| Quarter | Letter Date | Fund Name | QTD | YTD | Tickers | Keywords/Themes | Theme Commentary | Pitches | Letter |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 Q3 | Sep 30, 2025 | ACATIS Investment | - | -0.2% | 2330 TT, 6920 JP, AMRZ, ANSS, CLS CN, CRM, DWNI GR, HAL, HIMS, HOLX, ICE, ISRG, KGH PW, KRN GR, KVUE, KYGA IR, LRCX, PEP, SNPS, UMI BB, UNH, UPWK, VNA GR, ZAL GR | energy security, fiscal deficits, Global Fragmentation, Industrial Policy, Trade Policy | The report discusses mounting geopolitical fragmentation and policy uncertainty, emphasizing how trade tensions, fiscal imbalances and shifting global alliances are reshaping capital flows and regional growth prospects. Management highlights structural challenges in Europe alongside opportunities tied to industrial policy, energy security and technological sovereignty. In this environment, ACATIS positions portfolios toward globally competitive companies with resilient business models and exposure to long-term structural trends rather than cyclical macro swings. | UPWK UMI BB PEP KGH PW HIMS HAL ZAL GR CLS CN SNPS HOLX ICE KRN GR 2330 TT |
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| 2025 Q3 | Sep 30, 2025 | Burke Wealth Managament The Focused Growth Strategy | -0.9% | 5.3% | ASML NA, BWXT, CHTR, CRM, MU, NOW | Artificial Intelligence, Enterprise Software, Nuclear Energy, semiconductors, Trade Policy | The quarter was shaped by a pro-growth US Policy backdrop combining tariffs, manufacturing reshoring, and corporate tax reform, creating a supportive environment for domestic investment and capital spending. At the same time, AI remains the dominant structural driver within equities, influencing enterprise software, semiconductors, and power infrastructure. The portfolio reflects conviction that AI-driven productivity and capex cycles will outweigh near-term volatility tied to trade negotiations and sector-specific controversies. | View | |
| 2025 Q2 | Aug 27, 2025 | Antero Peak Group | 20.0% | 17.7% | AAPL, AMZN, AVGO, CRM, META, NVDA | Compounding, Discipline, durability, Intrinsic Value, Quality | The letter stresses disciplined ownership of high-quality, durable businesses amid volatile sentiment and shifting trade policy. Management highlights patience, selectivity, and focusing on intrinsic value rather than reacting to short-term macro noise. Quality businesses are positioned as the most reliable way to compound capital over time. | View | |
| 2025 Q2 | Jul 28, 2025 | Harry Qelm Baabsman Ltd | - | 9.7% | ADBE, CRM, GOOG, LIGHT NA, NVDA, NXT, PUM GR, SEDG, VWSB GR, ZAL GR, ZM | dislocation, Intrinsic Value, long-term, valuation gaps, volatility | The letter discusses extreme market dislocations caused by speculative behavior in AI-linked mega caps and short-term trading dominance. Management warns that pricing volatility has decoupled from fundamentals, creating opportunities in undervalued sustainable energy, technology, and consumer businesses. The outlook favors patient capital, intrinsic value discipline, and long holding periods. | ADBE PUM GR VWSB GR NXT ZAL GR ZM CRM |
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| 2025 Q2 | Jul 22, 2025 | Harris Associates Concentrated Strategy | 3.9% | 3.7% | COF, COP, CRL, CRM, GOOG, ICLR, IQV, SCHW, WTW | downside protection, fundamentals, Mean reversion, valuation dispersion, Value Investing | The letter centers on intrinsic value investing amid extreme valuation dispersion between popular growth stocks and unloved franchises. Management argues that patience and concentration in discounted, high-quality businesses will be rewarded as fundamentals reassert themselves. The strategy emphasizes downside protection and long-term mean reversion rather than short-term momentum. | IQV COP GOOG COF SCHW |
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| 2025 Q2 | Jul 22, 2025 | Ithaka US Growth Strategy | 23.0% | - | AAPL, CRM, LLY, MSFT, NOW, NVDA | Competitive Advantage, fundamentals, growth, secular trends, volatility | The commentary focuses on owning durable U.S. growth businesses with long runways supported by secular demand and strong competitive positions. Management highlights disciplined valuation awareness despite a growth-oriented mandate. Volatility is viewed as an opportunity to add to high-quality franchises at more attractive entry points. | CRM LLY AAPL NOW MSFT NVDA |
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| 2025 Q2 | Jul 18, 2025 | Alpine Capital Research | - | - | AMZN, CRM, LRCX, MU, V | AI, infrastructure, innovation, semiconductors, technology | The letter highlights technology and AI as dominant drivers of market performance, supported by scale advantages and capital investment by industry leaders. Management discusses volatility around tariffs and policy but remains focused on innovation-led growth and productivity gains. Energy infrastructure and semiconductors are noted as key beneficiaries. | V MU LRCX GLXY CN |
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| 2025 Q2 | Jul 17, 2025 | Oakmark Fund- International Small Cap | 4.4% | - | AMZN, C, CRM, GPN, NKE, ZBH | fundamentals, long-term, Quality, value | ZBH CRM NKE AMZN GPN C |
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| 2025 Q2 | Jul 14, 2025 | The Bristlemoon Global Fund | -0.3% | - | APG, CRM, HEM SS, UNH | catalysts, Concentration, risk management, tariffs, volatility | The commentary frames volatility as both a risk and an opportunity within a concentrated, long-short portfolio. Management discusses tariff-driven dislocations, defensive positioning, and redeployment into high-conviction names. Idiosyncratic catalysts are emphasized over macro forecasting. | UNH CRM APG HEM |
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| 2024 Q2 | Jul 12, 2024 | Parnassus Growth Equity Fund | 3.3% | 21.0% | AAPL, ADYEN NA, AMAT, AZN LN, CRM, GOOG, MSCI, NTRA, NVDA, ODFL, PANW, PCOR, TSM, WDAY | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q1 | Apr 9, 2025 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | -5.8% | -5.8% | AMZN, CRM, GOOG, MSFT, SWKS | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q1 | Apr 9, 2025 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | -6.0% | -6.0% | AMZN, CRM, GOOG, MSFT, SWKS | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q1 | Apr 25, 2024 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 5.6% | 18.6% | AMZN, CRM, GE, KKR, MSFT, TDG | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q1 | Apr 25, 2024 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 5.9% | 18.7% | AMZN, CRM, GE, KKR, MSFT, TDG | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q1 | Mar 31, 2025 | Mar Vistas U.S. Quality | -3.1% | -3.1% | AVGO, BRK/A, CRM, JNJ, MSFT, NVDA, PEP, V | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q1 | Mar 31, 2025 | Burke Wealth Managament The Focused Growth Strategy | -8.1% | -8.1% | ABT, CHTR, CRM, ICE, NOW, NVDA, TDG, UNH | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q4 | Feb 8, 2026 | SGA – U.S. Large Cap Growth | 0.2% | 3.0% | AAPL, AMZN, ARM, AVGO, AXP, COO, CRM, DHR, GOOGL, GWW, INTU, META, MSFT, NFLX, NKE, NOW, SPGI, V, WM, YUM | AI, growth, large cap, momentum, Quality, semiconductors, valuation | AI capital expenditures are expected to moderate due to structural constraints including power availability, skilled labor shortages, and capital availability. Hyperscaler CapEx spending has reached historically high proportions of revenues and operating cash flows. The most attractive long-term AI opportunities reside with businesses building long-term value rather than companies exposed to cyclical swings. 2025 was characterized by extreme momentum dynamics with capital flowing into immediate winners while perceived losers saw unprecedented pressure. Market leadership concentrated in lower-quality, speculative, and cyclically sensitive stocks. The momentum trade has been exceptionally profitable short-term but timing the inevitable reversal remains challenging. Quality growth companies with stable fundamentals have seen relative valuations plummet to lowest levels in decades while cyclicals trade at historically high levels. The portfolio focuses on reliable and durable growth companies with lower variability that continue to compound earnings and cash flows attractively despite not being rewarded by the market currently. Semiconductor and AI capital equipment stocks were among market darlings, buoyed by massive AI infrastructure spending. However, purely cyclical sectors exposed to hyperscaler CapEx growth rates will have a shorter runway of growth left as further upward growth revisions become challenging. | ALC YUM IT META MSFT ARM AVGO CRM COO GOOG |
