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Colossus | Investing & Business Podcasts
Learn how companies work from the people who know them best. We do deep research and interview industry veterans, investment professionals, and corporate executives to explain the inner workings of public stocks and private businesses. For each company, we break down their history, business model, financial statements, secret sauce, and bull/bear case. We believe every business has lessons to teach us and Breakdowns is here to highlight them. Learn more and stay up to date at www.joincolossus.com.
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Trane Technologies: Hot and Cold - [Business Breakdowns, EP.144]

Trane Technologies: Hot and Cold - [Business Breakdowns, EP.144]

This is Matt Reustle. Today we venture into the world of HVAC to break down Trane Technologies. Now, it's not often that I come across an industrial company with a $50 billion market cap that I just hadn't heard of. So when our guest today, Brett Larson, investor at NZS Capital, suggested Trane, it was as easy of a 'yes' as they come. Brett and I cover the long corporate history of Trane, the dynamics that separate residential HVAC from commercial HVAC, and how Trane has helped create this unique consolidated industry. You may never look at your thermostat the same after this episode. Please enjoy this breakdown of Trane Technologies. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Editing and post-production work for this episode was provided by The Podcast Consultant (https://thepodcastconsultant.com). Show Notes: (00:00:00) Welcome to Business Breakdowns (00:01:59) Brett tells us what Trane is  (00:02:34) The companies corporate history and how it became Trane (00:04:05) Overall size of the commercial market  (00:05:18) He explains the go to market sales strategy  (00:09:20) An additional breakdown of business cost (00:10:55) Revenue received from Trane software (00:14:53) Trane’s market share in the residential space (00:15:52) Differentiated products available on the commercial side (00:17:17) Included commercial software components (00:19:15) Average life cycle for commercial units   (00:21:19) Demand on commercial and residential sides of the market (00:25:31) The cyclicality of the business and how revenue has trended over time    (00:27:35) A look at share gains and industry consolidation over recent years (00:31:09) How the management team is viewed by the industry (00:34:46) Key contributions from MNA and future consolidation     (00:37:02) Data center demand for HVAC units (00:39:40) Transport refrigerators key role in the industry market   (00:41:02) Risks associated with the business (00:43:30) What he’s learned from studying Trane
46:5310/01/2024
Live Oak: The Small Business Bank - [Business Breakdowns, EP.143]

Live Oak: The Small Business Bank - [Business Breakdowns, EP.143]

This is Matt Reustle. Today we are breaking down Live Oak Bank. Our guest is Stephen Vafier, the Founder of Storri Labs Capital Partners. Live Oak is a bank that received a charter right before the financial crisis. It does not have the a 100+ year histories of many of the banks that we know so well today, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, and the other too-big-to-fail banks.  This is a new story with very interesting DNA in terms of how they built up this bank. They targeted specific industries and the SBA loan program and they had technology in their inception. Live Oak has done some unique things to build assets on the balance sheet to build equity in this bank and really build a name within a sector that is incredibly difficult to break into. This is an interesting case study on how you can think about out-dated industries, which seemingly have massive barriers to entry. Please enjoy this breakdown of Live Oak Bank. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:16) - (First question) - The unique market opportunity that the founders saw when starting this business (00:04:39) - How Live Oak differentiated its approach to make a more successful business model (00:06:03) - How they approached the SBA loan program differently (00:09:04) - The Live Oak sales strategy  (00:10:06) - Their strategy for trading partially guaranteed government-backed loans  (00:12:12) - Overcoming challenges to attract clients to specialized loans (00:15:44) - A brief history of Chip Mahan’s career (00:20:23) - Chip’s technology-centric approach without relying on physical locations (00:22:49) - Traditional banking security with high-upside ventures, contrasting with neo banks  (00:27:51) - The balance between the traditional lending business and technology-focused ventures (00:31:48) - How Live Oak intends to scale the business  (00:36:52) - How the surge in SBA programs during COVID impacted Live Oak (00:40:02) - Handling the effects of the Silicon Valley Bank collapse (00:42:32) - The strategy for deposit growth and how pivotal is it for the bank's competitiveness (00:46:13) - How Live Oak navigates threats from entities employing similar strategies  (00:53:36) - The significance of Chip Mahan's role and his influence on the organization's future  (00:56:43) - Potential risks that Live Oak faces (00:59:44) - Lessons learned from researching Live Oak
01:04:3103/01/2024
Moody’s: Aaa Business Model - [Business Breakdowns, EP.142]

Moody’s: Aaa Business Model - [Business Breakdowns, EP.142]

This is Zack Fuss. Today we are breaking down Moody's Corporation. Moody's was founded by John Moody in 1909 with the idea of broadening access to credit information and codifying how people viewed credit statistics by producing manuals of stats related to bonds. In 2000, Moody's was spun off from Dun & Bradstreet as a separately traded public company. Today, it is nearly a $75 billion enterprise business, producing approximately $6 billion in revenue at 45 percent margins.  To break down Moody's, I'm joined by Brian Yacktman, the Founder and President of YCG Investments. During this conversation we explore the business's origin story, how the financial crisis impacted the trajectory of the business, and the role that credit ratings play in the broader investment ecosystem. Please enjoy this breakdown on Moody's. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 60,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:30) - (First question) - Introducing Moody's and its operations (00:05:13) - Analyzing Moody’s revenue structure (00:06:13) - Highlighting Moody's business strengths (00:07:40) - Discussing Moody’s business model transformation (00:12:29) - Evaluating entry barriers in Moody’s field (00:17:06) - Exploring the network effects within the company (00:23:01) - Examining Moody’s profit margins (00:26:26) - Comparing Moody’s to S&P Global (00:28:08) - The impact of the financial crisis on Moody's (00:29:46) - Assessing economic sensitivities affecting Moody's (00:35:25) - Key takeaways from Moody’s business strategies
39:3227/12/2023
Pernod Ricard: Luxury Liquor - [Business Breakdowns, EP.141]

Pernod Ricard: Luxury Liquor - [Business Breakdowns, EP.141]

This is Zack Fuss. Today, we are breaking down Pernod Ricard, a business whose history dates back to 1797. Today, the business is the second-largest global producer of wine and spirits with a portfolio of 17 of the top 100 spirits brands, including Absolut Vodka, Beefeater Gin, Jameson Irish Whiskey, and Malibu rum. The portfolio produces north of EUR 12 billion in sales and generates an impressive 60% gross margin and high 20% operating margin. To break down Pernod Ricard, I am joined by Swetha Ramachandran, a fund manager at Artemis Investment Management. During this conversation, we explore the interplay between luxury goods and spirits, the post-COVID normalization, and consumption trends. We hope you enjoy this breakdown of Pernod Ricard. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes [00:03:00] - Introduction to Pernod Ricard and the Spirits Industry [00:04:11] - Pernod Ricard's Brand Portfolio and Acquisition History [00:09:36] - The Strengths of the Spirits Business [00:14:37] - The Shift in Consumption Patterns [00:20:21] - The Appeal of the Spirits Conglomerate Business Model [00:24:04] - Understanding the Current Challenges in the Spirits Industry [00:26:41] - The Role of Emerging Markets in the Spirits Industry [00:31:45] - The Influence of the Ricard Family on Pernod Ricard [00:35:46] - Innovation and Distribution in the Spirits Industry [00:34:17] - The Impact of Market Trends and Consumer Preferences [00:40:15] - The Future of Spirits in the Chinese Market [00:42:26] - What Makes Pernod Ricard Special [00:44:01] - Lessons from Pernod Ricard's Business Model
45:5620/12/2023
Ferrari: Magic from Maranello - [Business Breakdowns, EP.140]

Ferrari: Magic from Maranello - [Business Breakdowns, EP.140]

This is Dom Cooke. Today we are breaking down Ferrari. Ferrari was founded in 1929 as a race team by Italian driver, Enzo Ferrari, but it wasn’t until 1947 when Enzo was 50 that Ferrari sold its first car. Today, the car company is one of the most recognizable brands in the world, in large part because of its history in Formula 1, where it is both the oldest and most successful team ever. To break down Ferrari, I’m joined by Brian Lum, an Investment Manager at Baillie Gifford. We discuss how Ferrari went from racing team to a $70 billion business, the various ways it looks more like a luxury goods company than a car maker, and how its business model both nurtures and monetizes its famous red brand. There aren’t many things money can’t buy, but in many instances, a Ferrari is one of them. The ways in which the company manufactures scarcity are fascinating, and this conversation dives into all the aspects that make Ferrari so successful and unique. Please enjoy this Business Breakdown of Ferrari. Interested in hiring from the Colossus Community? Click here. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:31) - (First question) - An introduction to the numbers behind the Ferrari brand (00:04:26) - Exploring Ferrari's roots to understand the impact on the brand's present-day business landscape (00:07:06) - Enzo Ferrari’s dedication to the company extended to the location of his house (00:07:50) - A look at the brand’s racing heritage over the last 75 years (00:13:04) - A unique way of structuring a marketing budget, wholly focused on F1 (00:17:51) - Ferrari's restraint in capitalizing on the SUV market to uphold their brand identity (00:21:40) - A look at the product portfolio and how they cultivate exclusivity for their “collectors” (00:23:51) - A unique buying experience, how existing Ferrari owners become frequent buyers (00:26:50) - How Ferrari sets itself apart from its competitors (00:29:20) - An overview of Ferrari’s financials (00:35:21) - Alternative strategies beyond volume growth to uphold scarcity without compromising the brand's prestige (00:36:40) - A look at other segments of the business like fashion (00:38:44) - The business’ cost profile and its significant investment in R&D (00:41:27) - Ferrari’s approach to electrification and hybrid cars (00:48:31) - Comparing electrification and luxury watchmakers during the quartz crisis (00:52:39) - Looking at Ferrari’s future and incremental evolution (00:54:47) - Lessons learned from studying Ferrari
01:00:3313/12/2023
Charter Communications: Cable Cash Flows - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 139]

Charter Communications: Cable Cash Flows - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 139]

This is Matt Reustle. Today we are breaking down the cable giant Charter Communications. Tony Coniaris and John Sitarz of Harris Associates join us for this deep dive on the cable market and Charter's business. We've spent a big portion of the first half of the conversation outlining the history of cable, the asset itself, what it does differently versus some of the alternatives, and then we flash forward to how the industry is operating today. The idea of cord cutting has become very consensus, but it's not very obvious in terms of how that actually impacts a business like Charter and its flagship product Spectrum. We go into some of the case studies that have recently occurred and then tie it all back in terms of the business model. There's so many different lessons that you can take out here thanks to Tony and John. Please enjoy this Business Breakdown on Charter Listen to Invest Like the Best: A Conversation with Charlie Munger & John Collison For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 60,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag| @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:04:07) - (First question) - The role of Charter Communications in daily life (00:07:28) - Charter Communications as an infrastructure entity (00:08:15) - Mapping the cable market landscape (00:12:51) - Evolution of competition within the cable industry (00:14:01) - Tracing the origins of Charter Communications (00:19:18) - Initiating business restructuring (00:20:20) - Exploring the capabilities of cable assets (00:23:40) - Emerging challengers in the cable arena (00:29:58) - Examining mobile data trends (00:30:54) - Exploring the potential of fixed wireless access (00:33:48) - Conducting business analysis (00:36:10) - Assessing the impact of consumers 'cutting the cord' (00:42:16) - Comparing internet-only customers to full cable bundle subscribers (00:47:53) - The value of comprehensive service packages (00:49:08) - Identifying major cost factors in the industry (00:52:35) - Outlining the market structure for cable businesses (00:57:16) - Anticipating potential industry risks (00:58:03) - Understanding compute capacity and its implications (01:01:21) - Reflecting on insights gained from Charter Communications
01:03:2806/12/2023
Vistra Corp: Full Stack Energy Provider - [Business Breakdowns, EP.138]

Vistra Corp: Full Stack Energy Provider - [Business Breakdowns, EP.138]

This is Zack Fuss. Today we are breaking down Vistra Corp. Vistra is an integrated retail electricity and power generation company. The company, through its subsidiaries, is involved in electricity generation and wholesale and retail energy sales to commercial, municipal and residential customers across the U.S. The company serves 4 million Americans across 20 states producing 37,000 megawatts of capacity, enough to power 20 million homes. To break down Vistra, I'm joined by John DeGulis, Partner and Portfolio Manager at Sound Shore Management. We go through the dramatic evolution of the industry, the acquisition track record of Vistra, and zoom out on the broader electricity production & distribution business and history in the United States. Please enjoy this conversation on Vistra Corp. Interested in hiring from the Colossus Community? Click here. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:52) - (First question) - A brief history of Vistra (00:10:57) - An overview of Vistra’s business model  (00:14:11) - Navigating the value chain of merchant power from generation to retail and how Vistra positions itself within the industry (00:27:28) - The contrast between financial analysis and consumer perspectives and Vistra’s strategic cash flow allocation toward renewables and shareholder returns (00:32:49) - The limitations when charging for electricity utilities  (00:35:23) - A breakdown of Vistra Vision, the allocation of profits from traditional energy generation for growth in renewable energy (00:39:29) - Vistra’s management team and the key players  (00:42:58) - Vistra’s potential expansion plans into solar, wind and nuclear  (00:46:30) - How Vistra could be an integral part of the nation's energy transition to low or no-carbon electricity (00:49:28) - The lessons learned from studying Vistra
52:1629/11/2023
Entegris: Solutions for Semiconductors - [Business Breakdowns, EP.137]

