Conviction Bet

Read the Label: What's Actually Inside the S&P 500

23 min · I går
episode Read the Label: What's Actually Inside the S&P 500 cover

Beskrivelse

Buying the S&P 500 feels like the most diversified decision in investing. It has quietly become one of the most concentrated. The index everyone owns hasn't changed — but the recipe underneath has. Seven companies now make up about a third of it, up from roughly 12% a decade ago, and produced about 42% of the market's 2025 return. "Buy the S&P 500" became a concentrated bet on mega-cap tech that most people never decided to make. This episode is about what's actually inside the envelope, and the three other products that wear the same label. In this episode: * The concentration nobody chose. The Magnificent Seven are now about a third of the S&P 500, up from ~12% a decade ago, and produced roughly 42% of its 2025 return. History rhymes: the early-1970s "Nifty Fifty" traded near twice the market's valuation at their 1972 peak, then fell far harder than the market in the 1973–74 bear — Polaroid lost about 90%. The lesson isn't that today's giants are doomed; it's that "you can't lose owning the best companies" is the exact belief that has preceded the worst outcomes. * The idea professionals build careers around: the efficient frontier. The real game isn't the single best holding — it's owning things that don't fall on the same day. Ray Dalio's "Holy Grail": ~15 uncorrelated bets can cut risk ~80% without giving up return. David Swensen grew Yale's endowment from $1.3B in 1985 to over $40B in 36 years — about 13% a year — by owning what almost no one else did. Diversification is about correlation, not the number of things you own. * Why the index compounds at all. Two kinds of companies: cash machines whose free cash flow keeps growing — a rising coupon — and commodity-like cyclicals that round-trip to roughly nothing over a full cycle. The S&P 500 has worked for decades because it's stuffed with the first kind and quietly sheds the losers. * Three products, one label. COWZ buys the 100 highest free-cash-flow yields in the Russell 1000 (about 6.37% FCF yield vs. 2.70% for the index, per Pacer, March 2026) and finished 2022 roughly flat while the market fell ~18% — though it lags in mega-cap bull years. Equal weight (RSP) holds the same 500 names at ~0.2% each; it beat the standard index from 2003 through about 2023, then lagged badly. The Russell 2000 is the rate-sensitive sleeve — leveraged to rate cuts, but only when they arrive without a recession attached. * When the rules break. Correlation isn't permanent. In 2022, stocks and bonds fell together, vaporizing the classic 60/40 cushion. Gold tore past $4,000 an ounce in 2025, up 50%+ at its peak even with bonds paying well — because the driver broadened from real rates to fiscal stress (a ~$1.9T deficit, gross federal debt near 120% of GDP), central-bank buying, and geopolitics. A portfolio built on yesterday's correlations isn't built once and framed on the wall. * What it actually means for you. "The S&P 500" isn't a strategy — it's an envelope, and what you put inside it is the real decision. You don't need all four sleeves tomorrow; even pairing the standard index with one steadier holding changes the ride. This isn't the Yale model or the full Holy Grail — these are all still U.S. equities that fall together in a crash — but it's the retail-investor version of the same instinct. Read the written version — with the full data and card layouts — at quietvelocity1.substack.com, the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