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| 2025 Q4 | Feb 8, 2026 | SGA – Global Growth | -0.3% | 3.1% | 1299.HK, 9983.T, ADYEN.AS, ALC, AMZN, AON, ARM, AVGO, BABA, CMG, CP, CRM, DHR, EXPN.L, GOOGL, HDB, INFY, INTU, IT, MELI, META, MSFT, NFLX, NOW, NVDA, SAP, SE, SNPS, SPGI, STE, TSM, UMG.AS, UNH, V, WM | AI, cyclicals, global, growth, Quality, valuation | AI capital expenditure growth is expected to moderate due to structural constraints including power availability, skilled labor shortages, and capital availability limits. Hyperscalers are approaching 90% of operating cash flows for CapEx spending, creating natural constraints on future growth rates. Quality factors including sales stability and high gross margins continued to underperform in 2025 as markets favored cyclical and momentum-driven assets. The portfolio's quality growth companies are trading at historically attractive relative valuations. Market leadership was dominated by momentum and cyclical assets while quality growth strategies faced headwinds. Extreme concentration and momentum effects created significant winners and losers independent of company fundamentals. | INFY NOW ARM MELI MSFT SE NFLX AVGO 9983 JP TSM GOOG |
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| 2024 Q4 | Feb 24, 2025 | Mar Vistas U.S. Quality Select | 0.4% | 13.6% | AMT, AMZN, AVGO, CRM, DIS, EFX | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q4 | Feb 24, 2025 | Mar Vistas U.S. Quality | 0.2% | 15.0% | AMT, AMZN, AVGO, CRM, DIS, GXO, MCHP | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q4 | Feb 23, 2026 | Bailard Technology Strategy | -2.2% | 19.2% | ADBE, AMZN, CRM, DDOG, GOOGL, HUBS, KLAC, LRCX, META, MNDY, MSFT, MU, NOW, NTNX, NVDA, QCOM, SAP, TEAM, TSM, WD | AI, growth, infrastructure, positioning, semiconductors, software, technology | The AI infrastructure cycle has mirrored cloud computing build-out with hyperscalers aggressively financing GPU and data center deployments. The focus is shifting from building computational backbone to realizing value through software and application layers. AI agents are creating concerns about disrupting legacy software applications, but incumbents can embed agents into existing systems to leverage proprietary data and customer relationships. The AI build-out is causing extremely tight supply for memory chips, benefiting companies like Micron that supply memory chips and equipment manufacturers like Lam Research and KLA that manufacture wafer equipment needed to expand the supply chain. The semiconductor complex is expected to remain fundamentally strong with potential for further acceleration in specific verticals. Software sector demonstrated resilient but normalizing revenue growth with highly bifurcated results. High-growth leaders maintained 25-30% growth while enterprise stalwarts sustained low-20% growth. Software valuations faced pressure due to fears that AI agents might disrupt legacy feature-heavy applications, creating a selective opportunity to own high-quality firms at a discount. Hyperscalers have aggressively financed massive deployments of GPUs and data center capacity using robust internal cash flows. Energy availability is becoming the constraining factor on datacenter growth, and the nature of AI investment is evolving toward more complex financing structures including alternative financing and circular financing arrangements. | View | |
| 2024 Q4 | Feb 19, 2025 | Harry Qelm Baabsman Ltd | - | -8.5% | ADBE, CRM, HFG GR, LIGHT NA, NXT, PUM GR, SEDG, ZAL GR, ZM | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q4 | Feb 10, 2026 | FPA Source Capital | 4.3% | 18.4% | ADI, CRM, GOOGL, IFF, META, MSFT, MTN, NOW, NTDOY, ORCL, SAF.PA, SAP, SNOW, TEL, WDAY | Balanced, credit, private credit, Quality, small caps, value | The fund emphasizes being 'value aware' and focuses on finding rare cases where both quality and value intersect. They regularly search the 52-week low list for potential opportunities rather than momentum plays. The managers believe the investment community is casting its gaze away from various market constituents that offer asymmetric risk-reward for those willing to look forward three to five years. The fund is actively investing in global securities with lower market capitalizations, believing these offer attractive opportunities that are being overlooked. They note there may be a shrinking pool of active investors with the interest and resources to conduct in-depth research on lower market-cap names. Source has 25.9% committed to private credit including called and uncalled capital as of quarter-end. The managers continue to look for opportunities to increase that exposure, viewing private credit as an attractive asset class for the fund's balanced strategy. The fund is responding to historically low credit spreads by reducing exposure to high yield and other lower-rated debt. They believe current spreads offer insufficient compensation for credit risk and increase the risk of permanent impairment of capital. The managers are downside-focused and do not share the market's optimism needed to justify such low spreads. | MSFT MTN IFF SAF FP TEL |
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| 2025 Q4 | Dec 31, 2025 | Guinness Global Innovators | 0.0% | 12.8% | 2020.HK, ABB, AMAT, APH, AVGO, CRM, DHR, GOOGL, ICE, LRCX, MDT, META, NFLX, NVDA, ORCL, SHL.DE, TMO | AI, global, inflation, innovation, monetary policy, Quality, semiconductors, technology | AI capex cycle continues to gather momentum with Hyperscaler spending expectations rising 78% for 2026 and 95% for 2027. However, concerns around an AI bubble are emerging as investments make up approximately 40% of US GDP growth in 2025, with circular deal flows among key players raising sustainability questions. Nvidia remains dominant in AI chips despite competition from Google's TPUs, which could capture up to 10% of Nvidia's data center revenue. The industry shows growing interest in workload-optimized hardware, with GPUs maintaining advantages in flexibility while ASICs offer cost efficiencies for specific tasks. Quality as a factor has underperformed year-to-date during risk-on periods but historically provides downside protection in bear markets. Quality stocks are trading below their 10-year average premium, presenting an opportunity to buy quality at relatively lower valuations. Policy rates across US, Europe and UK have moved decisively off 2023 peaks with cuts rarely seen outside recessions. Markets anticipate additional Fed rate reductions despite mixed signals, with sustained monetary easing expected to provide constructive backdrop for equities in 2026. Inflation outlook becoming increasingly divergent across regions, with US core inflation expected to remain at 2.6% in 2026 above Fed target, while Eurozone inflation expected to fall to 1.8%. US tariff expansion and fiscal policy continue to push inflation risks higher. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Dec 31, 2025 | ACATIS Investment | 0.0% | 0.3% | ADBE, AMR, BARC.L, BKNG, BNTX, BRK-A, CLS, CRM, DHR, EBS.VI, EL.PA, EPAM, GLE.PA, GOOGL, KKR, LRCX, NVDA, PGR, TSMC, ZTS | AI, Asia, Banking, Europe, Geopolitical, semiconductors, technology, value | The report discusses the continued global race to scale artificial intelligence capabilities, emphasizing capital intensity in semiconductors, data centers, and energy infrastructure as structural drivers of corporate investment. Management highlights the migration of value from hardware build-out toward software monetization, while warning that elevated equity valuations and geopolitical fragmentation increase dispersion across regions and sectors. Portfolio positioning favors globally competitive companies with durable pricing power and exposure to long-term innovation cycles rather than cyclical beta. | PLTR KOG NO DB1 GR 1177 HK 600183 CH DHR BARC LN AMR ADBE TUNE LN FAA AV EBS AV EPAM |