Entegris: Solutions for Semiconductors - [Business Breakdowns, EP.137]

This is Matt Reustle. Today we are breaking down Entegris, a supplier of advanced materials and process solutions for semiconductors. Small interferences with the different materials that exist within the semiconductor will slow it down and make it inoperable, and that's where Entegris comes into play.  We get into that discussion with our guest, Daniel Pilling from Sands Capital. He joins us to talk through the history of semiconductors in his own terms, what makes it such a fascinating industry to cover, and what makes Entegris unique operating as a small player in an overall huge universe, dominated by major players. Please enjoy this breakdown of Entegris. Interested in hiring from the Colossus Community? Click here. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:03:00) - (First question) - Why semiconductors is an interesting industry for Daniel (00:05:45) - An introduction to Entegris and its business (00:07:19) - A look at the chemicals produced for computer chip manufacturing (00:09:39) - A historical look at the importance of chemicals in chipmaking (00:11:45) - The cost of chemicals within a chip (00:13:55) - The backstory as to how Entegris started operating and their competitors  (00:17:03) - How the business has been able to remain so independent (00:21:57) - The stickiness of the business and how they aim to be the partner of choice (00:23:22) - A look at previous execution and any issues that have occurred in the past (00:23:56) - The cyclicality of the semiconductor industry historically (00:25:45) - An overview Entegris’ pricing power and maintaining margin profile (00:28:32) - Operating leverage within the business and how the margin profiles differ between the different segments (00:30:03) - A look at the business’ research and development spend (00:32:01) - How the business has approached mergers and acquisitions over the years (00:34:04) - Whether the business has ever been a target acquisition for a larger player  (00:34:48) - The outlook for Entegris’ revenue growth, expected margin expansion due to operating leverage (00:37:05) - Possible threats to the business from new technology (00:39:04) - A look at other potential risks to Entegris (00:41:18) - Should the industry’s growth slow or even decline how it could affect Entegris  (00:42:46) - How Daniel values the business comparing it to its peer group (00:45:04) - Other risks to the business not mentioned (00:46:00) - The lessons learned from Entegris
47:5222/11/2023
The Coca-Cola Company - [Business Breakdowns, EP.136]

The Coca-Cola Company - [Business Breakdowns, EP.136]

This is Zack Fuss. Today we are breaking down The Coca-Cola Company. On May 8th, 1886, Dr. John Pemberton brought this perfected syrup to Jacobs Pharmacy in downtown Atlanta, where the first glass of Coca-Cola was poured for five cents a glass. Today, more than 1. 9 billion servings per day of Coke are served worldwide.  To break down Coca-Cola, I'm joined by Freddie Lait, Founder and Managing Partner at Latitude Investment Management. We cover the business of Coca-Cola and how its bottling network is imperative to its capital light business model. We discuss recent acquisitions like Costa Coffee & Body Armor and the Coca-Cola Company's expansion beyond its flagship brands and products with legacy Coke representing just 50% of their offering. Please enjoy this breakdown of the Coca-Cola Company.  Interested in hiring from the Colossus Community? Click here. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 60,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:03:33) - (First question) - Exploring Coca-Cola's unique business model (00:05:57) - Comparing Coca-Cola's size to its competitors (00:07:30) - Delving into the history of the company (00:12:28) - Contrasting a bottling business with brand building and distribution (00:18:53) - Examining how Coca-Cola has maintained consistent growth and driven revenue (00:23:49) - Discussing Coca-Cola's 20% ownership of Monster Energy  (00:27:11) - Assessing Coca-Cola's approach to capital allocation for value creation (00:30:33) - Highlighting the most dynamic growth segment in Coca-Cola's portfolio (00:33:43) - Breaking down Coca-Cola's business by region (00:37:39) - Adjusting to emerging risks in the marketplace (00:41:11) - Lessons learned from studying Coca Cola
45:2915/11/2023
FedEx: Anytime, Anywhere - [Business Breakdowns, EP.135]

FedEx: Anytime, Anywhere - [Business Breakdowns, EP.135]

Today we are breaking down FedEx. FedEx has a more direct impact on the U.S. economy than 99.9% of U.S. businesses - an actual statistic from Dun & Bradstreet. It was a business started in 1973 by the famous Fred Smith, as his planes delivered 186 packages to 25 cities. Today, FedEx moves about 15 million packages a day, all over the world. To break down the business, I'm joined by Staley Cates, Vice Chairman of Southeastern Asset Management. We cover the business of FedEx, how this network operates, the integration of Express and Ground services, and its history and valuation relative to UPS. Please enjoy this breakdown of FedEx. Founders Podcast: #151 Frederick Smith (FedEx) For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes: (00:04:27) - First question - An overview of Staley’s relationship with FedEx (00:05:06) - How FedEx is doing as a business in general (00:06:46) - A look at the different segments of FedEx’s business (00:08:08) - The differences between FedEx’s express and ground services (00:09:51) - A brief history of Fred Smith, the founder of FedEx and the opportunity he saw in the market (00:14:03) - How eCommerce and other trends have affected FedEx over the years (00:18:36) - FedEx’s position on whether to battle UPS for Amazon’s shipping alternative option (00:20:25) - A look at the United States Postal Service and its role in the overall eCommerce system (00:21:39) - The reasons behind the upside in FedEx Ground margins  (00:26:07) - A look at LTL margins when it comes to FedEx Express services (00:28:20) - Potential opportunities for FedEx moving forward (00:31:24) - The re-fleeting of FedEx planes and other potential areas in FedEx’s business that may require capital expenditures (00:33:19) - The challenges FedEx faced when integrating the acquisition of TNT (00:36:04) - Bringing together FedEx’s different businesses to get an overview of the entire organization (00:38:34) - Wage inflation and how that will affect FedEx’s margin profile overall (00:42:56) - The potential for FedEx to compete with Amazon more directly (00:45:42) - FedEx’s current stock price and its potential  (00:50:29) - FedEx’s use of railroads and its expansion over the past two decades (00:52:54) - An overview of the risks FedEx could face in the future (00:54:19) - The lessons learned from studying FedEx
56:0008/11/2023
Databricks: Data Based Decisions - [Business Breakdowns, EP.134]

Databricks: Data Based Decisions - [Business Breakdowns, EP.134]

This is Zack Fuss. Today I am joined by Yanev Suissa, Managing Partner at SineWave Ventures, to break down the private company Databricks. Born out of a UC Berkeley research lab in 2013, Databricks has grown rapidly, and after 50% growth this summer, it was rumored to have last raised at a $43 billion valuation. In the most simple terms, Databricks provides tools for ingesting, transforming, and analyzing large sets of data from multiple sources in multiple formats in order to inform business and engineering decisions. Databricks is on a crash course with Snowflake to amass market share. In this conversation, we explore the nuances of structured and unstructured data, discuss data lakes, and what it entails to get "Hadooped." Please enjoy this breakdown of Databricks.  Interested in hiring from the Colossus Community? Click here. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes: (00:02:32) - (First Question) - What Databricks is and why it is so successful  (00:04:38) - Real world examples of how customers use Databricks  (00:07:23) - How issues were handled historically before Databricks was available  (00:08:39) - Key examples of what helped accelerate Databricks’ success  (00:10:52) - Databricks revenue model and how it converts into bottomline   (00:12:13) - How Databricks competes with competitors like Snowflake  (00:14:11) - Competition versus symbiosis when compared to large organizations  (00:14:11) - The overall size of Databricks as a business (00:18:09) - Costs incurred when using a database service like Databricks (00:19:47) - The founding story of Databricks  (00:22:53) - When SineWave recognized the database's potential  (00:24:29) - The importance of partnerships and how they help grow the business  (00:27:07) - Legacy solutions that they are disintermediating or replacing in their growth   (00:27:57) - What being Hadoop’d means  (00:21:50) - A breakdown of the complexity behind switching to different database providers  (00:32:07) - The success of these businesses breaking into legacy regulated industries  (00:34:47) - Why AI is so impactful to the database  (00:37:40) - How AI is helping these businesses go to market with their software  (00:39:50) - Democratization of data access and businesses taking the opposite approach  (00:43:00) - Key reasons for investing in Databricks and potential risks to be considered   (00:46:12) - Lessons learned from studying Databricks 
49:5001/11/2023
Match Group: The Business Behind Tinder - [Business Breakdowns, EP.133]

Match Group: The Business Behind Tinder - [Business Breakdowns, EP.133]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down the giant of online dating. Even if you found love the old-fashioned way, you're likely familiar with the Match brands like Tinder and Hinge, amongst many others. To break down Match, I'm joined by George Hadjia, founder of Bristlemoon Capital. George goes through a background on this industry, what made Match who it is today, and all of the key debates that are driving this stock and all the commentary around it. Please enjoy this breakdown of Match Group. Read the Bristlemoon Capital MTCH Report. Interested in hiring from the Colossus Community? Click here. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus Converge — the first virtual event centered on the world of investor research. When twin brothers Tom and Mike Elnick realized that the research process for investors was broken, they founded Tegus to fix it. Now the people behind the most trusted research platform are bringing institutional investors together to investigate the state — and the future — of fundamental research. On November 8th, join industry luminaries like IGSB Founder Reece Duca and Daniel Gross, AI Expert, Entrepreneur and Investor, to dig into the latest research trends and breakthrough technologies shaping the investment landscape. Register today at tegus.com/register. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:03:10) - (First question) - George’s response since releasing his recent report on Match (00:04:55) - A general overview of the online dating market (00:10:55) - Comparing the different brands within the dating app industry   (00:14:10) - The reason for the existence of so many niche brands in the market (00:18:55) - The different avenues for these brands when it comes to monetization  (00:21:25) - The breakdown of revenue per customer and the different tiers dating apps offer  (00:24:10) - Customer turnover due to the nature of dating and how the retention rate differs between the different apps (00:28:40) - A snapshot of how the industry has been growing over recent years (00:29:50) - Determining normalized earning profiles and margins when taking into account the lack of marketing spend historically (00:32:40) - The historical percentage of revenue that goes into marketing expenses (00:35:10) - How Bumble’s advertising expenditure differs from Match Group brands (00:36:40) - Price competition between different brands and a look at Tinder’s introduction of premium monetization tiers (00:39:20) - Dissecting top-line growth and the percentage due to recent price increases  (00:40:10) - An overview of the business’ capital allocation and how they intend to invest in the growth of the business (00:42:50) - The new management team’s strategy and how it differs from the previous regimes (00:46:25) - Potential changes to Apple app store fees and how it could affect the business  (00:51:10) - A forward outlook at where George expects the business to go in the coming years (00:54:40) - The key risks to the business moving forward (00:57:20) - The threat that Facebook poses in terms of its entry into the market  (01:02:20) - The lessons learned from researching Match
01:09:1025/10/2023
Olin: Chemistry and Cash Flows - [Business Breakdowns, EP.132]

Olin: Chemistry and Cash Flows - [Business Breakdowns, EP.132]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down Olin Corporation. Olin is a key player in industrial chemicals but many of those chemicals are used in products that we encounter on a day-to-day basis. To break down Olin, I'm joined by Yinan Zhao from Pzena Investment Management. Together we cover the chlor-alkali market, what it means to be the lowest-cost producer of a given commodity, and how Olin has shifted its business model and its operational model to help sustain earnings through cycles. Please enjoy this breakdown of Olin Corp. Interested in hiring from the Colossus Community? Click here. Subscribe to Colossus's New Show: Art of Investing For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:01:33) - (First question) - An elevator pitch for Olin (00:02:56) - Investors looking at DuPont also look at Olin from a subsector perspective  (00:03:55) - A brief history of Olin’s business (00:07:40) - The process of creating Chloralkali and its uses (00:11:25) - The similarities and differences when comparing the crude oil refining process and the creation of Chloralkali (00:12:21) - The use of Olin’s chlorine in residential public pools  (00:12:48) - The breakdown of manufacturing operations of Olin, control versus outsourcing (00:18:14) - A snapshot of the revenue percentages of Olin’s businesses (00:19:13) - The percentage range of Olin’s cyclical commodities  (00:20:06) - The end markets that Olin integrates itself in (00:22:47) - A background on CEO Scott Sutton and the shift in operating philosophy (00:29:09) - Olin’s confidence in its new optimization strategies (00:33:49) - The downside risk to Olin’s new business model (00:35:53) - A breakdown of Olin’s CapEx spending  (00:37:17) - The margin profile and EBITDA growth, historically and how it looks now (00:38:20) - The difficulties in forecasting and similarities with oil refinery volatility (00:40:02) - Market futures activity and hedging (00:41:49) - The Winchester business and its position within the overall Olin pie (00:43:49) - The announcement to the departure of Scott Sutton and the risks posed (00:48:11) - Other potential risks to Olin’s business moving forward (00:49:11) - A look at Olin’s ESG ranking  (00:51:35) - Valuing the business and what investors might think about Olin (00:53:12) - Lessons learned from researching Olin
58:0718/10/2023
WEX: Fleet Cards - [Business Breakdowns, EP.131]

