:
Bruker’s sell-off reflects macro policy and funding headwinds rather than operational flaws. With EBITDA margins above 20% and modest leverage, fundamentals remain sound. Long-term demand for analytical instruments will recover with R&D spending normalization. Shares at ~17x forward earnings could re-rate once visibility improves.
Pitch Summary:
Globant declined -37.5% during the quarter through the date of our exit. Globant is the second-largest pure-play digital software engineering vendor with a focus on front-end, custom-designed software engineering applications that are mission critical to its customers. Globant has been a strong outperformer in recent years, with double-digit revenue growth throughout 2023 and 2024. Revenue growth was well ahead of peers during this...
Pitch Summary:
Globant declined -37.5% during the quarter through the date of our exit. Globant is the second-largest pure-play digital software engineering vendor with a focus on front-end, custom-designed software engineering applications that are mission critical to its customers. Globant has been a strong outperformer in recent years, with double-digit revenue growth throughout 2023 and 2024. Revenue growth was well ahead of peers during this period, supported by industry-leading AI studios that help large enterprises implement and leverage AI capabilities. However, Globant has been significantly impacted by tariffs, especially among its Latin American customers, who have reduced or paused IT spending against a weak macroeconomic backdrop in the region. North American customers have also experienced a deceleration. While Globant’s AI studios continue to grow at a double-digit rate, this has not been enough to offset slowing growth elsewhere, and market sentiment has also soured out of concern that AI could compress revenues due to efficiency gains and the prevalence of new AI coding tools. Despite our frustration with the repeated cuts to guidance this year, we believe the preponderance of evidence is that Globant’s business model is not permanently impaired. While its growth has slowed to low single digits for 2025, Globant’s margins and cash flows have held up and the balance sheet remains strong with a net leverage ratio of 0.5x. However, given the decline in the share price and lack of near-term catalysts, we believe it was opportune to exit our position to harvest the tax loss for the Fund.
BSD Analysis:
Globant’s weakness reflects cyclical demand softness rather than structural erosion. The firm’s AI expertise remains differentiated, but regional exposure and tariff disruptions weigh on revenue visibility. With net cash and margins intact, recovery could resume in 2026. Current valuation (~18x forward P/E) prices in excessive pessimism relative to peers in IT services.
Pitch Summary:
Shift4 declined -21.9% during the quarter, ending with a weight of 4.4%. Shift4 is an integrated payments processor, specializing in the hospitality vertical, including restaurants, lodging, and leisure. In the quarter, the company slightly missed consensus estimates on volumes, EBITDA, and EPS while slightly beating consensus on net revenue and free cash flow. Excluding the recent acquisition of tax-free shopping solutions provide...
Pitch Summary:
Shift4 declined -21.9% during the quarter, ending with a weight of 4.4%. Shift4 is an integrated payments processor, specializing in the hospitality vertical, including restaurants, lodging, and leisure. In the quarter, the company slightly missed consensus estimates on volumes, EBITDA, and EPS while slightly beating consensus on net revenue and free cash flow. Excluding the recent acquisition of tax-free shopping solutions provider Global Blue, annual guidance for net revenue was raised while the rest of the standalone guidance was reaffirmed. Guidance, including the acquisition of Global Blue, was below consensus estimates for volumes. Global Blue was accounted for under IFRS, and we believe this made it difficult for some sell-side analysts to update their models and led to confusion about the underlying performance of Shift4. However, we note that Shift4 continues to expect over 20% organic net revenue growth this year, and management believes the company is tracking toward the high-end of its intermediate term guidance issued in January.
BSD Analysis:
Despite near-term valuation pressure, Shift4’s fundamentals remain strong. With over 20% organic growth and expanding merchant base, its margin profile is improving through scale efficiencies. The firm trades at under 10x 2025 EBITDA, an attractive entry for a profitable fintech consolidator. Management’s execution on integrations and channel diversification should sustain long-term growth momentum.
Pitch Summary:
Advanced Drainage returned 20.9% during the quarter, ending with a weight of 4.0%. Advanced Drainage is the leading manufacturer of thermoplastic pipe and allied products for stormwater and wastewater management applications. Despite difficult end markets, Advance Drainage has executed well and delivered better than expected sales and earnings and reiterated fiscal 2026 guidance. Although organic growth was down slightly in the qua...
Pitch Summary:
Advanced Drainage returned 20.9% during the quarter, ending with a weight of 4.0%. Advanced Drainage is the leading manufacturer of thermoplastic pipe and allied products for stormwater and wastewater management applications. Despite difficult end markets, Advance Drainage has executed well and delivered better than expected sales and earnings and reiterated fiscal 2026 guidance. Although organic growth was down slightly in the quarter due to wet weather and continued interest rate headwinds, the company outgrew most of its end markets. Aside from infrastructure, the company’s sales grew in all end markets. Its higher margin leach field, stormwater, and wastewater categories grew faster than its core pipe products. For example, Advanced Drainage saw double-digit organic growth in sales of on-site wastewater tanks driven by material conversion to plastic. Demand was also supported by strength in the multifamily residential market, where the company saw double-digit growth of key products like retention/detention chambers, water quality products, and stormwater capture structures. Water quality remains a key growth area for the company and this category has grown at high-teens CAGR over the last three years.
BSD Analysis:
Advanced Drainage continues to demonstrate resilience through pricing power and product mix improvement. With EBITDA margins near 25% and ROIC above 20%, it remains well positioned as an infrastructure play on water management. Trading at ~17x forward earnings, its long-term demand is supported by regulatory trends favoring sustainable stormwater solutions and resilient construction spending.