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| 2025 Q4 | Dec 31, 2025 | Burke Wealth Managament The Focused Growth Strategy | 2.0% | 7.4% | AAPL, ADBE, ASML, BWXT, CMCSA, CRM, GOOGL, ISRG, META, MU, NOW, NVDA, ORCL, SNOW, TDG | AI, Data centers, Enterprise Software, growth, semiconductors, technology, Trade Policy | The AI revolution continues to gain steam with expectations for a slowdown in data center infrastructure spend proving incorrect. The manager believes the current AI investment cycle is different from the dot.com bubble because we don't have enough compute capacity to meet today's needs, driven by three mega-trends: transition from CPU to GPU dominated data centers, replacement of recommender systems with AI-driven systems, and future robotics and digital agents. Companies are spending hundreds of billions of dollars per year to build massive data centers capable of delivering enormous compute power. The infrastructure buildout of massive amounts of compute power needed to drive the next generation of AI applications is viewed as the most secure part of the AI food chain. The manager maintains continued investment in Nvidia and ASML and has made a relatively new investment in Micron, viewing the infrastructure buildout as the most secure part of the AI food chain. GPU dominated servers are replacing CPU servers for cheaper running of traditional workloads. The enterprise software sector faces heightened uncertainty due to the threat of AI disintermediation. The manager consolidated investments into platform companies Service Now and Salesforce while exiting Adobe, believing platforms that connect workflows across organizations are less at risk than best-of-breed apps. 2025 saw the global trade order re-written through executive orders and tweets, with tariffs being a central topic. The manager expects tariffs could remain a central topic in early 2026 depending on upcoming Supreme Court rulings on the legality of Trump tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. | View | |
| 2024 Q4 | Dec 31, 2024 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 6.3% | 26.1% | AMZN, CG, CRM, EG, GOOG, KKR, LYV | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q4 | Dec 31, 2024 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 7.4% | 27.5% | AMZN, CG, CRM, EG, GOOG, KKR, PGHN SW | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q4 | Dec 31, 2024 | Parnassus Core Equity Fund | 0.3% | 18.5% | AMZN, AVGO, BAC, BALL, CI, CME, CRM, DE, DHI, FERG, FI, INTL, KLAC, LIN, LLY, MDLZ, O, ORCL, SYY, VRTX, WDAY | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q4 | Dec 31, 2024 | Parnassus Growth Equity Fund | 4.9% | 26.9% | AKAM, AMAT, AMD, AVGO, AZN, BSX, CRM, DASH, DDOG, EFX, EXAS, FERG, INTU, MC FP, MELI, MSFT, NTRA, NVDA, PCOR, TEAM, TMO, TSM, UNH, VRTX | - | View | ||
| 2023 Q4 | Dec 31, 2023 | Harry Qelm Baabsman Ltd | - | 6.8% | CRM, HFG GR, LIGHT NA, SEDG, TPIC, ZAL GR, ZM | - | View | ||
| 2023 Q4 | Dec 1, 2024 | Polen Capital – Focus Growth | 3.0% | 11.0% | AAPL, ABNB, AMZN, CRM, ILMN, MSFT, NFLX, NOW, NVDA | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q3 | Oct 7, 2025 | Mar Vista US Quality Select | 3.3% | - | AAPL, ADBE, APH, CRM, INTU, ORCL, SAP | Artificial Intelligence, diversification, Large Cap Growth, Market Concentration, valuation | The commentary reinforces a quality-first philosophy focused on businesses with resilient earnings and strong free cash flow generation. Short-term macro noise is considered less important than long-term business economics. Valuation discipline is applied within a quality framework. | SAP INTU APH ORCL AAPL |
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| 2023 Q3 | Oct 31, 2023 | Starboard Value | 0.0% | 0.0% | CRM, FTRE, GDDY, SPLK, VERT, WIX | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q3 | Oct 28, 2025 | Harris Associates Concentrated Strategy | 2.4% | 6.2% | CRM, GOOG, IQV, KDP, MOH, WBD | Artificial Intelligence, Cloud, healthcare, Media, U.S. Equities | U.S. equities rose on tech strength, with key contributors Warner Bros Discovery and Alphabet benefiting from M&A speculation and AI-driven cloud growth. IQVIAs analytics and clinical research platform also advanced due to next-gen data capabilities. While detractors included Keurig Dr Pepper and Molina Healthcare, management remains focused on concentrated, high-conviction holdings tied to AI innovation and healthcare recovery. | CRM MOH KDP IQV GOOGL WBD CRM MOH KDP IQV GOOGL WBD |
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| 2025 Q3 | Oct 28, 2025 | Columbia Global Technology Growth Fund | 12.1% | - | ACN, ALAB, AVGO, CRM, HOOD, NOW, NVDA, TTD | Artificial Intelligence, Cloud, Data centers, semiconductors, tariffs | The funds returns were powered by surging demand for AI infrastructure, led by NVIDIA and Broadcom, as hyperscalers invested heavily in next-generation data centers. Management emphasized that AI remains in early innings, driving long-term secular growth across semiconductors, cloud, and enterprise software. The fund also noted that easing U.S. tariff risks and improving trade policy provided macro support for technology valuations and investor sentiment. | NOW CRM ACN TTD AVGO NVDA HOOD ALAB AVGO US NVDA US ALAB US AVGO US NVDA US ALAB US |
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| 2024 Q3 | Oct 23, 2024 | Polen Capital – Focus Growth | 3.0% | 11.0% | ABNB, APPL, CRM, GOOG, MSCI, NKE, NOW, NVDA, ORCL, PAYC, SHOP, TSLA | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q3 | Oct 22, 2025 | First Eagle Global Fund | 8.9% | 24.9% | 7309 JP, CHRW, CMCSA, CRM, ELV, GOOG, ORCL, PM | AI, Cloud, Fiscal Deficit, geopolitics, gold | The Global Fund outperformed its benchmark with gains in gold, AI-driven technology, and Asian equities. Holdings in Oracle, Alphabet, and Alibaba benefited from AI and cloud expansion, while gold exposure provided a hedge against fiscal deficits and currency debasement. Managers stress disciplined capital recycling and valuation awareness amid rising geopolitical and debt risks. | CRM CMCSA PM ELV 7309 JP CHRW BABA GOOG ORCL CRM CMCSA PM ELV 7309 JP CHRW BABA GOOG ORCL |
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| 2025 Q3 | Oct 14, 2025 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 3.7% | 6.1% | CRM, GOOG, UNH | Artificial Intelligence, Defensive Growth, healthcare, Quality, regulation | The funds performance benefited from Alphabet and UnitedHealth, both positioned for durable growth and strong cash generation. While Alphabet faced regulatory and AI disruption risks, its fundamentals remain robust. UnitedHealth rebounded sharply as guidance and Medicare ratings stabilized, supporting the case for long-term defensive compounding. | Salesforce Inc UNH US GOOGL US |
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| 2025 Q3 | Oct 14, 2025 | Parnassus Growth Equity Fund | 5.8% | - | AAPL, APPF, ASML, BRO, CMG, CRM, DE, GOOG, INSM, INTU, MELI, PODD, SARP, TSM | Artificial Intelligence, growth, healthcare, inflation, semiconductors | The fund underperformed the Russell 1000 Growth Index due to underweight positions in Apple and Tesla but gained from holdings in Alphabet, ASML, and TSMC. It highlights AI infrastructure buildout, healthcare innovation, and defensive growth through high-quality companies like Insulet and StandardAero. Management remains bullish on U.S. equities while monitoring inflation and monetization risks from AI. | PODD US SARO US |
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| 2025 Q3 | Oct 11, 2025 | Torre Financial | 1.7% | 6.5% | ADBE, AMD, AMZN, ANET, ASML, CRM, FDS, GOOGL, INTU, MELI, META, MSFT, NVDA, ORCL, TMO, TSM | AI, growth, large cap, Quality, semiconductors, technology, US | AI-related capex spend is boosting the stock market with hyperscalers spending nearly $450 billion in 2025. The AI economy including semiconductors, energy, and data center construction have been clear winners while the rest of the market has struggled. Many large AI infrastructure deals have been announced, benefiting companies like Nvidia, OpenAI, Oracle, and AMD. Semiconductor companies have been major beneficiaries of AI spending. TSMC is described as undisputedly the best semiconductor foundry making chips for Nvidia, Google, and Meta. ASML is highlighted as the only company building critical EUV lithography machines needed for the most advanced chips. Cloud infrastructure and data center companies have outperformed significantly. Arista Networks provides high-performance networking solutions required for data centers and is displacing Cisco. The portfolio maintains exposure to cloud themes within a balanced approach. The manager emphasizes investing in very strong, proven businesses with attractive business models. All portfolio companies exhibit strong returns on capital, competitive advantages, and durable growth. The portfolio has higher ROIC, superior margins, and stronger balance sheets compared to the S&P 500. | View | |