WEX: Fleet Cards - [Business Breakdowns, EP.131]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down WEX, a big fish in a less known pond. WEX is a leader in the fleet card market - they offer trucking businesses special credit cards which help secure advantaged rates on fuel among many other things. This is a business with a long history as WEX is headquartered in Maine, and really came to life in the 1980s.  To break down WEX, I'm joined by Mark Tomasovic from Energize Capital, a multiple-time guest on Business Breakdowns. We get into the history of this industry and how WEX found a very creative way to accelerate adoption within this market. Please enjoy this breakdown of WEX. Subscribe to Colossus's New Show: Art of Investing Buy a ticket to Patrick and David Senra's live show. Interested in hiring from the Colossus Community? Click here. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus Converge — the first virtual event centered on the world of investor research. When twin brothers Tom and Mike Elnick realized that the research process for investors was broken, they founded Tegus to fix it. Now the people behind the most trusted research platform are bringing institutional investors together to investigate the state — and the future — of fundamental research. On November 8th, join industry luminaries like IGSB Founder Reece Duca and Daniel Gross, AI Expert, Entrepreneur and Investor, to dig into the latest research trends and breakthrough technologies shaping the investment landscape. Register today at tegus.com/register. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:57) - (First question) - An overview of what WEX is and what they do (00:03:50) - A summary of the market that WEX operates in (00:05:59) - The history of the company’s creation (00:08:53) - The importance of signing up large gas companies rather than retail locations (00:11:33) - Value propositions behind providing fleet cards  (00:12:53) - How the economic model works for the cards   (00:13:48) - The percentage of spend equivalent to Visa or Mastercard (00:14:31) - The difficulty behind switching from one fleet card provider to another  (00:17:05) - The role fuel prices play in the total revenue of the business (00:20:09) - Threats to consider on the supply end of the business   (00:21:57) - Recharging at home and the process of receiving a credit (00:23:06) - Other businesses WEX is involved in (00:24:27) - A comparison between all of WEX’s businesses and where they direct focus (00:25:13) - A look into their health and employee benefits line  (00:26:39) - The overall financial profile from a revenue and margins standpoint (00:28:43) - How big players like Amazon or Walmart play a part in potential business (00:30:02) - The threat of Visa or Mastercard entering the same space (00:31:17) - Total amount of revenue generated from electric vehicle fleets   (00:33:27) - Electric charging locations and the process of building these facilities (00:35:13) - Technology invested into creating faster charging stations (00:35:50) - An overall look at risks for the business (00:37:54) - Other parts of WEX that stand out (00:40:10) - Lessons learned from studying WEX
41:5613/10/2023
Equifax: Your Score & More - [Business Breakdowns, EP.130]

Equifax: Your Score & More - [Business Breakdowns, EP.130]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down the data services giant, Equifax. Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax have built this fascinating oligopoly worth studying, but the business has extended well beyond the credit checks on mortgages. Their employee verification tool, The Work Number, may be their most valuable asset today. To break down Equifax, I'm joined by Mo Spolan, analyst at Weitz Investments. We dive into both sides of the business, the unique industry structures that they sit in, the history around competition, and Equifax's future outlook. The newest podcast from Colossus, Art of Investing is dropping next week! This is going to be a series of discussions with the world's best investors, company builders, academics, athletes, artists, and any human beings devoted to exploring the joys of compounding in all its forms. The first two episodes will be released on Monday, October 9. Art of Investing: Trailer Interested in hiring from the Colossus Community? Click here. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 60,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:00:58) - (First question) - How Equifax extends beyond credit checks (00:05:02) - Evolution from the Wild West of credit to a tech-driven, regulated oligopoly (00:10:21) - Give-to-get model builds network; compiles detailed credit history (00:12:16) - How credit bureaus grow with GDP and loan volumes (00:15:19) - The shift from three to two credit checks for mortgages (00:23:16) - Facing cyclical shifts, credit bureaus' margins decline with IT investments (00:25:29) - How The Work Number, acquired by Equifax, has evolved into a critical income verification service (00:28:50) - Ingesting exclusive data, Equifax dominates income verification via a large network (00:32:51) - How Work Number stays atop the verification market despite competition (00:43:36) - Increasing Work Number margins lift Equifax; HR paperwork still strategically important (00:44:57) - Work Number poised for solid double-digit growth; boosts overall business outlook (00:51:15) - The 2017 Equifax breach led to executive shakeup and strategic focus shift (00:55:57) - Increasing competitive intensity, aggressive pricing, and potential regulation are key risks for Equifax (00:59:46) - Lessons learned from studying Equifax
01:03:2004/10/2023
Boeing: Turbulent Times - [Business Breakdowns, EP.129]

Boeing: Turbulent Times - [Business Breakdowns, EP.129]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down Boeing. Founded in Seattle in 1916 by William Boeing, the company has produced thousands of commercial and military aircraft over the past century. It is an important national and global asset and one-half of arguably the most famous duopoly in business, alongside Airbus. To break down Boeing, I’m joined by Jon Ostrower, founder and editor-in-chief of The Air Current. You can split Boeing’s business into three segments: commercial, defense, and services. For this discussion, we focus mostly on Boeing’s commercial business, which accounted for nearly 40% of its revenues last year. We talk about the cost and complexity of building new airplanes, how the 737 MAX disaster changed the business, and why the future of commercial planes may look radically different. Please enjoy this business breakdown of Boeing. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:38) - (First question) - An introduction to the aerospace industry and Boeing's role in it (00:05:41) - Boeing's business model today (00:09:52) - How the aerospace industry settled into a duopoly (00:12:30) - Costs associated with airplane manufacturing (00:14:02) - The life expectancy of an aircraft (00:14:46) - Dealing with the supply coordination problem (00:17:39) - The Boeing and McDonnell Douglas merger (00:20:51) - Problems Boeing has faced over the past five years (00:25:44) - How leadership turnover has permeated through Boeing (00:28:03) - Competitive headwinds Boeing can face (00:33:10) - How Boeing will grow in the aerospace industry (00:37:39) - Boeing's eVTOL strategy (00:41:42) - What is impacting the profitability of the business (00:43:38) - The biggest challenge facing the aerospace industry (00:44:57) - Lessons learned from studying Boeing
47:0827/09/2023
Kingspan: Influential Irish Insulation - [Business Breakdowns, EP.128]

Kingspan: Influential Irish Insulation - [Business Breakdowns, EP.128]

This is Dom Cooke and today we’re breaking down an Irish business that has become the global leader in insulation products for buildings. Founded in 1965, the business is called Kingspan and today it has a market cap of nearly 13 billion euros. The bulk of their business comes from insulating big, commercial new builds – Tesla Factories, Apple’s Headquarters, the Emirates Stadium in London – all places where you’ll find Kingspan’s products. To break down this business, I’m joined by Nick Griffin, the Founding Partner and CIO of Munro Partners. We talk about the ESG tailwinds behind this business, how they’ve grown through acquisitions, and their interesting go-to-market motion. Please enjoy this Business Breakdown of Kingspan. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:35) - (First question) - He gives us a detailed description of Kingspan (00:03:28) - Investing in a company based on the other side of the world (00:05:14) - Whether Kingspan is more commercial or residential driven  (00:05:55) - Kingspan’s origins (00:08:35) - Description of an insulated panel and how it is used (00:12:38) - What makes their panels the best in the world (00:15:25) - The benefits of doing both commercial and residential panels (00:16:08) - Industry characteristics and its overall market share (00:17:54) - The pricing mechanism and pricing power behind the product (00:21:26) - Kingspan’s expansion into the world market  (00:22:53) - The secret sauce behind the success of Kingspan  (00:25:01) - Kingspan’s economy to scale (00:27:42) - What he finds interesting about Kingspan’s financial profile  (00:29:15) - Splitting revenue growth between organic and inorganic growth (00:32:35) - The visibility of Kingspan’s products and their measurable efficiency       (00:34:50) - His expectations for Kingspan’s growth over the next 10 to 15 years (00:34:05) - The margin structure of the acquired businesses (00:37:12) - The life expectancy of the insulation product (00:38:35) - Risks behind insulated panels and the industry (00:42:22) - His evaluation of business modeling for acquisitions  (00:43:23) - Which competitors does he watch most closely    (00:44:49) - The lessons learned from studying Kingspan for 10 years 
47:4113/09/2023
Padel: Causing a Racket - [Business Breakdowns, EP.127]

Padel: Causing a Racket - [Business Breakdowns, EP.127]

This is Dom Cooke and today’s breakdown is a little different. Last week we looked at the most popular sport in the world in Football. Today, we break down the business behind a sport in its relative infancy - Padel. This racket sport started in the late 60s in Mexico and became big in many Spanish speaking countries. It then got a significant COVID bump and momentum has remained strong since. To break down this burgeoning sport, I’m joined by Alan Flatt, CEO and President of EEP Capital. We look at the dynamics of the sport that are making it popular, the investment characteristics of Padel Clubs, and how sustainable its recent growth is. We also cover the differences to a sport that has become big in the US, Pickleball. Please enjoy this business breakdown of Padel. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 60,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:41) - (First question) - A background on the sport of Padel (00:03:38) - The size and scope of Padel today (00:05:35) - The origins of the sport and its growth around the world up until now (00:06:31) - Covid and Pickleball’s impact on the growth of Padel over the last 5 years (00:07:08) - The main differences between Padel and Pickleball (00:09:12) - Padel’s universal attraction being its ease of entry for beginners (00:10:41) - Alan’s story of how he became involved with Padel as an investment (00:12:16) - Investing in Padel clubs and looking at Padel’s previous growth in other territories  (00:15:53) - What makes an attractive location for a Padel club (00:18:14) - The costs involved with starting a Padel club (00:21:53) - A look at the Padel Brooklyn location’s business model (00:25:12) - The margin profile of a Padel club (00:26:51) - Other sports and businesses with comparative models (00:28:55) - How the current supply issue can be resolved (00:33:06) - The current state of the US Pro League and how it might change (00:37:50) - A breakdown of the teams and schedule of the US Pro League (00:39:32) - The makeup of a Padel Pro League team (00:40:49) - The strategic priority list for the Pro League in order to meet its growth goals (00:44:28) - As a whole, how the sport of Padel can grow and the target markets for adoption (00:46:07) - How close the sport is to becoming an Olympic sport (00:48:20) - The risks that Padel faces (00:51:46) - The lessons Alan has learned and can share with operators and investors
55:2206/09/2023
The Business of Football - [Business Breakdowns, EP.126]

The Business of Football - [Business Breakdowns, EP.126]

This is Dom Cooke and today we’re breaking down the business behind the most popular sport in the world, Football or Soccer. It’s a vast market. 3 billion people around the world watch the sport and more than €30 billion euros are spent within the football ecosystem in Europe alone each year. But aside from a huge addressable market and reasonable revenue, is it actually a good business? Why do investors keep buying Football clubs? Is there any economic rationale behind that? Is there a link between sporting and financial success? Has middle-eastern money distorted the transfer market for good? These are some of the questions I asked our guest, Dr Rob Wilson, who is a football finance expert and Head of the finance, accounting, and business systems department at Sheffield Hallam University. I hope you enjoy us breakdown the business of football. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 drivable global models hand-built by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:03:16) - (First question) - Defining the European football market (00:05:12) - How the Premier League defined itself as the world’s best league (00:08:16) - The delegation of funds based on a team’s final position in the league (00:11:19) - A brief introduction to the breakaway European Super League (00:12:53) - The sale of Manchester United and how it affects the scope of the footballing world (00:18:34) - The role emotion plays when it comes to buying and selling of football clubs (00:20:47) - The makeup of a well run football club (00:23:54) - The four-pillar model and exploring new revenue streams in football (00:25:59) - The utilization of ‘access all areas’ type documentaries as a source of revenue (00:28:40) - Breaking down the return on investment for football clubs building new stadiums  (00:33:51) - Financial regulations in football and a brief history of UEFA’s Financial Fair Play (00:40:41) - The correlation between sporting and financial performance (00:42:23) - The different types of football club ownership profiles    (00:44:51) - Reasons why investors choose to enter the football market (00:48:12) - Changes to the football landscape since sovereign wealth funds have entered the market (00:51:36) - The importance of the transfer market to football clubs (00:53:03) - How the fans fit into the sport moving forward (00:55:52) - Potential opportunities for TV revenue streams by entering new market places  (00:56:55) - The relationship between the clubs and the leagues (00:58:20) - The lessons learned from researching the football industry
59:4430/08/2023
Casey’s General Stores: Fueling Convenience - [Business Breakdowns, EP.125]