| 2025 Q3 | Oct 10, 2025 | Oakmark Global Fund | 4.1% | 15.2% | CRM, DSY FP, HEX NO, KER FP, MOH, TRGP | Digitalization, energy, Luxury, software, value | The fund discusses positioning in global luxury brands recovering under new leadership, investments in virtual twin and AI software companies, and selective exposure to energy infrastructure. The managers view these as undervalued businesses with structural tailwinds and strong free cash flow generation. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 31, 2026 | Montaka Global Investments | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0700.HK, ALB, AMZN, BX, CRM, FND, GOOGL, KKR, MA, MDB, META, MOGL.AX, MSFT, NOW, ORCL, REA.AX, SPGI, SPOT, U, V | AI, Cloud, geopolitics, Lithium, software, technology, value | AI is driving dramatic transformation and propelling stock prices higher. The manager sees AI as creating enormous capital investments in data centers and driving growth in LLM tokens north of 200% per annum. They believe AI will increase cloud computing TAM to $2 trillion per annum over the next 10 years. The manager sees high probability of an impending lithium supply shortage as prices have been too low to incentivize new production capacity. They added Albemarle as an asymmetric value investment, expecting a price squeeze driven by electric vehicle batteries and industrial-scale Battery Energy Storage Systems demand. Enterprise software leaders like ServiceNow and Salesforce have been sold off on AI disruption narratives. The manager believes these companies have scale advantages in R&D, customer distribution, and customer data that favor them in the AI transition, making them significantly undervalued after 2025 declines. Alternative asset managers like Blackstone and KKR declined in 2025 despite strong fundamentals. The manager sees cyclical upswing potential as M&A returns, asset realisations follow, and private wealth channel growth continues. They assess the future looks bright for these businesses. | KKR BX NOW FND ALB |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 30, 2026 | Antipodes Global Fund | - | - | AAPL, AMD, AMZN, ASAI, BEKE, BMRI.JK, CRM, Gold, GOOGL, HON, HYMTF, JCI, LLY, META, MRK, SIEGY, STM, TCEHY | AI, cyclicals, financials, global, healthcare, industrials, materials, technology | Portfolio increased exposure to structural investment trends, namely software, while reducing hardware exposure. AMD benefited from landmark agreement with OpenAI to supply 6 gigawatts of high-performance graphics chips and broader investor rotation into AI infrastructure. Barrick Mining rose sharply underpinned by fresh wave of investor enthusiasm for gold, with record bullion prices boosting revenue, margin and earnings estimates. Portfolio reduced exposure to gold via exiting Valterra Platinum following rapid price moves. Amazon's AWS business re-accelerated growth to 20% year-on-year, the fastest pace in several years, as the company sees strong demand. Portfolio increased exposure to Amazon partly based on infrastructure business winning market share. STMicroelectronics detracted with sentiment dented by softer demand in key end markets, notably automotive and industrial chips. AMD surged on chipmaker's landmark agreement with OpenAI and broader AI infrastructure rotation. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 30, 2026 | Antipodes Global Value Fund | 0.0% | 0.0% | 005380.KS, 0700.HK, AMD, AMZN, ASAI3.SA, BABA, BEKE, BMRI.JK, CRM, GLOB, Gold, GOOGL, HON, IWG.L, JCI, META, MRK, SIE.DE | consumer, financials, global, healthcare, industrials, materials, technology, value | Portfolio increased exposure to structural investment trends in software while reducing hardware exposure. AMD benefited from landmark agreement with OpenAI for high-performance graphics chips. Meta's AI-driven ad impressions growing at double-digit rates, driving revenue growth. Barrick Mining rose sharply on fresh investor enthusiasm for gold with record bullion prices boosting revenue and margins. Portfolio trimmed gold exposure via Valterra Platinum following rapid price moves and positive sentiment around platinum group metals. Amazon's AWS business re-accelerated growth to 20% year-on-year, the fastest pace in several years, driven by strong demand. Infrastructure and retail businesses both winning market share while valuation hovers around 20-year low. Portfolio rotated to process and industrial automation where greater value is seen. Honeywell positioned as leader in aerospace and industrial automation, focusing on building and process automation after business simplification. Hyundai Motor navigating industry transition to electrification with focus on profitability and capital efficiency. Company prioritizing hybrids over pure battery electric vehicles, aligning with consumer preferences as EV demand has stalled. | BMRI IJ 005380 KS HON IWG LN CRM META AMZN AMD GOOG MRK B BMRI IJ 005380 KS HON CRM AMZN 2423 HK TCEHY STM ASAIY AMD GOOG MRK B |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 3, 2026 | Torre Financial | 1.9% | 8.5% | ADBE, AMZN, ANET, ASML, CRM, FDS, GOOGL, LLY, META, MSFT, NVDA, PYPL, TSM, UBER, UNH | AI, competition, growth, healthcare, Quality, technology, value | The race for AI has drawn in technology companies and nation states, with massive capital spending from Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and OpenAI driving Nvidia to become the first 5 trillion market cap company. The US has launched the Genesis Mission to ensure America wins the AI race, while China has shown innovation with DeepSeek. The portfolio focuses on strong, proven businesses with attractive business models, exhibiting strong returns on capital, competitive advantages, and durable growth. High quality, cash-flowing companies were not particularly sought after in 2025, with many high quality compounders selling off significantly. Eli Lilly's performance was propelled by their GLP-1 offerings and promising pipeline, contributing to the portfolio's top performers in 2025. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 29, 2026 | 8th Wonder Investments | 0.0% | 0.0% | AAPL, AMZN, CMCSA, CRM, CSU.TO, DECK, DIS, GOOGL, HEI, LYV, META, MSFT, NFLX, NVDA, PARA, RH, SKX, TOI.TO, TSLA, WBD | aerospace, AI, Leadership, Luxury, M&A, Media, software, value | Warner Bros. Discovery represents a special situation investment driven by CEO David Zaslav's shift toward shareholder value creation and aggressive debt paydown. The company announced plans to split into two entities and received multiple takeover bids, with Netflix ultimately winning the bidding war. The market fears AI will disrupt vertical market software by eliminating switching costs and seat-based pricing. However, AI agents will likely increase demand for systems of record and control point software rather than replace them, as enterprises need guardrails for non-deterministic AI outputs. Constellation Software and Topicus represent the core thesis of acquiring mission-critical vertical market software businesses with high switching costs, recurring revenue, and defensive moats. These businesses serve niche markets where switching is painful and alternatives offer minimal benefits. The fund employs covered call strategies to generate income and reduce cost basis while building positions. This options-based approach allows for larger position sizing in balance sheet challenged businesses while providing downside protection. HEICO represents an antifragile business model in aftermarket aerospace components that gains