Casey’s General Stores: Fueling Convenience - [Business Breakdowns, EP.125]

Today we are going into the land of convenience stores to break down Casey's General Stores. Casey's currently operates in 16 states in the Midwest and Southern US. As of this recording, they have close to a $10 billion market cap and are the number three player in their market. To break down Casey's, Matt Reustle is joined by Markus Hansen, portfolio manager and senior analyst at Vontobel Asset Management. We cover the industry of convenience stores, including the competition that exists in this market and the unique geographical considerations. We also discuss the financial model, drivers of gasoline performance versus in-store purchases, and margin profiles across the different segments of this business. This is another fascinating story hidden in plain sight. Please enjoy this breakdown of Casey's. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:42) - (First question) - The concept of Casey’s General Stores  (00:06:04) - Casey’s competitors and the market share in different regions (00:10:52) - The main differences between Casey’s and a regular gas station   (00:14:09) - A brief history on Casey’s beginnings and its founder (00:17:25) - A breakdown of the business’ revenue (00:19:14) - Casey's growth despite the changing environment standards raising operational costs (00:23:52) - The business’ margin profile (00:26:53) - How Casey’s General competes with its peers and fuel pricing (00:29:33) - The focus for Casey’s with regards to expansion opportunities  (00:33:06) - The hurdles involved with building new gas stations versus acquiring existing stores (00:35:08) - Casey’s stance on franchising (00:38:02) - The company’s attractiveness to buyers (00:40:52) - Casey’s General’s average stock performance (00:44:26) - Key risks of Casey’s (00:47:30) - The main lessons learned from Casey’s General Stores Important Information: Information provided represents the views of a company of the Vontobel Group (“Vontobel”) and should not be considered investment advice and/or legal, tax, financial or other advice. Further, not a recommendation to purchase, hold or sell any investment and no representation is given that the securities discussed are suitable for any particular investor. Although Vontobel believes that the information provided in this document is based on reliable sources, it cannot assume responsibility for the quality, correctness, timeliness or completeness of the information contained in this document.
48:2223/08/2023
Take-Two Interactive: GTA and NBA 2K - [Business Breakdowns, EP.124]

Take-Two Interactive: GTA and NBA 2K - [Business Breakdowns, EP.124]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down Take-Two Interactive Software. If you listened to our Business Breakdown on Electronic Arts, Take Two is another giant in the video game publishing space. They are best known for their Grand Theft Auto and 2K franchise. To break down Take-Two I'm joined by Eric Kress, principal at Gossamer Consulting Group. Eric spent multiple decades inside the video game market, both as an investor and as an operator, and we tap into his perspective from both sides of the table. We drill into historic IP, the strategy behind new releases and what mobile means for the market, and specifically for Take Two. Please enjoy this breakdown of Take-Two. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 60,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:35) - (First question) - Brief overview of Take-Two (00:03:32) - Take-Two's acquisition of Zynga represents a significant push into mobile gaming (00:05:05) - Mobile gaming faces challenges from Apple's IDFA removal and Google's changes (00:06:37) - Apple's privacy changes benefit them but hurt mobile publishers (00:07:50) - How Take-Two evolved from PC and console to mobile (00:10:48) - Console and PC target AAA games; mobile reaches a broader, less premium market (00:12:53) - Creating new iconic AAA gaming IP is nearly impossible due to high costs (00:15:08) - Big IP success in gaming historically depended on retail relationships and distribution (00:17:39) - Sports games have almost 100% revenue visibility; others like GTA fluctuate (00:19:31) - GTA's next release is anticipated and guaranteed to sell millions, but post-launch is uncertain (00:25:24) - Risk of new console alignment affects expectations for next GTA game release (00:27:57) - Updating titles for different consoles has become less complicated with PC architecture (00:29:44) - Pricing at $60-$70; new tech may boost in-game spending (00:31:30) - GTA's mature nature makes in-game advertising tough (00:32:59) - NBA license with 2K is a partnership, not exclusive (00:35:28) - Take-Two lacks profitable titles beyond GTA and 2K (00:37:57) - EA smartly bought Respawn and built studios; Take-Two lacks similar capability (00:39:29) - Gaming industry consolidated to fewer franchises; similar to film industry's trend (00:44:07) - Zynga's acquisition was ill-timed; it's a declining asset with no value (00:47:32) - Microsoft's deal may lead to Amazon or Comcast buying Take-Two (00:50:11) - Valuing these businesses often relies on traditional PE methods (00:52:06) - Key risks for Take-Two are overhyped GTA expectations and service burnout (00:53:37) - Lessons learned from studying Take-Two
54:5116/08/2023
Nubank: David vs Goliaths - [Business Breakdowns, EP.123]

Nubank: David vs Goliaths - [Business Breakdowns, EP.123]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down Nubank. The Brazilian-based neobank has gone from nothing to extraordinary scale in a short period of time. 10 years after its founding, the company counts 46% of Brazil’s adult population as customers, is the largest Fintech in Latin America, and has a market capitalization of $37 billion. The fact that it’s achieved this in an environment that heavily favored the large incumbent banks makes its story all the more impressive. To break down the business, I am joined by Daniel Bakalarz, Managing Partner at Unison Asset Management. Dan has a long history with this business and it shows in our discussion. We discuss the confluence of factors that made this business possible, the economics of a typical Nubank customer, and the competitive dynamics of banking in South America. Please enjoy this business breakdown of Nubank. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 drivable global models hand-built by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:44) - (First question) - A background on neobanks and how Nubank is unique (00:04:17) - The company’s origin story and how it moved up the value chain over time (00:09:43) - Nubank’s rise to a becoming a market leader in just a decade since its formation in 2013 (00:17:04) - The backdrop in Brazil that led to the opportunity for Nubank to enter the market (00:23:34) - A breakdown of Nubank’s revenue (00:29:06) - The makeup of a mature Nubank customer and the company’s average revenue from that customer (00:33:33) - Reasons for the business pricing its annual percentage rates so aggressively  (00:34:18) - The comparison between the business and traditional bank holding companies in the US and South America (00:43:40) - Potential opportunities for Nubank in the future (00:52:12) - The biggest risks to the company moving forward (00:57:30) - Brazilian regulator's opinion on Nubank’s rise in the market in context of its large established peers (00:59:54) - Lessons learned from studying the business (01:05:06) - Dan’s parting wisdom on Nubank and what he wants people to take away from this breakdown
01:05:5309/08/2023
Argenx: Changing Lives with Llamas - [Business Breakdowns, EP.122]

Argenx: Changing Lives with Llamas - [Business Breakdowns, EP.122]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital. Today, we're breaking down Argenx, an immunology company founded in 2008 by its three founding partners. Today, it's a $30 billion company set to produce over a billion dollars in sales. They're known for their skill in developing antibodies for complex disease targets and owe a large part of their medical breakthroughs to llamas, which have similar antibodies in their immune system to those found in humans.  To break down Argenx, I'm joined by Julia Angeles, an investment manager at Baillie Gifford. Throughout this conversation, we'll discuss how Argenx navigates the complex world of drug development, clinical trials, regulatory approvals, and the ultimate commercialization of autoimmune therapies. We'll also learn more about their transition from a venture capital backed business to its 2017 IPO, and today, a meaningful revenue generating business. We hope you enjoy this business breakdown. Note: This conversation was recorded on 19 July 2023. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Shownotes (00:03:49) - (First question) - Ways the immune system protects us and fails us (00:06:00) - Current patient treatments and evolving solutions to existing problems  (00:07:52) - The key difference between how the biotech community is addressing big diseases versus autoimmune disorders (00:09:55) - What sparked Julia’s interest in Argenx (00:14:01) - Explanation how we use animal antibodies to help research progression (00:15:25) - The foundations of the business (00:17:57) - The evolution of the business and its commercial success thus far (00:20:22) - Transitioning from lab antibodies to a commercial product ready for consumers (00:23:42) - The infrastructure needed to maintain and grow Argenx (00:26:43) - Indicators of commercial success (00:29:27) - The basic revenue model for this business type (00:30:49) - Go to market strategies for developed drugs  (00:34:39) - Pricing and patient protection of these newly developed drugs  (00:37:46) - Cures versus creating treatments with recurring revenue streams (00:39:38) - The importance of the current team composition  (00:41:44) - Julia’s perspective on what they are willing to invest to grow the company (00:43:49) - Normalized profitability for biotech companies such as this (00:45:59) - Potential risks to the current business model (00:49:22) - Lessons learned from studying Argenx
43:5902/08/2023
Copart: The Car Undertaker - [Business Breakdowns, EP.121]

Copart: The Car Undertaker - [Business Breakdowns, EP.121]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down the vehicle auction giant, Copart. You may be unfamiliar with Copart but, at the time of this recording, the company has a $40 billion market cap. They operate in over 200 locations across the globe and they sell north of 3 million cars per year on behalf of their unique customer base. Copart is a unique story in a very concentrated industry where they likely have 50% market share. It's a story defined by evolution. Its founder, Willis Johnson, didn't merely adopt a junkyard mentality. He was born into it, molded by it. To break down Copart, I'm joined by Adam Mead, CEO and Chief Investment Officer of Mead Capital Management. We cover all the angles of this unique industry giant. Please enjoy this breakdown of Copart. Access Adam's Copart writeup for free here. Choose the October 2022 Copart issue and use the code "Breakdowns" for 100% off.  For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 60,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:32) - (First question) - An overview of Copart (00:04:16) - The size and scope of the market  (00:04:52) - The process of a vehicle entering into Copart’s system  (00:06:36) - The other side of the marketplace, who buys from Copart (00:08:16) - Selling cars whole or dismantling and how this has changed from the early days of the business (00:09:55) - An overview of Willis Johnson’s career, forming Copart and his involvement today  (00:13:26) - The financial structure of the business in the early days (00:14:59) - Copart’s differences from the competition  (00:18:42) - Biggest drivers of supply. Accidents, natural disasters, wear and tear   (00:22:12) - Cashflow flow through, the economics for Copart (00:24:08) - Associated costs with regards to the sale and movement of vehicles  (00:26:12) - Average inventory numbers throughout the year (00:27:32) - The margin profile of the business on a normalized basis (00:29:29) - A breakdown of the CapEx budget on a yearly basis (00:33:42) - The major drivers of growth for Copart  (00:37:16) - The buyback history, stated goal and philosophy on dividends (00:38:38) - Historical and potential future risks to the business   (00:42:00) - The insurance companies’ opinion of the business, net positive or net negative (00:43:37) - The framework investors use when valuing this business (00:47:17) - Lessons learned from the research and analysis of Copart 
50:2926/07/2023
Lululemon Athletica: The Athleisure Leader - [Business Breakdowns, EP.120]

Lululemon Athletica: The Athleisure Leader - [Business Breakdowns, EP.120]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down Lululemon Athletica. The Canadian company, founded by Chip Wilson in 1998, has grown from a pop-up store in a yoga class to a $45 billion apparel business. Along the way, it pioneered the trend of athleisure and forever changed what women and men wear to work out in. To break down the business, I am joined by John Zolidis, president and founder of Quo Vadis Capital. We explore the origins of Lululemon’s direct to consumer growth strategy, how it has remained relevant in an industry known for fleeting success, and how its business model compares to apparel giants like Nike. Please enjoy this business breakdown of Lululemon.  For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:30) - (First question) - An overview of Lululemon (00:03:27) - Lululemon's success lies in branding, innovation, and community involvement (00:05:53) - Evaluating their growth story and investment potential (00:09:57) - Chip Wilson’s history and influence (00:16:53) - Management transitions, operational issues, and turnaround under new leadership (00:20:01) - Lululemon's success lies in its functional product and strong brand message (00:23:13) - Fending off competition through unique branding and customer engagement (00:26:31) - Lulu aims to grow men's business to complement women's dominance and reach (00:28:46) - China offers significant growth potential for Lululemon (00:32:35) - Focusing on vertical integration and limited wholesale channels (00:34:21) - Lulu's higher gross margins stem from product mix and DTC focus (00:37:08) - Increased capital expenditure is primarily allocated to store openings (00:40:18) - Mirror acquisition didn't meet expectations, unlikely to repeat such deals (00:42:30) - Significant risks for Lululemon's future (00:44:48) - Lessons learned from studying Lululemon
46:2919/07/2023
Toast: The Restaurant Operating System - [Business Breakdowns, EP.119]