market share during economic stress as airlines extend fleet life. The company demonstrates seamless leadership transition and decentralized operations that thrive on adversity. RH under Gary Friedman exemplifies exceptional leadership combining capital allocation with creative genius, transforming the company from near-bankruptcy into a luxury lifestyle brand with galleries that redefine retail and 30% EBITDA margins. | TOI CN CSU CN RH HEI WBD |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 29, 2026 | Hotchkis & Wiley Global Value Fund | 3.8% | 23.8% | AIG, BNP.PA, CMCSA, CRM, ELV, ERIC, FFIV, FISV, GEHC, GOOGL, UNH, USB, WBD, WDAY | AI, financials, global, healthcare, software, technology, valuation, value | The portfolio trades at 13x forward earnings and less than 10x normal earnings, representing attractive valuations relative to the broad market. The fund focuses on opportunities outside the Magnificent 7 where overall valuations remain near average despite elevated market multiples. The fund views AI as more likely to be a tailwind for application software vendors like Workday as they incorporate AI-powered features into their software suites. Google delivered strong new AI products that appear to be taking material share of Consumer Chatbot activity from OpenAI's ChatGPT. The fund has significant exposure to cloud-based enterprise software companies like Workday and Salesforce, which provide human capital management, financial management, and analytics solutions. These companies benefit from sticky customer bases and recurring revenue models. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 29, 2026 | Hotchkis & Wiley Large Cap Fundamental Value | 4.5% | 17.1% | AIG, APA, C, CMCSA, CRM, CRWD, CVS, ERIC, FDX, FFIV, FISV, GM, NFLX, PLTR, UNH, WBD, WDAY, WPP | banks, energy, financials, healthcare, large cap, software, valuation, value | The portfolio trades at 13x forward earnings and less than 10x normal earnings, both in line with historical averages. The manager emphasizes attractive valuations outside the Magnificent 7, with the S&P 500 excluding these stocks trading at 18x forward P/E versus a 35-year average of 17.4x. The fund focuses on undervalued quality businesses with strong fundamentals. Software is the portfolio's largest industry exposure on both absolute and relative basis. The manager views prospects of select software companies as highly compelling, citing sticky customer bases, recurring revenues, and predictable businesses. Major purchases included Workday and Salesforce, which trade at discounts to their own history despite being higher quality businesses. The portfolio's banks returned 13% compared to 6% for the index in Q4, with an average weight of 12% that returned nearly 40% for the year. The manager took capital out of the group as valuations increased. Banks were the top contributing industry to relative performance both quarterly and annually. The portfolio remains overweight in healthcare, noting the sector's return is about half that of the rest of the market over the past decade. Healthcare's P/E ratio is less than 80% of the broad market's P/E, trading at a deeper discount only 8% of the time since 1990. The manager views this as an attractive opportunity given the quality of businesses and growth prospects. Energy exposure spans both exploration & production companies as well as oilfield services. While these businesses are not as structurally attractive as software or healthcare, energy remains among the most attractively valued areas of the portfolio. The group trades at less than 7x normal earnings and offers an expected free cash flow yield of 11%. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 29, 2026 | FPA Crescent Fund | 3.1% | 17.7% | ADI, AMZN, AVTR, BDX, C, CHTR, CMCSA, CRM, GOOGL, HEIA.AS, IFF, JEF, KMX, META, MSFT, NOW, NTDOY, ORCL, SAF.PA, SAP, SNOW, TEL, WDAY | AI, global, healthcare, Quality, small caps, technology, value | The fund emphasizes being value aware, focusing on cases where both quality and value intersect. They avoid speculative areas where reward for taking risks is insufficient relative to potential returns. The strategy has generated equity-like returns while placing equal importance on capital preservation and appreciation over 30 years. The fund is actively investing in small to mid-cap global securities, believing the investment community is casting its gaze away from these market constituents that offer asymmetric risk-reward for those willing to look forward three to five years. Recent purchases demonstrate their commitment to this thesis. The fund discusses AI extensively through Microsoft's transformation and growth prospects. They analyze how AI/cloud developments transformed Microsoft's business model and examine the massive revenue growth required for current AI valuations to make sense, questioning whether Microsoft can add revenue equivalent to multiple major software companies combined. | MSFT |
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| 2024 Q4 | Jan 21, 2025 | Kovitz Core Equity Strategy | 2.4% | 19.9% | AMAT, AMD, AMTM, AMZN, CRM, GOOG, LVS, TMO | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 20, 2026 | Minotaur Global Opportunities Fund | 0.0% | 0.0% | ADBE, CRM, GOOGL, HUBS, HUT, MSFT, NVDA, TEAM | AI, Automation, Data centers, infrastructure, software, technology | AI has experienced a step-change in capability through two key shifts: skills that expand what AI can touch, and loops that move from chatting to continuous iteration. The Ralph Wiggum technique of running AI in loops until tasks are complete has gone viral, enabled by better models like Claude Opus 4.5 and GPT-5.2. Software stocks have been hammered as AI threatens traditional software business models through build vs buy dynamics, competitive intensity, and per-seat pricing pressure. The fund reduced software exposure including cutting Atlassian due to shifting unit economics and defensibility concerns. The fund initiated a position in Hut 8 following their 15-year, $7 billion data center lease to Anthropic backed by Google. The project yields approximately 15% unlevered in year one with 3% annual escalators, representing contracted investment-grade infrastructure. | TEAM HUT |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 20, 2026 | Harding Loevner Global Small Companies | 0.4% | 8.5% | AAPL, ADBE, AMD, AMZN, AVGO, CRM, CSCO, GOOGL, IBM, INTC, META, MSFT, NFLX, NOW, NVDA, ORCL, PYPL, QCOM, TSLA, TXN | global, healthcare, momentum, Quality, small caps, technology, value | The manager emphasizes quality-growth investing that demands relentless skepticism toward market narratives and constant scrutiny of company fundamentals. They focus on financially strong, well-managed companies with durable competitive advantages operating in industries poised for long-term growth. The letter discusses how price momentum is a well-documented phenomenon where securities whose prices have risen are more likely to keep rising in the short run. When momentum takes hold, fundamentals usually fade from view while narratives are used to justify price moves. AI enthusiasm has lifted hardware and semiconductor stocks while weighing on shares of software and services holdings. The manager notes that many AI-related winners lack clear basis for continuing, with some companies barely connected to the AI theme benefiting from momentum. Gold is trading at its highest inflation-adjusted level in five decades, but it is a volatile commodity. Gold-mining companies have not had a great history of profitability other than when prices are unusually high, making the current rally questionable for long-term returns. | 2344 TT DIA IM 298380 KS |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 19, 2026 | Forager International Shares Fund | -2.0% | 15.0% | AUTO.L, BKNG, CRH, CRM, FISV, FIX, FLUT, G24.DE, INCH.L, INGA.AS, IT, LNR.TO, NUTX, NXT, PSI.TO, REA.AX, SES.MI, WISE.L, XRO.AX, ZEG.L | AI, global, Quality, small caps, technology, Travel, value | AI companies' insatiable demand for data centres and power generation led to significant returns for heating and cooling system installer Comfort Systems and solar equipment company Nextpower. Markets are increasingly questioning whether new AI-enabled competitors and