Toast: The Restaurant Operating System - [Business Breakdowns, EP.119]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down the vertical market software business, Toast. Toast is a software platform built specifically for restaurants. Their operating system gives restauranteurs all the tools they need to serve customers, from taking orders to allocating shifts. It was founded in 2011 and went public a decade later. Today, it’s used by nearly 80,000 restaurants across the US. To breakdown Toast, I’m joined by Will Schreiber, the co-founder and CEO of Bottle – an ecommerce platform built for subscription businesses. We cover the different ways that Toast minimises the complexities of operating a restaurant, how their deep vertical focus has helped them outcompete Square, and how much room there is for potential growth. Please enjoy this breakdown of Toast.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:01:42) - (First question) - An overview of Toast (00:04:16) - Toast's origins and pivot to Point-of-Sale (POS) solutions (00:07:35) - Convincing restaurants to switch from antiquated systems to modern POS solutions (00:09:48) - The complexity of restaurant operations requires efficient POS systems (00:13:04) - An overview of the POS revenue model (00:17:16) - Addressable market and limiting it intentionally with pricing  (00:20:04) - How their tech expertise enabled them to build a hardware and software ecosystem (00:23:23) - The Toast network effect and their potential margin profile at full scale  (00:26:19) - Their revenue mix impacts its margin profile, with transaction revenue dominating (00:27:37) - How they aim to dominate the restaurant industry with comprehensive services (00:29:59) - APIs enable integration, yet in-house features may risk partner relationships (00:33:45) - The key risks for Toast moving forward (00:38:40) - Why expanding beyond restaurants could challenge Toast (00:41:02) - Third-party integrations may erode Toast's point-of-sale dominance (00:44:36) - Lessons learned from studying Toast
50:3612/07/2023
Applied Materials: Sanding Atoms - [Business Breakdowns, EP.118]

Applied Materials: Sanding Atoms - [Business Breakdowns, EP.118]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down the biggest manufacturer of chip making equipment in the world, Applied Materials. Last week, we looked at the other leading equipment maker in the semi-industry, ASML, and while that business currently has a higher market cap, Applied Materials generated more revenue and profit last year. It earned $26 billion, spent $3 billion on R&D and currently has 17,300 patents. To explore the business behind those numbers, I’m joined by Dylan Patel, Chief Analyst at SemiAnalysis. Dylan takes us through the industry’s evolution, how Applied’s business differs to ASML, and how geopolitics is a double-edged sword. Please enjoy this breakdown of Applied Materials. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 60,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:33) - (First question) - An overview of the vital and diverse semiconductor industry (00:05:11) - The shift to specialization in semiconductors (00:09:04) - Geopolitical factors that impact the sector (00:12:16) - The dynamic evolution of Applied Materials (00:15:22) - What differentiates Applied Materials from their competitors (00:18:52) - Strong margins, growth, and efficient capital allocation drive their financials  (00:22:00) - The cyclical nature of the semiconductor industry (00:24:36) - Optimizing equipment for next-gen chips through collaboration with manufacturers (00:29:09) - How Applied Materials' specialization limits equipment changes for manufacturers (00:32:54) - Contributing factors to Applied Materials' continued growth (00:36:05) - Market share varies by equipment and processes (00:39:13) - Biggest risks for Applied (00:41:23) - AI's growing demand for semiconductors (00:43:20) - Lessons learned from studying Applied Materials
46:2105/07/2023
ASML: Competing with Moore’s Law - [Business Breakdowns, EP.117]

ASML: Competing with Moore’s Law - [Business Breakdowns, EP.117]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are back covering the semiconductor value chain. ASML was once a forgotten subsidiary of Philips. Today, it's one of the most important technology companies in the world. To break down ASML, I'm joined by Tom Walsh, a portfolio manager at Baillie Gifford. Tom helps explain what's happening inside an extreme ultraviolet lithography machine, and how ASML came to pioneer this technology from the Netherlands. It was a non-traditional path to say the least. This breakdown pairs very well with our breakdowns on AMD, Qualcomm and Cadence. And I'd also highlight the Founders Podcast episode #8 on the Intel Trinity. Please enjoy this breakdown of ASML. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:44) - (First question) - The ASML back story (00:06:14) - A deep dive into what semiconductors and Lithography are   (00:08:04) - Alternate business directions ASML could have pursued  (00:19:39) - How large ASML is in the industry today (00:10:37) - A look into the management team over time (00:14:03) - Moore’s Law and the key components of chip production (00:15:09) - Overall size of the machines manufactured (00:16:14) - The evolution of UV light and its important role in the advancement of Lithography  (00:20:29) - Other competing companies within the field  (00:23:10) - A detailed look into the cost of production industry wide (00:24:04) - Unlocked innovations associated with the development technology  (00:25:32) - The life cycle of a lithography machine (00:27:04) - Revenue gained from new versus refurbished machines (00:27:27) - The cyclicality of the ASML machine revenue (00:29:32) - Potential production limitations due to capacity (00:31:00) - Margin profile and how ASML sets prices (00:32:33) - What the concentration of customers looks like (00:37:00) - Reasons why an acquisition has not taken place to date (00:38:42) - He explains where investor cash flow is directed (00:40:01) - An investors perspective on ASML opportunities  (00:42:24) - How milestones in new technology are regulated and measured (00:45:40) - Potential business risks (00:49:21) - Lessons he’s learned from studying ASML
51:3828/06/2023
Roku: One Stop Streaming Shop - [Business Breakdowns, EP.116]

Roku: One Stop Streaming Shop - [Business Breakdowns, EP.116]

This is Jesse Pujji and today we are breaking down Roku. With all the hype about social media and smartphones, it’s easy to forget that the average American still spends over 5 hours a day watching TV. And while the streaming wars get most headline attention, the battle for the user interface of smart TVs also has billions of dollars at stake. Here, Roku has emerged as an unlikely frontrunner, ahead of Samsung, Google, Amazon and other giants. To breakdown Roku, I am joined by Joe Frankenfield, Portfolio Manager at Saga Partners. We cover Roku’s history, dive into its income statement, unpack why it is the leading Smart TV platform in the US, and what the future holds for it. Please enjoy this breakdown of Roku. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 60,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show notes (00:02:35) - (First question) - What is Roku: its scale and business model (00:04:37) - The history of Roku, major milestones, and the evolution of streaming (00:09:04) - The evolution of the content landscape after the inception of Roku’s device  (00:10:59) - The steps Roku is taking to become the choice provider for consumers (00:14:10) - A breakdown of Roku’s revenue streams (00:18:04) - Advertising versus subscription models (00:18:37) - Mental models for determining the size and scope of the company  (00:19:48) - How Roku acquires new customers, how marketing differs from old-school cable acquisition methods (00:21:20) - Reasons why Roku has won the majority market share (00:28:00) - Roku’s founder Anthony Wood’s importance to the business nowadays (00:29:04) - How Roku distributes its profits (00:31:14) - Roku’s acquisitions to date and the reason why the company has not yet been acquired by a bigger player (00:32:38) - Internal and external factors that could make or break Roku’s  growth expectations over the next 5 years (00:39:09) - The lessons that can be taken from the Roku story for platform builders and investors (00:41:37) - Learn more about Roku: Media in the Digital Age | We Now Disrupt this Broadcast | The Business of Media Distribution
41:3921/06/2023
Mobile Gaming: A Freemium Economy - [Business Breakdowns, EP.115]

Mobile Gaming: A Freemium Economy - [Business Breakdowns, EP.115]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down the mobile gaming industry. It was several months ago that I was reading an industry report for our Business Breakdown on Electronic Arts. I was shocked to see that mobile gaming was now 50% of the overall gaming market. What really stood out to me was just how different the business model is. You have smaller game developers operating with a completely different monetization model. It's the same industry but with drastically different strategies. To break down the industry, I'm joined by Eric Seufert. Eric spent his early career in the heart of mobile gaming, notably as a Vice President at Rovio, which developed Angry Birds. Today, Eric is the creator of Mobile Dev Memo, a publication focused on mobile monetization. For this conversation, Eric details the history and inflection points for mobile gaming, what the market structure looks like today, and how regulation and privacy have impacted the business model and strategies.  For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 35+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:24) - (First question) The year mobile gaming took off and the leaders in game development at that time (00:04:34) - The evolution of mobile game publishers since 2012   (00:08:50) - Mobile gaming business models; why “freemium” has thrived   (00:14:04) - The 95% rule for freemium; revenue per user is not as important when working truly within a freemium model    (00:21:18) - The ratio of average user retention vs great user retention; and measuring retention using DX values  (00:24:19) - Comparing game revenue before and after the decline curve of user base at the 30 day mark (00:29:23) - How much in-game advertising revenue makes up in the total revenue for a game (00:34:22) - The current business model for mobile gaming; 25 good games vs 1 viral hit game (00:37:32) - Balancing in-game advertising between outside revenue and a developer’s gaming portfolio; determining high-potential players based on their immediate in-game behavior  (00:43:17) - Eco-system development or consolidation; The enduring theme that Eric expects to stick around for the next 3-5 years (00:47:18) - The overall health of the mobile gaming market; how the Digital Markets Act in Europe may lead to the fracturing of app stores and the benefits to the industry of that
51:4814/06/2023
First Citizens Bank: The Bank Buyers - [Business Breakdowns, EP.114]

First Citizens Bank: The Bank Buyers - [Business Breakdowns, EP.114]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down First Citizens Bank. I'm joined by investors with plenty of experience investing in banks - Bill Nygren and Alex Fitch of Oakmark. First Citizens is a bank with 125 years of history but they don't operate like the bulge bracket Wall Street Banks. They don't even host quarterly conference calls. They have a playbook and they execute it, and their recent acquisition of Silicon Valley Bank fell into that playbook. In this conversation, Bill and Alex offer a really unique macro and micro view on bank investing and what stands out about First Citizens. Please enjoy this breakdown of First Citizens Bank.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:47) - (First question) - A primer on investing in banks (00:09:27) - The appeal of First Citizens Bank (00:15:18) - How they leverage acquisitions, including FDIC auctions, for a competitive edge (00:21:42) - How their risk management and protective measures foster resilience and growth (00:26:22) - The significant impact of prioritizing relationship-based and specialized lending (00:28:51) - Why they adjust risk parameters during the integration with other banks (00:30:38) - How they leverage loyal customers and low costs to achieve strong profitability  (00:33:21) - Rapid fund movement during the SVB event raises market change concerns (00:36:58) - Overview of bank investment opportunities (00:42:48) - The key drivers of their business model (00:47:43) - Rebuilding relationships with former depositors to retain SVB deposits (00:51:23) - Their emphasis on relationships and strategic acquisitions (00:53:30) - How the regulatory framework plays a key role in de-risking the banking system (00:57:00) - The key risks for First Citizens moving forward (00:58:39) - Why volatile interest rate changes impacted banks (01:00:08) - Lessons learned from studying First Citizens
01:03:1407/06/2023
PayPal: A Digital Money Marketplace - [Business Breakdowns, EP.113]

PayPal: A Digital Money Marketplace - [Business Breakdowns, EP.113]

This is Dom Cooke and today we’re breaking down PayPal. PayPal has been at the forefront of digital payments since the early days of the internet. Founded by Peter Thiel, Elon Musk and others, who have since become household names, PayPal is a payments marketplace that facilitates transactions between merchants and consumers. It found product market fit as the trusted way to send money over the internet, was quickly acquired by eBay, and had its second founding moment in 2015 when it was spun off into a public company again. The platform serves 435 million consumers and merchants and processed $1.4 trillion of payments last year. To break down the business, I’m joined by Elliot Turner, managing partner and CIO at RGA Investment Advisors. We discuss the acquisitive history behind this business, how their portfolio of brands like Braintree, Venmo, and Honey operate within the ecosystem, and why VISA threatened to go nuclear on PayPal. Please enjoy this business breakdown of PayPal.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 55,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:40) - (First question) Important milestones leading to the genesis of PayPal (00:08:18) - eBay's acquisition of PayPal and the subsequent separation (00:12:13) - The size and scope of PayPal today (00:15:08) - Where PayPal fits within the overall payments ecosystem (00:18:33) - The various transaction types involved in their business economics (00:22:03) - How PayPal protects its users against fraudulent behavior (00:24:37) - PayPal’s business strategy of getting people comfortable with using digital money (00:27:31) - The value that driving customer engagement has on the bottom line (00:31:41) - How PayPal utilizes cash within its ecosystem (00:33:15) - Why Braintree has been such a success, and who they compete with (00:38:50) - How PayPal revenue is split into cash flow and profits (00:42:40) - What enables PayPal to maintain such a large advantage over its competitors  (00:46:03) - Identifying PayPal’s main competitors and partners (00:48:30) - The dynamics of PayPal's relationship with Apple (00:50:44) - How acquisition and R&D fosters their growth and innovation   (00:55:12) - Strategic changes adopted by PayPal to recover from the COVID period (00:56:42) - Speculation on who could replace Dan Schulman as PayPal’s CEO (00:58:52) - His thoughts on potential growth opportunities for PayPal’s next CEO (01:01:40) - Potential risks that PayPal may encounter in the future (01:04:10) - Lessons learned from studying PayPal
01:06:5331/05/2023
Restoration Hardware: Climbing the Luxury Mountain - [Business Breakdowns, EP.112]

Restoration Hardware: Climbing the Luxury Mountain - [Business Breakdowns, EP.112]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down Restoration Hardware. The average person would call RH a furniture company but RH is a company where the CEO feels as important as the business, and CEO Gary Friedman has aspirations well beyond selling furniture. To break down RH, I'm joined by Drew Cohen of Speedwell Research. You may remember Drew from our breakdown of Floor & Decor. We cover how Gary Friedman took Restoration Hardware from the brink of bankruptcy and has built it into a brand with luxury aspirations. We go deep on the business model, why has RH been leaning into this in person experience despite a massive e-commerce boom, the reality of interior designers, inventory management, and orchestrating a supply chain when you sell monstrous couches. There's a lot to talk about here. It's a fascinating business with a fascinating person sitting at the middle of it. Please enjoy this breakdown of RH.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:27) - (First question) - Restoration Hardware’s relevance in the market (00:04:37) - The origin story of Restoration Hardware (00:07:58) - Insight into Gary Friedman’s backstory and his entry into RH (00:09:52) - The current RH business model and how Gary has shaped that over time  (00:17:14) - Their unique marketing funnels  (00:19:47) - Their move into the luxury brand market (00:21:24) - Explaining how the product collections are made up (00:22:32) - Updated supplier relations model  (00:25:25) - Insight into the RH sales model (00:28:04) - Overview of the membership model and how it impacts the business (00:31:42) - Peers within the industry that are using similar business models (00:32:49) - Cyclical macro exposure sales growth over time (00:34:09) - Their operations and logistics model (00:39:03) - The impact of COVID-19 (00:40:15) - Expected working capital for RH and other furniture peers (00:42:36) - Peer group average margin growth (00:45:56) - Key decisions and investments that need to go right (00:48:41) - European housing sizes and issues with American furniture (00:49:52) - Capital allocation history within RH (00:51:15) - How RH stays in style as decor tastes change over time (00:54:02) - His overall insight towards Gary’s ideas and risky business experiments (00:55:37) - His capital structure perspective for the future  (00:58:09) - How RH is moving into the luxury market as other brands move out  (00:59:09) - Lessons learned from studying Restoration Hardware
01:01:3124/05/2023
FICO: A High Score Business - [Business Breakdowns, EP.111]

FICO: A High Score Business - [Business Breakdowns, EP.111]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down Fair Isaac Corporation, commonly known as FICO. FICO is best known for its consumer credit scores product, which has become a common language across the world of consumer loans and banking. Less well known, but a major piece of the business, is FICO’s software offering that helps financial businesses with fraud detection, CRM, and loan origination. Between these two offerings – scores and software – FICO earned $1.3 billion last year. To break down the business, I’m joined by Dev Kantesaria, managing partner at Valley Forge Capital Management. In going through its history and business units, Dev explains why it would be tough to design a better business model than FICO. Please enjoy this breakdown of FICO.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. Tired of running your own expert calls to get up to speed on a company? Tegus lets you ramp faster and find answers to critical questions more efficiently than any alternative method. The gold standard for research, the Tegus platform delivers unmatched access to timely, qualitative insights through the largest and most differentiated expert call transcript database. With over 55,000 transcripts spanning 22,000 public and private companies, investors can accelerate their fundamental research process by discovering highly-differentiated and reliable insights that can’t be found anywhere else in the market. As a listener, drive your next investment thesis forward with Tegus for free at tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:40) - (First question) - What attracted him to FICO as a business (00:03:31) - An overview of their key products and the value they provide (00:06:01) - How FICO collaborates and competes with credit bureaus (00:11:23) - Their ability to sustain steady growth in a cyclical environment (00:12:48) - How FICO's software offerings complement their credit score business (00:14:13) - Who their competitors are (00:23:16) - The potential competitive risks of emerging A.I. technology (00:25:57) - Why the push for VantageScore in the mortgage industry created more competition for credit bureaus  (00:27:58) - The differences between their B2C and scores businesses  (00:30:38) - A breakdown of the software side of the business and its significance (00:34:26) - All about FICO’s Falcon Fraud Manager and Triad Customer Manager  (00:39:20) - FICO’s capital-light business model in detail (00:41:59) - The aspects of the business that investors often overlook or underestimate (00:45:18) - Lessons learned from studying FICO 
47:5617/05/2023
FC Bayern Munich: The Best Run Club in Football - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 110]

FC Bayern Munich: The Best Run Club in Football - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 110]

This is Dom Cooke and today we’re breaking down Bayern Munich. Bayern is Germany’s most successful football club and one of the world’s biggest. Most importantly, it makes a great case for being the best-run club in football. It has an enterprise value close to €3 billion, no debt, has been profitable for 3 decades, and is majority owned by fans. Plus, it has a trophy cabinet to rival any club worldwide. Bayern has won a record 32 national Bundesliga titles, including the last ten in a row, and has won the prestigious Champions League, six times. To break down the business behind the club, I’m joined by Marie Schulte-Bockum, a football journalist and Munich resident. Please enjoy this Business Breakdown of FC Bayern Munich. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 25+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:38) - (First question) - Overview of Bayern Munich (00:05:37) - How Bayern’s been able to maintain such consistent success writ large (00:12:39) - What the 50+1 rule is and its implications for German football clubs (00:17:24) - Major differences between the Bundesliga and other European leagues (00:22:30) - What it takes to run a high performance team like Bayern Munich (00:28:39) - Driving profits and the three major revenue buckets for Bayern Munich (00:35:48) - Germany’s influence being the biggest economy in the European Union (00:38:40) - How important European football is to every major club and broadcasting revenue (00:43:20) - Whether Bayern are buyers, builders, or borrowers in regards to their team  (00:51:15) - Overview of their expenses and the size of their wage bill  (00:53:43) - What financial fair play is and how it protects football clubs (00:57:27) - How they’ve managed to cultivate one of the biggest fanbases in the world (01:02:14) - Potential risks for Bayern Munich’s continued success (01:04:18) - League-level discussions around sharing revenue equitably  (01:05:34) - Lessons for builders and investors when studying Bayern Munich’s story 
01:07:4710/05/2023
MTN Group: Connecting Africa - [Business Breakdowns, EP.109]

MTN Group: Connecting Africa - [Business Breakdowns, EP.109]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down MTN Group. MTN is the largest mobile network operator in Africa and one of the 10 largest in the world. It has over 270 million subscribers, operates in 20 different markets, and is also one of the largest FinTech’s in the continent. To break down MTN, I’m joined by Benjamin Isaac, founder and Chief Investment Officer at Brizo Capital. We unpack their mobile money business in some detail, contrast the development of Telcos in Africa with what we’ve experienced in the US, and explore the competitive dynamics of operating in Africa. Please enjoy this breakdown of MTN.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors. Stretch your research budget with flexible expert calls you can trust. At a fraction of the cost of traditional expert networks, Tegus customers pay only what an expert charges – with zero markups and no confusing call credits – netting an average 70% savings. Don’t want to conduct a full hour call? Tegus offers the ability to schedule 30-minutes, an offer you won’t find anywhere else. And they don’t stop there. With white-glove custom sourcing for every project and robust compliance measures, including a dedicated 50+ analyst team that vets every call transcript, Tegus ensures your privacy and protection. As the industry innovator for qualitative insights, Tegus helps you find the right experts you need at a quality and speed that can’t be matched. For a limited time, as a listener, you can trial Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:24) - An overview of MTN Group today (00:04:13) - Contextualizing the scale and trajectory of the business vis-à-vis  its strong African demographic (00:05:52) - MTN Group’s unique position in the value chain (00:10:37) - The origin and the evolution of MTN Group (00:13:19) - The business’ current and future revenue models and how they differ domestically and internationally (00:15:52) - Comparing ARPU in North America and Africa (00:18:03) - His take on why the international fintech market is developing as rapidly as it is (00:22:48) - Understanding use cases for MTN Group’s mobile money products (00:27:57) - The low market share held by credit card companies in Africa, and the opportunity it represents for MTN Group (00:29:07) - Regional differences, local competition, and the overall market structure (00:30:42) - The architects, visionaries, and capital allocators behind MTN Group (00:34:33) - What structural separation means for a business like MTN Group (00:36:31) - Measuring the size and scale of the business (00:38:53) - Investing in emerging markets (00:42:59) - The importance of location in a mobile fintech company listing (00:45:09) - Risks and challenges facing MTN Group (00:49:53) - How African mobile and fintech markets fared during COVID (00:51:23) - Framing the business’ current and future picture of profitability (00:56:23) - Lessons learned in studying the story of MTN Group
01:00:2603/05/2023
Roper Technologies: Industrial Titan to Software Giant - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 108]

Roper Technologies: Industrial Titan to Software Giant - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 108]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down Roper Technologies. Roper is a fascinating case study in how an old industrial business can pivot into a new world focused on software and technology. Roper was founded in 1890 as a manufacturer of industrial equipment and home appliances but, today, it is one of the most profitable software businesses in the world. Much of the pivot and subsequent value creation can be credited to Brian Jellison, who took over in 2001. To break down Roper, I’m joined by Joseph Shaposhnik, portfolio manager of the TCW New America Premier Equities Fund. We discuss the business’s roots, Jellison’s acquisition strategy, and how Roper compares to other niche software acquirers like Constellation Software. Please enjoy this business breakdown of Roper Technologies. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors, and provider of Canalyst. Tired of calculating fully-diluted shares outstanding? Access every publicly-reported datapoint and industry-specific KPI through their database of over 4,000 driveable global models handbuilt by a team of sector-focused analysts, 25+ industry comp sheets, and Excel add-ins that let you use their industry-leading data in your own spreadsheets. Tegus’ models automatically update each quarter, including hard to calculate KPIs like stock-based compensation and organic growth rates, empowering investors to bypass the friction of sourcing, building and updating models. Make efficiency your competitive advantage and take back your time today. As a listener, you can trial Canalyst by Tegus for free by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:38) - (First question) - Basic overview of Roper (00:05:24) - The businesses history and its pivot away from its roots (00:08:53) - Brian Jellison’s background and his appreciation for software businesses (00:14:23) - The way Brian Jellison would distinguish himself from others in his space (00:20:35) - His focus on acquiring new businesses vs building them himself (00:26:08) - The 3 dials he used to assess capital allocation decisions and the performance of companies (00:29:12) - How they are able to grow and expand margin after acquisitions (00:30:58) - Difference between other vertically integrated businesses like Constellation (00:34:19) - The succession plan at Roper (00:38:00) - Risks to that people should think about when it comes to Roper (00:41:44) - Lessons learned from Roper
47:2326/04/2023
Dolby Laboratories: The Sound Standard - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 107]

Dolby Laboratories: The Sound Standard - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 107]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down Dolby Labs. Our favorite Breakdowns are those businesses, which are widely known but barely understood. Dolby fits the bill. You see the logo everywhere but what does Dolby technology do and how does the business work? To answer those questions and break down Dolby, I was joined by Paul Vincent and William Nott from investment manager, Ninety One. We cover the backstory of Ray Dolby, what Dolby's actually building and selling, and how the business model works. Please enjoy this breakdown of Dolby. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. (for me - https://joincolossus.com/episodes/69279744/vincent-dolby-the-sound-standard)  ----- This episode is brought to you by Tegus. Tegus is the modern research platform for leading investors. I’m a longtime user and advocate of Tegus, a company that I’ve been so consistently impressed with that last fall my firm, Positive Sum, invested $20M to support Tegus’ mission to expand its product ecosystem. Whether it’s quantitative analysis, company disclosures, management presentations, earnings calls - Tegus has tools for every step of your investment research. They even have over 4000 fully driveable financial models. Tegus’ maniacal focus on quality, as well as its depth, breadth and recency of content makes it the one-stop, end-to-end research platform for investors. Move faster, gather deep research to build conviction and surface high-quality, alpha-driving insights to find your differentiated edge with Tegus. As a listener, you can take the Tegus platform for a free test drive by visiting tegus.co/patrick. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:50) - (First question) - The problem that Dolby initially set out to solve (00:05:02) - Some of the well-known products Dolby offers today  (00:08:41) - The path from noise reduction to enhancing the listener experience  (00:13:23) - Invisalign: Patents, Patients, Profits; How their codec technology is actually implemented  (00:16:40) - Whether or not how we record and what we record on can inhibit our ability to use Dolby’s products (00:18:32) - What the end markets for Dolby look like today   (00:21:04) - Whether or not they can offset against the consolidation of consumer technology  (00:22:54) - Targeting manufacturers as customers (00:26:55) - The trouble in defining Dolby’s total addressable market  (00:28:15) - Metrics used for measuring the size and relevance of the business  (00:31:23) - Outlining their royalty pricing model, its evolution, and the model’s dynamics   (00:34:54) - Whether or not the decline of movie theaters will impact their growth  (00:38:01) - Thoughts about Dolby’s cyclicality and potential trend impacts   (00:42:38) - The margin profile and how capital intensive the business is  (00:46:03) - His views on the potential risks to Dolby’s future  (00:50:30) - What stops Amazon or Apple from producing Dolby adjacent products in house (00:53:18) - How risky it is for Dolby to start pushing into the visual side of entertainment  (01:00:53) - Lessons for investors and builders when studying Dolby’s story 
01:03:4619/04/2023
Electronic Arts: FIFA, The Sims, Madden and More - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 106]