solutions threaten the dominance of application software companies. The fund added three technology companies that have each halved over 2025 and hopes to add more. Many tech stocks had become expensive but recent falls present opportunities, though most still aren't cheap enough including Xero. International arrivals into Australia set post-Covid records in recent months, with August, September and October combined seeing arrivals hit 97% of 2019 levels. Travel has historically grown at a multiple of GDP growth and there is still catching up to do. Quality businesses with strong moats and decades of earnings growth suffered in 2025 as share prices had been growing faster than earnings. High multiples became a problem even for the best businesses, resulting in years of no returns or significant derating. | ARX AU ZEG LN NXT NUTX FISV |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Vulcan Value Partners – Small Cap | 1.3% | 10.7% | CBRE, CRM, CSGP, FI, GOOGL, ITRN, KMX, MC.PA, MEDP, MSFT, QRVO, RE, RI.PA, RYSG, SSCC, SWKS, TRU, UNH | AI, Buybacks, insurance, Margin Of Safety, Quality, small caps, technology, value | AI is in early stages of disrupting numerous businesses similar to the Internet in the 1990s. The manager notes AI stocks accounted for approximately 61% of the S&P 500's return in 2025. Unlike the dot-com era, some AI leaders are real businesses financing substantial AI investments with self-generated cash flow, though valuations for some are attractive while others may be overvalued. The manager emphasizes following value investing discipline by purchasing only companies from their MVP list with stable values at discounted prices. They focus on businesses with sustainable competitive advantages trading below intrinsic value estimates, with portfolios showing improved price-to-value ratios across all strategies despite positive absolute returns. Small Cap returns have lagged Large Cap for an extended period, with Small Cap Value performing even worse. The manager notes conversations with clients questioning continued Small Cap allocation, spotty sell-side coverage, and an ignored segment creating opportunities. Their Small Cap portfolio remains most discounted with weighted average price-to-value ratio in mid-50s. The manager owns more insurance-related businesses, highlighting opportunities in the sector. They discuss Ryan Specialty Holdings as a commercial excess and surplus insurance broker, and Everest Group as a leading reinsurance company trading at discount to tangible book value despite producing underwriting profits. Share repurchases are highlighted as value-creating when companies buy back stock below intrinsic value. Medpace used strong balance sheet and free cash flow to repurchase over 8% of shares at approximately 50% of estimated intrinsic value, giving shareholders 100% return on each dollar spent on buybacks. | FISV SWKS TRU KMX RYAN |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 0.1% | 7.1% | CBRE, CRM, CSGP, FI, GOOGL, ITRN, KMX, MC.PA, MEDP, MSFT, QRVO, RE, RI.PA, RYAN, SSNC, SW, SWKS, TRU, UNH | AI, Buybacks, healthcare, insurance, small caps, technology, value | AI is in early stages of disrupting numerous businesses similar to the Internet in the 1990s. The manager believes AI is as real and transformational as the Internet, with approximately 61% of the S&P 500's return in 2025 coming from AI-related stocks. However, concerns exist about paying too much for AI businesses despite their real potential. The manager is finding tremendous opportunities in non-AI related companies that are steadily compounding their values but being ignored by the market. These 'old economy' companies are becoming increasingly discounted while AI stocks dominate returns, creating attractive value opportunities similar to the late 1990s dot-com era. Small Cap returns have lagged Large Cap for an extended period, with the manager noting conversations about whether to continue allocating to Small Caps. The Small Cap portfolio has a weighted average price to value ratio in the mid-50s, representing the most discounted portfolio. Sell-side coverage is spotty to nearly non-existent for many small cap holdings. Share repurchases are highlighted as a key value creation mechanism, with Medpace repurchasing over 8% of shares at approximately 50% of intrinsic value, effectively providing 100% returns on capital deployed. Companies are using strong balance sheets and free cash flow for opportunistic buybacks at discounted valuations. | MSFT CSGP CRM GOOG CBRE RYAN |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 0.1% | 6.2% | CBRE, CRM, CSGP, FI, GOOGL, ITRN, KMX, MC.PA, MEDP, MSFT, QRVO, RE, RI.PA, RYAN, SSNC, SW.PA, SWKS, TRU, UNH | AI, healthcare, insurance, Quality, small caps, technology, value | Manager emphasizes value investing discipline, focusing on companies trading at substantial discounts to intrinsic value. Portfolio has improved price-to-value ratios across all strategies while delivering positive returns. Small Cap portfolio has weighted average price-to-value ratio in mid-50s, which manager considers incredible in current environment. Artificial Intelligence is disrupting numerous businesses similar to the Internet in the 1990s. AI stocks accounted for approximately 61% of S&P 500's return in 2025. Manager believes AI is as transformational as the Internet but warns against paying excessive valuations for AI-related companies, drawing parallels to dot-com bubble. Small Cap returns have lagged Large Cap for extended period, with Small Cap Value performing even worse. Manager sees this as opportunity, noting sell-side coverage is sparse and segment is ignored and unloved. Small Cap portfolio remains most discounted with weighted average price-to-value ratio in mid-50s. Manager focuses on MVP list of highest quality, most stable value companies in the world with sustainable competitive advantages. Lower quality companies have outperformed higher quality companies, especially in Small Cap, with companies having negative earnings accounting for 28% of Russell 2000 Value Index return. Medpace used strong balance sheet and free cash flow to repurchase over 8% of shares at approximately 50% of estimated intrinsic value. Every dollar spent on share repurchases gave 100% return because they were purchasing at half of estimated fair value, increasing estimated value per share by 29% in single quarter. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Vulcan Value Partners – Large Cap | -1.5% | 7.9% | CBRE, CRM, CSGP, EVER, FI, GOOGL, ITRN, KMX, MC.PA, MEDP, MSFT, QRVO, RI.PA, RYAN, SSNC, STLA, SW, SWKS, TRU, UNH | AI, Buybacks, healthcare, insurance, small caps, technology, value | Manager emphasizes value investing discipline, focusing on companies trading at substantial discounts to intrinsic value. Portfolio weighted average price to value ratio improved to low 60s while maintaining positive returns. Small Cap portfolio has weighted average price to value ratio in mid-50s, representing incredible opportunity in current environment. Artificial Intelligence is in early stages of disrupting numerous businesses, similar to Internet in 1990s. AI stocks accounted for approximately 61% of S&P 500's return in 2025. Manager acknowledges AI as transformational technology but warns against paying excessive valuations for AI-related companies, drawing parallels to dot-com bubble. Small Cap returns have lagged Large Cap for extended period, creating attractive opportunities. Small Cap Value has been particularly weak. Manager notes sell-side coverage of Small Caps is much less robust, leading to ignored and unloved segment. Small Cap portfolio remains most discounted with weighted average price to value ratio in mid-50s. Share repurchases highlighted as value-creating activity when companies buy back stock below intrinsic value. Medpace repurchased over 8% of shares at approximately 50% of estimated intrinsic value, increasing estimated value per share by 29% in single quarter. Every dollar spent on buybacks provided 100% return due to purchasing at half of fair value. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Vulcan Value Partners – Small Cap | 3.2% | 9.5% | CBRE, CRM, CSGP, FISV, GOOGL, ITRN, KMX, MC.PA, MEDP, MSFT, QRVO, RE, RI.PA, RYAN, SSNC, STLA, SW.PA, SWKS, TRU, UNH | AI, discount, insurance, Quality, small cap, value | Manager emphasizes value investing discipline, focusing on companies trading at substantial discounts to intrinsic value. Small Cap portfolio has weighted average price to value ratio in mid-50s, representing significant margin of safety in current environment. Artificial Intelligence is disrupting numerous businesses similar to the Internet in the 1990s. AI stocks accounted for approximately 61% of S&P 500 returns in 2025, creating market concentration risks reminiscent of dot-com era. Small Cap returns have lagged Large Cap for extended period, creating attractive opportunities. Manager notes sell-side coverage is sparse and segment is ignored and unloved, often indicating good allocation timing. Portfolio includes more insurance-related businesses including Everest Group reinsurance and Ryan Specialty excess and surplus insurance broker. These companies offer attractive risk-adjusted returns and capital allocation opportunities. | ITRN EG |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Parnassus Core Equity Fund | 1.6% | 11.6% | AAPL, AMAT, AMD, AZO, BALL, BRO, CRM, DHR, EFX, FISV, GOOGL, HD, KLAC, LIN, LLY, MSFT, ORCL, TMO, VRTX, WDAY | AI, growth, healthcare, large cap, Quality, semiconductors, technology, value | The fund views AI as a generational demand driver creating durable need for faster, more powerful and energy-efficient computing. They are likely in the early stages of a decade-long AI investment cycle, seeking upside capture while managing risks of rapid technological change, rising competition and growing financial leverage. The gap will widen between AI winners versus AI losers, favoring active portfolio management. The fund maintains exposure to semiconductor companies benefiting from AI-driven demand. Applied Materials and KLA gained from sustained AI-driven semiconductor demand with improving customer outlooks. The portfolio includes semiconductor manufacturing equipment suppliers and chip designers positioned for the AI infrastructure build-out. The fund invests in hyperscalers and cloud infrastructure companies. Alphabet showed improving growth in its cloud segment and renewed confidence in its vertically integrated AI strategy. The portfolio includes companies providing cloud services and infrastructure supporting the AI transformation. The fund holds pharmaceutical companies like Eli Lilly, which rebounded sharply as concerns around pricing, penetration and competitive dynamics for GLP-1 weight-loss drugs eased following stronger-than-expected demand data. The portfolio favors companies that continue to innovate to improve patient outcomes. The fund invests in life science tools companies such as Danaher and ThermoFisher that provide valuable equipment and services for clinical research. These companies benefited from improving sentiment around life sciences end markets as pharmaceutical customers signaled higher-than-expected spending on research and development. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 18, 2026 | Magellan Global Opportunities Fund No. 2 | 1.4% | 0.0% | AMT, AMZN, CMG, CRM, DG, ES, GOOGL, MA, MELI, META, MSFT, NESN.SW, NVO, OR.PA, SAP, TSM | AI, Cloud, consumer, Defensive, global, Quality, technology | AI continues to drive market leadership with companies like Alphabet demonstrating ability to leverage full stack approach. Microsoft's positioning affected by shifting views on AI leadership through OpenAI relationship. Meta doubling down on AI investments despite uncertain returns from non-core initiatives. AWS showing acceleration in Q3 growth as increased capex delivers returns. All incumbent cloud providers viewed as long-term winners despite short-term performance variations. Microsoft Azure growth moderating but still positioned well. Consumer environment remains challenging heading into 2026. Dollar General delivering operational improvements. Nestlé positioned to adapt with leading brands in attractive categories like coffee and pet care despite near-term margin pressures. | View | |
| 2023 Q4 | Jan 17, 2024 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 5.6% | 18.6% | AMZN, CBRE, CG, CRM, KKR, MSFT, TDG | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 14, 2026 | L1 Capital International Fund | 2.2% | 9.8% | AER, AMZN, BKNG, CRH, CRM, DHR, GOOGL, HCA, ICE, INTU, J, LSEG.L, MA, MSFT, TSM, UBER, UNH, V | AI, consumer, Global Equities, Macro, Quality, technology, valuation | AI continues to be a central focal point for stock markets, with companies being labeled as either AI winners or AI losers. The manager believes many perceived AI winners are trading at valuations requiring everything to go right, while some businesses labeled as AI losers present attractive opportunities due to exaggerated concerns. Traditional Quality factor materially underperformed the broader U.S. market by the widest margin since the dot.com boom, providing opportunities to invest in high-quality businesses at attractive valuations. The fund maintains focus on quality businesses with strong competitive moats. Consumer environment continues to be highly mixed with financial pressure building on lower socioeconomic consumers while affluent consumers thrive. This K-shaped economy influences portfolio decisions, steering clear of businesses exposed to less affluent consumers. | ICE LSEG LN INTU CRM TSM AER UBER J |
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| 2025 Q4 | Jan 13, 2026 | Mar Vista US Quality Select | 0.2% | 12.8% | AAPL, AMZN, APH, AVGO, CRM, DHR, EFX, GOOG, JNJ, LIN, META, MSFT, NFLX, NVDA, ORCL, ROP, SAP, TSM, V | AI, Cloud, growth, large cap, Quality, semiconductors, Streaming, technology | The structural shift driven by Artificial Intelligence is transitioning from proof-of-concept to demonstrable return on investment. Early monetization is visible in advertising, cloud computing, and semiconductors. Companies deploying AI infrastructure are seeing tangible improvements in ROIC through more efficient ad targeting and premium AI cloud services. Cloud computing continues to be a key beneficiary of AI infrastructure deployment. Google Cloud emerged as a standout performer with 34% revenue growth and $155 billion backlog. Microsoft's Azure platform remains capacity-constrained with accelerating growth and increasing adoption of Copilot offerings. Taiwan Semiconductor represents the dominant manufacturer for leading fabless chip designers including NVIDIA, Apple, and Broadcom. The global arms race to develop artificial general intelligence will support multiple years of robust growth for foundries with leading-edge capabilities. Netflix has built a durable economic moat around its globally-scaled streaming business. With more than 300 million members, Netflix enjoys the lowest content cost per subscriber in the industry, enabling it to profitably outspend rivals and accelerate its competitive flywheel. | View | |
| 2025 Q4 | Jan 13, 2026 | Generation Investment Management Global Equity | - | - | ADYEY, AMZN, ASML, CRM, CSL, DHR, GOOGL, LEGN.PA, MCO, MELI, MSCI, MSFT, SIK.SW, SNPS, SPOT, SU.PA, TMO, TSM, VWS.CO, WDAY | AI, Energy Transition, global, long-term, Quality, sustainability, technology, valuation | Generation believes computing power demand will roughly triple if a third of internet users interact with AI services via voice for 20 minutes daily. They invest across the AI build-out from chip manufacturing (TSMC, ASML) to electrical equipment (Legrand, Schneider) to cloud companies. Roughly one third of the portfolio is involved in AI build-out in some capacity. Generation focuses on quality companies with strong pricing power, indispensable products, and long-term thinking management teams. They believe quality stocks have had one of their weakest relative performances in 15 years, creating attractive valuations. The portfolio has never been so cheaply valued relative to benchmark despite faster earnings growth. MercadoLibre serves as Latin America's core digital infrastructure, operating in 18 countries with strong positions in Brazil, Argentina and Mexico. The platform handled 1.8 billion shipments in 2024, roughly doubling from 2020 figures. Over half a million SMEs sell on the platform representing upwards of 70% of gross merchandise sales. Generation invests across the payments ecosystem including Visa, Mastercard, PayPal, and Adyen. Adyen processes EUR 1.4 trillion of payments with a single global platform approach. More than half of MercadoLibre users say Mercado Pago was their first digital payment method, demonstrating the financial inclusion benefits. The portfolio includes renewable energy companies like Vestas Wind Systems and energy efficiency companies like Legrand and Schneider Electric. Companies are setting science-based emissions targets with 67% of portfolio covered by validated targets. The transition faces political headwinds but technological and economic advances continue to accelerate. | View | |