Electronic Arts: FIFA, The Sims, Madden and More - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 106]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down the iconic video game publisher, Electronic Arts. EA’s corporate history dates back to the 1980s and the business has evolved with all of the industry shifts in the decades since. To break down EA, I am joined by the author of The10thMan blog. We cover the role of a publisher in the video game ecosystem, the history and dynamics behind crown jewels like FIFA and Madden, and what the growth in mobile and new forms of monetization mean to a business like EA. Please enjoy this breakdown of EA. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:02:18) - (First Question) - EA’s role as a video game publisher within the broader industry (00:05:06) - EA’s size and scale today compared to its competitors  (00:08:15) - The founding story and the company’s background (00:16:12) - The impact of licensing agreements with sports games like Madden and FIFA (00:28:31) - The proportion of their games made for mobile, console, and PC (00:32:29) - Economics of a typical new game development and launch (00:34:38) - Expected lifespan of a game or its peak popularity (00:35:57) - How the industry is shifting from up-front sales to in-game sales (00:38:19) - The cost of keeping games up to date and working properly (00:40:00) - Working with third-party game engines versus developing a proprietary engine (00:44:45) - In-game purchases like loot boxes and the legal risks of being deemed gambling (00:48:26) - The video game M&A landscape and a discussion of Microsoft and Activision (00:50:19) - How EA uses a subscription model to unlock value from their back catalog (00:51:43) - Hypothetical top-line growth in the future and the bull case for EA (00:55:48) - Lessons for builders and investors when studying EA’s story
56:5512/04/2023
Titan: A Golden Case in Indian Retail - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 105]

Titan: A Golden Case in Indian Retail - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 105]

Today we’re breaking down India’s largest jewelry business, Titan. Titan began life as a watchmaker in 1984 through a joint venture between India’s biggest conglomerate, Tata Group, and the Tamilnadu state government. Today, the vast majority of its $4 billion in revenue come from its collection of jewelry brands, and Tanishq in particular. To break down the business, I’m joined by Saurabh Mukherjea, the founder and Chief Investment Officer of Marcellus Investment Managers. We cover the importance of jewelry to Indian consumers, the intricacies of retailing across India, and how Titan stands head and shoulders above its competitors in terms of profitability. Please enjoy this breakdown of Titan. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt Show Notes (00:02:45) - (First question) - What Titan is, where it operates, and its size and scale (00:06:50) - The bulk of the demand when it comes to Indians buying gold  (00:08:24) - Getting their start in watches in the 80s and evolving into what Titan is today  (00:14:52) - What a typical Tanishq store looks like and overview of store economics (00:18:58) - How their return profile is changing and what types of stores they want to open (00:23:51) - What gold on lease is and the implications of it for their business model  (00:25:33) - Why make jewelry when they could just be selling gold for savings purposes (00:27:36) - Managing inventory and keeping costs under control at the store level (00:31:54) - Whether or not they have artisans spread out across the country and difficulties of shipping and freight at their current scale in India  (00:33:38) - How they’re attracting customers to stores and store-level marketing strategies (00:37:57) - Splitting their business into middle class, premium, and wedding jewelry  (00:39:22) - Where e-commerce figures into the scope of their business (00:42:47) - Thoughts and philosophy on allocating surplus capital and acquisitions  (00:45:38) - Additional competitive advantages Titan has (00:48:42) - Building brand trust in a low trust economy in such a short time period  (00:50:22) - Where future growth will come from and if they can sustain their current growth rate (00:54:04) - The bull case for their business and what a Saree is (00:57:03) - Risks the business faces as they look out at the future  (01:00:12) - What he’s learned as an investor studying Titan’s business
01:04:0805/04/2023
The National Basketball Association - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 104]

The National Basketball Association - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 104]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down the National Basketball Association. The NBA topped $10bn in revenue last season, in line with MLB and behind only the NFL in terms of major sports leagues. The initial headlines for the next media rights deal, which is coming in 2025 suggest a 200% to 300% increase versus the previous contract. But what's particularly interesting about these data points is that they stand in sharp contrast to declining viewership numbers.  To break down the NBA, I'm joined by Ethan Strauss. Ethan has been intimately involved with the league for the past decade and often writes about why the NBA, like other sports leagues, is not a traditional business. We cover who and what made the NBA into the giant it is today and whether that's getting stronger or less strong. Please enjoy this breakdown of the NBA.  For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:03:11) - (First Question) - His background and his entry into the basketball business (00:09:24) - Key turning points that enabled the league to mature to what it is today (00:12:53) - An overview of the league’s economics and scale (00:16:01) - The dynamics of negotiating national and regional TV deals (00:18:57) - How viewership is faring with an increasingly fractured TV audience (00:22:40) - The counter-intuitive notion that lower TV viewership can help extract more media rights profits (00:25:47) - The international market for the NBA (00:31:06) - The unique role of the NBA commissioner and how it compares to other sports (00:34:12) - How individual teams and their owners influence league dynamics (00:37:27) - Rough splits between the NBA’s various revenue streams (00:39:32) - Astronomical franchise purchase prices and owner dynamics (00:41:34) - The possibility of expansion and the creation of new franchises (00:44:41) - How the NBA’s star players draw in fans but also wield power over the league (00:50:07) - The extent to which players’ popularity depends on nationality (00:54:03) - How much players make in salary versus endorsement deals (00:58:11) - Variables that could threaten the success of the league as a whole (01:00:26) - Probable drivers for future success and growth of the NBA (01:02:14) - The role of marketing in the NBA’s continued success (01:04:15) - Cues the NBA could take from other leagues in terms of its media presence (01:07:15) - Lessons for builders and investors when studying the NBA’s story
01:10:2731/03/2023
Jim Chanos: A Short Thesis on Data Centers - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 103]

Jim Chanos: A Short Thesis on Data Centers - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 103]

Compound248 is back to host another episode of Business Breakdowns. His most recent podcasts have focused on digital infrastructure and today we continue with that theme, but with a twist. Our guest is Wall Street Legend Jim Chanos, famed for bringing a skeptical eye to a credulous world. Together, we walked through his short thesis on the US Data Center REITs, his bear case for commercial real estate, and some broader wisdom on how management can thoughtfully respond to short sellers. Let's get started. For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.  ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes. Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke Show Notes (00:03:30) - (First question) - His counter-narrative thesis of shorting traditional data centers (00:09:34) - How data center hyperscalers have been shifting the industry since 2016 (00:12:14) - The size, margins, and depreciation profile of the data center industry (00:16:14) - The cash burn problem with digital REITs (00:18:30) - How he thinks about interest rates, liquidity, and leverage in the space (00:20:25) - More on why the value of these data centers is so elusive (00:21:57) - The extent to which macro tech slowdowns intersect with his thesis (00:23:13) - What investors see in these businesses that he discounts (00:26:59) - Risks for the short and the bull case for data centers (00:29:04) - Big concerns about the broader commercial real estate market (00:36:34) - The best way for operators to handle a short thesis about their company (00:39:49) - Critical mistakes he recommends managers avoid
42:4429/03/2023
Markel: Playing The Long Game - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 102]

Markel: Playing The Long Game - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 102]

Today, we’re breaking down Markel. Markel is an insurance and investing business. It shares the same operating structure as Berkshire Hathaway in that it uses insurance underwriting profits to fund an investing portfolio that includes both minority and controlling interests in public and private businesses. It was founded in 1930 by Sam Markel to insure Jitney buses and today it is a Fortune 500 company with a market value of $17 billion. To break down Markel, I’m joined by Peter Keefe and Saurabh Madaan. Peter is an investor at Avenir and longtime Markel shareholder, while Saurabh was the Deputy CIO at Markel and is now the founder and managing member of Manveen Asset Management. We discuss why the Berkshire comparison is unfair, how a specific set of values is so deeply embedded in the business, and we use Markel as a lens to talk about capital allocation and the psychology of investing more broadly. Please enjoy this breakdown of Markel.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.    -----   Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.   Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.   Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke   Show Notes (00:02:34) - (First question) - How they would explain Markel’s unique business model to a friend (00:04:24) - The values and systems that make Markel stand out (00:08:57) - Subtleties that differentiate Markel from Berkshire (00:11:22) - Markel’s stance and perspective in the larger insurance industry (00:15:31) - The structural factors that enable Markel’s excellence across many different classes of insurance (00:18:55) - Why this specialized business model is still not widely replicated (00:20:18) - The disproportionate amount of legacy companies in the insurance industry (00:22:58) - The evolution of Markel’s investment portfolio and investing style (00:29:22) - Key differences between Markel Ventures and the public equity portfolio (00:32:25) - How their decision-making and allocation process differs from traditional funds (00:36:42) - How their small team is able to outperform the bigger competitors (00:39:50) - Summoning patience to reap the benefits of holding positions long-term (00:42:37) - The famous American Tower investment story  (00:46:10) - How they would evaluate Markel from an outside investor perspective  (00:53:43) - Key-man risk in Markel’s agile leadership (00:55:33) - Other risks and challenges they think about with Markel (00:57:05) - How experience with Markel has informed their perspective on the insurance industry (01:00:50) - Lessons for builders and investors when studying Markel’s story
01:02:0922/03/2023
The Walt Disney Company: An Entertainment Empire - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 101]

The Walt Disney Company: An Entertainment Empire - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 101]

This is Jesse Pujji and today we’re breaking down The Walt Disney Company. Disney needs no introduction. We have all interacted with the entertainment empire in some capacity. It was founded 100 years ago as the Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio and over the ensuing century, the business has grown into a conglomerate of entertainment properties that includes the likes of Pixar, Marvel, Disneyland, ESPN, National Geographic, and Disney+. To explain how the business fits together, I’m joined once again by Ben Weiss, the Chief Investment Officer of 8th & Jackson. We talk about Disney’s famous flywheel, its push into streaming, and why it's such a difficult business to manage. Please enjoy this business breakdown of Disney.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.    -----   Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.   Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.   Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke   Show Notes (00:02:23) - (First question) - Overview of Disney and their size and scale today  (00:05:15) - Major milestones across Disney’s one hundred year history  (00:07:17) - What lead to their decision to buy ABC and subsequently ESPN  (00:08:00) - Disney’s Original Flywheel; How Disney’s flywheel compounds on top of itself (00:10:11) - Characterizing their competitors and the markets they play in   (00:12:58) - Overview of Disney’s theme park business  (00:15:07) - Fixed costs, growth, and thoughts about volume for their theme parks (00:17:40) - Their cable business and the drivers of growth and success for it  (00:21:33) - Netflix: The Original; What’s different about Disney+ compared to Netflix and why they’re losing money  (00:23:14) - Disney+ verses Netflix in the competitive landscape  (00:24:45) - How far Disney can extend their content offering without degrading their brand (00:27:42) - Overview of Disney’s movie business and its growth levers  (00:29:04) - Creativity, Inc.; A revenue case study of the Cars franchise (00:33:08) - Company culture in running an effective enterprise as big as Disney  (00:35:43) - The recent leadership transition and his thoughts on it as an investor (00:37:24) - Reasons behind the Marvel acquisition in 2009 (00:40:05) - What will have to go right if Disney became the next trillion dollar company (00:43:32) - Possible reasons why Disney could fail over the coming decade   (00:45:56) - Lessons for builders and investors when studying Disney’s story (00:48:54) - Learn more about Disney; Creativity, Inc., The Ride of a Lifetime 
49:3615/03/2023
IPL: The World’s Fastest Growing Sports League - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 100]

IPL: The World’s Fastest Growing Sports League - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 100]

Today we are breaking down the world’s fastest-growing sports league, The Indian Premier League. The Indian Premier League, often shortened to IPL, is a cricket competition that takes place in India every year between the end of March and end of May. There are 10 teams, 74 matches, and the competition starts and ends within 2 months.  The biggest sports leagues tend to come with long histories. You can trace the NFL back to 1920, the NBA to 1946, and Formula 1 to 1950. In stark contrast, the IPL and its teams were founded in 2008. But despite its relative youth, the IPL is already a sporting giant. It has revolutionized the game of cricket and is the second biggest sports league in the world if you measure it on a per-game basis. To break down the story and business, I’m joined by Ed Cowan. Ed played professional cricket for Australia in the early 2010s and is now an investor at TDM Growth Partners. Please enjoy this breakdown of the Indian Premier League.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.    ----- Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.   Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.   Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke   Show Notes (00:03:05) - [First question] - An overview of the Indian Premier League (IPL) today (00:07:41) - How cricket fits in the context of Indian culture and markets (00:11:06) - The mechanics of T20 cricket and its history (00:19:33) - The genesis of the IPL (00:21:42) - How the original eight teams were sold by the league and seeded by investors (00:24:44) - The IPL’s conception and the rockier aspects of its startup phase (00:30:13) - The revenue structure and business model broken down into their many streams (00:33:44) - How Indian culture influences media deals in cricket (00:41:55) - How operators have structured the IPL to optimize for media rights  (00:44:53) - More on league-level economics, costs, and IP monetization  (00:47:22) - Dynamics of individual franchises within the league (00:55:19) - The infrastructure model and overhead costs for individual franchises (00:59:03) - A deep dive into the player auction and how it works (01:07:48) - Fanbase demographics and the importance of female representation in the IPL (01:12:38) - How IPL creates and leverages scarcity value (01:17:26) - The increasing international reach of the IPL draft (01:19:32) - How the BBL in Australia stacks up against the IPL (01:25:18) - Premortem case for the IPL (01:28:22) - Why he thinks cricket and the IPL won’t be disrupted any time soon (01:31:59) - Lessons for operators and investors when studying the IPL story
01:34:5008/03/2023
Wise: Moving Money Around the World - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 99]

Wise: Moving Money Around the World - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 99]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down Wise. Wise helps individuals and small businesses move money across borders. It offers significantly faster and cheaper international transfers than traditional banking routes because of its innovative closed-loop system. Twelve years after its founding, Wise serves six million customers and earned close to £1 billion in income last year. Investors currently value the business, which is listed in London, at £6 billion. To break down Wise, I’m joined by former payments exec and now investor at Sydney-based TDM Growth Partners, James Revell. We cover the broken system of correspondent banking, which has led to slow, opaque, and expensive transfers and then explore how Wise has counter-positioned itself to take advantage of this large market. Please enjoy our breakdown of Wise.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.    -----   Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.   Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.   Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke   Show Notes  [00:02:27] - [First question] - Overview of Wise, their key product, and core competency  [00:04:17] - The founding story of Wise and the road leading to today [00:09:18] - Wise’s size and scale today compared to 2011 [00:11:07] - Their competitive advantages and how it informs their goals  [00:19:24] - Exploring Wise’s closed loop system and why their model can’t be copied [00:21:28] - Unique characteristics of their business model that allows them to capture such robust margins [00:25:32] - Overview of Wise’s unit economics and their revenue model [00:34:49] - Interchange fees and how Project Zero guides the business [00:36:44] - Why their lower take rate doesn’t destroy the industry  [00:38:24] - Ways Wise’s business model can’t simply be copied and replicated  [00:44:35] - Thoughts on who their true competitors are [00:48:10] - Their customer acquisition flywheel  [00:49:49] - Float, increasing net margin, and how they contribute to durability [00:53:55] - Key risks associated with Wise when evaluating the business [00:58:35] - Reasons behind the decision to raise money as a direct listing in the UK [01:01:03] - How people looking at Wise should think about margins over time [01:03:32] - Lessons for builders and investors when studying Wise’s story  
01:07:0801/03/2023
Ryanair: Low Cost Obsessed - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 98]

Ryanair: Low Cost Obsessed - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 98]

This is Matt Reustle and today we are breaking down Europe's largest airline, Ryanair. As we do more breakdowns, we start to look for patterns of successful business models that succeed across different industries. Ryanair is another case study in low-cost shared economies of scale. To break down Ryanair, I'm joined by Holland Advisors’ founder and portfolio manager, Andrew Hollingworth. On this episode, we talk about what makes airlines such a difficult industry for investors, how CEO Michael O'Leary has taken a truly unique approach to building this business, and how to frame cyclical versus secular dynamics in the airline market.  Now, one quick note before we transition to the episode. You'll hear Andrew and I talk about O'Leary's unique PR approach with shareholders, the union, and pretty much anyone that he deals with. If you're interested in that type of dark arts of communication and media, make sure to check out our newest show at Colossus, Making Media. It operates as an ongoing Business Breakdown of our own business, Colossus, and we spend a lot of time studying the world of communications and media more broadly. You'll find a link to that series in our show notes. Make sure to subscribe.    For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.    -----   Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.   Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.   Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke   Show Notes [00:03:12] - [First question] - Why airlines have such a bad reputation with investors  [00:04:20] - An overview of Ryanair and its size and scale today  [00:05:43] - Unique characteristics about Ryanair’s business model that distinguishes them from their competitors [00:09:10] - What keeps customers coming back to Ryanair [00:10:49] - What else stands out about Michael O’Leary that is key to Ryanair’s success [00:12:16] - Michael O’Leary: Turbulent Times for the Man Who Made Ryanair [00:14:22] - How Ryanair’s business model has evolved against cycles and opportunities [00:19:29] - What else goes into their cheap seat cost structure  [00:23:10] - Approaching labor in light of a unionized industry and workforce  [00:28:07] - The cyclicality of margins and how theirs look compared to their competitors [00:33:47] - Interesting data on airplane utilization and dynamic pricing   [00:36:40] - What’s contributing to the lack of growth at easyJet  [00:42:37] - The risks to Ryanair’s growth as a shareholder   [00:44:00] - Industry responses to cycles and recessionary environments  [00:46:31] - The main takeaways from Ryanair that could be applied elsewhere
47:4322/02/2023
Constellation Software: Principled, Profitable, Permanent - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 97]

Constellation Software: Principled, Profitable, Permanent - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 97]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we’re breaking down Constellation Software. Constellation is a conglomerate which owns more than five hundred vertical market software businesses. It was founded by Mark Leonard in 1995 and has delivered remarkable returns to shareholders since going public on the Toronto stock exchange in 2006. To break down Constellation, I’m joined by Chris Cerrone, a Partner and Portfolio Manager at Akre Capital Management. We discuss Mark Leonard’s genius, why Constellation is the gold standard for employee compensation plans, and how the business has perfected its acquisition engine, which allows it to buy dozens of software businesses each year. Please enjoy this breakdown of Constellation Software.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.   -----   Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.   Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.   Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt | @domcooke   Show Notes [00:02:37] - [First question] - How Chris and Akre came across Constellation Software  [00:05:21] - An overview of Constellation [00:08:40] - The origins of Constellations’ 30-year legacy of extraordinary returns [00:11:57] - A deeper explanation of vertical market software as it relates to Constellation [00:15:30] - The impressive scale of Constellation despite its niche-targeted portfolio [00:18:04] - Their incentive structures and their avoidance of stock-based compensation [00:21:05] - Additional ways in which Constellation stands out, relating to the Rule of 40  [00:23:20] - The barriers that keep competitors and copycats from overtaking them [00:28:00] - The three legs of Constellation’s acquisition engine [00:32:57] - Recent spin-offs of assets as opposed to straight acquisitions [00:35:45] - How Constellation is planning for the future [00:38:13] - Why they’re considering expansion towards non-VMS acquisitions [00:40:30] - Capital allocation and Mark Leonard’s outlook more broadly [00:43:46] - How the business reflects Mark’s nature and values [00:47:31] - How much technology risk does the business face? [00:50:56] - Is organic growth a concern?  [00:57:40] - Lessons for operators when studying Constellation’s story
01:00:3016/02/2023
The Business of Sport: NFL, F1, PGA Tour - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 96]

The Business of Sport: NFL, F1, PGA Tour - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 96]

This is Dom Cooke and this week is a little different. It’s Super Bowl week and to get in the mood, we’re doing a sports special as we break down the business behind 3 iconic sports - The NFL, Formula 1, and the PGA Tour. Now, these are not new episodes. We have covered each of these sports over the past two years on Business Breakdowns. But for this episode, we have condensed those conversations into 100 minutes of action, focusing on the similarities and differences between these major leagues. In terms of revenue, the NFL dwarfs the other two sports. But in terms of eyeballs, Formula 1 is the clear global leader. And from a strategic perspective, it’s fascinating to see the evolution since we aired these episodes. For example, you’ll hear Formula 1’s CEO talk about the US being a key growth market, and then you’ll notice that last week Red Bull unveiled their 2023 car in New York. This year’s calendar has 3 US races. Similarly, the upcoming weekend is the second in a series of PGA Tour events designed to bring more of the top golfers together on a regular basis. Neil explains why that was desperately needed in more detail towards the end of this episode. Finally, before we jump into the action. I wanted to highlight our newest Colossus show, Making Media. If you enjoy Business Breakdowns, I think you’ll enjoy that show too. I think of it as a real-time Business Breakdown of our media business, Colossus, and the media industry writ large. Make sure to check it out if you like the sound of it. You’ll find a link in the show notes. Now, without further ado - let’s get to the Business of Sport, starting with the NFL.   Making Media: Hunting for Magicians with Patrick O’Shaughnessy The National Football League Formula 1: The Iconic Motor Sport PGA Tour: Playing Under Pressure   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.   -----   Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.   Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.   Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt   Show Notes [00:03:10] - PART 1: THE NFL (LINK TO FULL EPISODE) [00:35:25] - PART 2: FORMULA 1 (LINK TO FULL EPISODE) [01:07:41] - PART 3: PGA TOUR (LINK TO FULL EPISODE)
01:40:4308/02/2023
Qualcomm: Making Smartphones Smart - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 95]

Qualcomm: Making Smartphones Smart - [Business Breakdowns, EP. 95]

This is Zack Fuss, an investor at Irenic Capital, and today we're breaking down Qualcomm. When you think of semiconductors, Qualcomm isn’t necessarily the first name that comes to mind but its size and utility in our lives is truly striking. The business has an enterprise value of $150 billion and set the standards for 3G, 4G, and 5G mobile connectivity that we rely on so heavily in our daily lives today. I bet that if you don’t have a Qualcomm product in your pocket right now, you most certainly have one in your home. To break down the business, I’m joined by Jay Goldberg, a semiconductor industry consultant and partner at Snowcloud Capital. Please enjoy this breakdown of Qualcomm.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here.   -----   This episode is brought to you by Tegus, the modern research platform for leading investors. I’m a longtime user and advocate of Tegus, a company that I’ve been so consistently impressed with that last fall my firm, Positive Sum, invested $20M to support Tegus’ mission to expand its product ecosystem. Whether it’s quantitative analysis, company disclosures, management presentations, earnings calls - Tegus has tools for every step of your investment research. They even have over 4000 fully driveable financial models. Tegus’ maniacal focus on quality, as well as its depth, breadth and recency of content makes it the one-stop, end-to-end research platform for investors. Move faster, gather deep research to build conviction and surface high-quality, alpha-driving insights to find your differentiated edge with Tegus. As a listener, you can take the Tegus platform for a free test drive by visiting tegus.co/patrick.   -----   Business Breakdowns is a property of Colossus, LLC. For more episodes of Business Breakdowns, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.   Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.   Follow us on Twitter: @JoinColossus | @patrick_oshag | @jspujji | @zbfuss | @ReustleMatt   Show Notes [00:02:41] - [First question] - Describing what a semiconductor is for laypeople  [00:03:51] - Distinguishing between chip designers and producers [00:04:53] - Why the semiconductor industry evolved the way it did  [00:05:57] - The history of Qualcomm from the 50s leading up to today  [00:08:40] - Where Qualcomm fits into the world of wireless phones  [00:12:01] - What winning the war of standards means for their economics writ large [00:13:42] - The dynamics within the business that influenced their growth  [00:16:00] - Qualcomm’s direct competitors as they exist today  [00:17:20] - The relationship between Qualcomm and Apple [00:19:42] - What’s happened over the last couple of years in the industry [00:21:05] - The possibility of a structural tailwind in a digitally interconnected world  [00:22:56] - Some of the competitive hostility in the semiconductor space [00:26:58] - Unique directions Qualcomm could be taken beyond positioning  [00:29:02] - What they can do with their abundant free cash flow  [00:30:24] - Variables that preserve and could threaten their margins  [00:32:58] - Where Qualcomm sits within the global struggle for chip dominance geopolitically  [00:35:00] - Capacity constraints that could impact them directly  [00:36:51] - Lessons for investors and operators when studying Qualcomm’s story [00:39:50] - Unique characteristics of Qualcomm’s company culture   [00:41:06] - Thoughts about Steve and Aman as CEOs [00:43:08] - Where Meta, Apple, and Microsoft source their chips 
44:4301/02/2023