| 2022 Q3 | Sep 11, 2022 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 5.6% | 18.6% | CRM | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q2 | Jul 23, 2024 | Ithaka US Growth Strategy | 0.2% | 0.0% | AAPL, AMZN, CRM, DXCM, NVDA, VEEV | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q2 | Jul 18, 2024 | Harding Loevner Global Equity | 5.2% | 15.6% | AAPL, ADYEN NA, ASML, CRM, DHR, GLOB, MSFT, NVDA, TSM, VRTX | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q2 | Jul 16, 2024 | Polen Capital – Focus Growth | 3.0% | 11.0% | AAPL, ABBY, ACN, ADSK, ALGN, AMZN, CRM, GOOG, HD, META, MSCI, MSFT, NFLX, NVDA, SPOT | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q2 | Jul 15, 2024 | Parnassus Core Equity Fund | 5.5% | 18.2% | AAPL, AMAT, BALL, COST, CRM, DE, GOOGL, INTC, ORCL, VRSK | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q2 | Jun 30, 2024 | Mar Vista Focus Fund | 3.4% | 0.0% | AAPL, AVGO, CRM, DIS, GOOG, META, MSFT, NKE, NVDA | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q2 | Jun 30, 2024 | Mar Vista Global Equity Fund | 7.2% | - | 0NIQ LN, AAPL, AVGO, CRM, DIS, GOOG, LIN, META, ORCL | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q2 | Jun 30, 2024 | Columbia Global Technology Growth Fund | -0.9% | 0.0% | AAPL, AMD, AVGO, CRM, NVDA | - | View | ||
| 2023 Q1 | Apr 18, 2023 | Ithaka US Growth Strategy | 0.2% | 0.0% | CRM, DXCM, ISRG, MSFT, NVDA, SNOW | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q1 | Apr 14, 2025 | Parnassus Core Equity Fund | -2.4% | -2.4% | AMD, AMZN, AVGO, AZO, BRO, CI, CRM, DE, DHI, ICE, MAR, SNPS, VZ, WM | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q1 | Apr 14, 2025 | Parnassus Growth Equity Fund | -8.6% | -8.6% | ADBE, ADYEY, APP, ASML, BRO, BSX, CRM, CSGP, DDOG, DE, EFX, EXAS, GEV, MSCI, PCOR, SN, SNPS, V, VRTX | - | View | ||
| 2025 Q1 | Mar 31, 2025 | Mar Vista Global Equity Fund | -3.0% | -3.0% | AVGO, BRK/A, CRM, MSFT, NESN SW, NVDA, SAF FP | - | View | ||
| 2024 Q4 | Feb 24, 2025 | Mar Vista Global Equity Fund | -3.3% | 12.7% | AMT, AMZN, ASML, AVGO, CRM, DIS, NESN SW, NZM GR | - | View | ||
| 2023 Q4 | Jan 30, 2024 | Parnassus Growth Equity Fund | 3.3% | 21.0% | ADBE, ADYEN NA, CRM, PLNT, SBAC, TMO | - | View | ||
| 2023 Q4 | Jan 28, 2024 | Mairs & Power – Balanced Fund | 0.0% | 11.0% | CRM, ECL, ENTG, FI, HSY, LLY, MSFT, NTRS, SHW, TXN | - | View | ||
| 2023 Q4 | Jan 17, 2024 | Vulcan Value Partners – Large Cap | 8.2% | 17.6% | AMZN, BVI FP, CG, CRM, JLL, KKR, MSFT, TDG | - | View | ||
| 2023 Q4 | Jan 17, 2024 | Vulcan Value Partners – Focus Plus | 5.9% | 18.7% | AMZN, CBRE, CG, CRM, KKR, MSFT, TDG | - | View |
| Date | Pitch Type | Author | Company | Industry | Sub Industry | Bull / Bear | Stock Exchange | Keywords | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 21, 2026 | Fund Letters | Tucker Brown | Salesforce Inc | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | AI, ARR, buybacks, cloud, Software | View Pitch |
| Feb 4, 2026 | Twitter / X | @undrvalue | Salesforce, Inc. | Software | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | Agents, CRM, Datamoat, SaaS, Switchingcosts, Workflow | View Pitch |
| Feb 4, 2026 | Fund Letters | Jacob Mitchell | Salesforce Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | AI agents, CRM, Enterprise software, productivity, valuation | View Pitch |
| Feb 4, 2026 | Fund Letters | Jacob Mitchell | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | AI, Automation, CRM, growth, Software | View Pitch |
| Jan 22, 2026 | Twitter / X | @TechFundies | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Neutral | New York Stock Exchange | cloud, CRM, Gaap, Grew, Last, Last Prior, Marketing Software, Net Add | View Pitch |
| Jan 21, 2026 | Fund Letters | C.T. Fitzpatrick | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | AI agents, Enterprise software, margin expansion, Platform Moat, recurring revenue | View Pitch |
| Jan 16, 2026 | Fund Letters | David Steinthal | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | AI, CRM, Margins, Software, valuation | View Pitch |
| Jan 8, 2026 | Fund Letters | Scott O'Gorman | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | Agentforce, AI monetization, cloud, CRM, Subscription | View Pitch |
| Jan 8, 2026 | Fund Letters | Mr. Damir Babanazarov | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | cloud, core holding, CRM, margin expansion, profitability | View Pitch |
| Jan 8, 2026 | Fund Letters | William C. Nygren | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | AI, CRM, Margins, SaaS, Software, transformation | View Pitch |
| Jan 8, 2026 | Fund Letters | George Hadjia | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | New York Stock Exchange | AI, Automation, Data, SaaS, Software | View Pitch |
| Dec 3, 2025 | Fund Letters | Rahul Narang | Salesforce Inc | Information Technology | Software | Bear | NASDAQ | AI, cloud, CRM, Enterprise software, guidance | View Pitch |
| Dec 1, 2025 | Seeking Alpha | Seeking Alpha | Salesforce, Inc. | Software - Application | Bull | AI, Cloud computing, CRM, earnings, Enterprise software, growth, long-term buy, risk/reward, Salesforce, valuation | View Pitch | ||
| Nov 30, 2025 | Seeking Alpha | Seeking Alpha | Salesforce, Inc. | Software - Application | Bear | Agentforce, AI, Cloud computing, competitive moat, CRM, growth, guidance, Margins, Salesforce, Software | View Pitch | ||
| Nov 29, 2025 | Fund Letters | Julien Albertini | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | NYSE | AI, Cross-sell, Free Cash Flow, guidance, Margins, Retention, SaaS | View Pitch |
| Nov 29, 2025 | Fund Letters | Tony Coniaris | Salesforce Inc. | Information Technology | Software | Bull | NYSE | — | View Pitch |
| Nov 28, 2025 | Fund Letters | Julien Albertini | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Application Software | Bull | NYSE | AI, Cross-sell, Free Cash Flow, guidance, Margins, Retention, SaaS | View Pitch |
| Nov 28, 2025 | Fund Letters | Tony Coniaris | Salesforce Inc. | Information Technology | Software | Bull | NYSE | — | View Pitch |
| Nov 10, 2025 | Seeking Alpha | Seeking Alpha | Salesforce, Inc. | Software - Application | Bull | Agentforce, AI, CRM, Customer base, Enterprise software, growth, innovation, market dominance, profitability, Salesforce | View Pitch | ||
| Nov 10, 2025 | Seeking Alpha | Seeking Alpha | Salesforce, Inc. | Software - Application | Bull | Agentforce, AI-powered solutions, customer-centric solutions, Enterprise software, growth potential, innovation, market dominance, operational strengths, Salesforce, transformation strategy | View Pitch | ||
| Sep 14, 2025 | Seeking Alpha | Seeking Alpha | Salesforce, Inc. | Software - Application | Neutral | AI, Cloud computing, Competition, Data Cloud, Market Expectations, P/E ratio, PEG ratio, Revenue Growth, Salesforce, valuation | View Pitch | ||
| Aug 13, 2025 | Seeking Alpha | Gary Alexander | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Software - Application | Bull | NYSE | — | View Pitch |
| Aug 7, 2025 | Seeking Alpha | Oakoff Investments | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Software - Application | Bull | NYSE | — | View Pitch |
| Aug 7, 2025 | Substack | Rijnberk Invest Insights | Salesforce, Inc. | Information Technology | Software - Application | Bull | NYSE | — | View Pitch |
| Manager Name | Fund Name | Fund AUM | Invested Value | Portfolio Weight | Shares Owned | Shares Bought / Sold During Quarter | % Bought / Sold During Quarter | % of Shares Outstanding Owned |
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