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9 episoder

episode Read the Label: What's Actually Inside the S&P 500 cover

Read the Label: What's Actually Inside the S&P 500

Buying the S&P 500 feels like the most diversified decision in investing. It has quietly become one of the most concentrated. The index everyone owns hasn't changed — but the recipe underneath has. Seven companies now make up about a third of it, up from roughly 12% a decade ago, and produced about 42% of the market's 2025 return. "Buy the S&P 500" became a concentrated bet on mega-cap tech that most people never decided to make. This episode is about what's actually inside the envelope, and the three other products that wear the same label. In this episode: * The concentration nobody chose. The Magnificent Seven are now about a third of the S&P 500, up from ~12% a decade ago, and produced roughly 42% of its 2025 return. History rhymes: the early-1970s "Nifty Fifty" traded near twice the market's valuation at their 1972 peak, then fell far harder than the market in the 1973–74 bear — Polaroid lost about 90%. The lesson isn't that today's giants are doomed; it's that "you can't lose owning the best companies" is the exact belief that has preceded the worst outcomes. * The idea professionals build careers around: the efficient frontier. The real game isn't the single best holding — it's owning things that don't fall on the same day. Ray Dalio's "Holy Grail": ~15 uncorrelated bets can cut risk ~80% without giving up return. David Swensen grew Yale's endowment from $1.3B in 1985 to over $40B in 36 years — about 13% a year — by owning what almost no one else did. Diversification is about correlation, not the number of things you own. * Why the index compounds at all. Two kinds of companies: cash machines whose free cash flow keeps growing — a rising coupon — and commodity-like cyclicals that round-trip to roughly nothing over a full cycle. The S&P 500 has worked for decades because it's stuffed with the first kind and quietly sheds the losers. * Three products, one label. COWZ buys the 100 highest free-cash-flow yields in the Russell 1000 (about 6.37% FCF yield vs. 2.70% for the index, per Pacer, March 2026) and finished 2022 roughly flat while the market fell ~18% — though it lags in mega-cap bull years. Equal weight (RSP) holds the same 500 names at ~0.2% each; it beat the standard index from 2003 through about 2023, then lagged badly. The Russell 2000 is the rate-sensitive sleeve — leveraged to rate cuts, but only when they arrive without a recession attached. * When the rules break. Correlation isn't permanent. In 2022, stocks and bonds fell together, vaporizing the classic 60/40 cushion. Gold tore past $4,000 an ounce in 2025, up 50%+ at its peak even with bonds paying well — because the driver broadened from real rates to fiscal stress (a ~$1.9T deficit, gross federal debt near 120% of GDP), central-bank buying, and geopolitics. A portfolio built on yesterday's correlations isn't built once and framed on the wall. * What it actually means for you. "The S&P 500" isn't a strategy — it's an envelope, and what you put inside it is the real decision. You don't need all four sleeves tomorrow; even pairing the standard index with one steadier holding changes the ride. This isn't the Yale model or the full Holy Grail — these are all still U.S. equities that fall together in a crash — but it's the retail-investor version of the same instinct. Read the written version — with the full data and card layouts — at quietvelocity1.substack.com, the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

I går23 min
episode Dead Reckoning: What the 4% Rule Cannot See cover

Dead Reckoning: What the 4% Rule Cannot See

Most retirement planning math is correct. The problem is the question it's answering. The 4% rule was built for a 30-year retirement. An early retiree who leaves work at 35 and lives to 90 needs a portfolio that lasts 60 years — and the gap between what the rule promises and what that horizon requires is fifteen thousand dollars per year on a million-dollar portfolio. The formula is right. The voyage is twice as long. In this episode: * The three-number problem: William Bengen revised his own rule upward to 4.7% after extending his model beyond the original stock-bond mix. Morningstar's December 2025 forward-looking analysis sets the 30-year base case at 3.9% — and finds that higher equity allocations do not support higher withdrawal rates, because the volatility works against you. Extended-horizon researchers place 50- to 60-year safe starting rates in the low-3% range. Three figures, three different questions. Understanding which one applies to your situation is the whole ballgame. * Why 1966 was the worst year to retire in recorded US history — worse than 1929, worse than 2008 — over a 30-year horizon. Bengen's SAFEMAX for that cohort was 4.15%: a withdrawal rate meaningfully above 4.1% would have depleted the portfolio. Not because of a crash. Markets peaked and ground sideways for years as inflation climbed from 3% to 12%. No sudden crisis. Just a slow, compounding mismatch between what the portfolio returned and what inflation required. 90% of all historical failures cluster in that single decade — and the conditions that produced it have a more than passing resemblance to May 2026. * Healthcare is not a line item. Fidelity's 2025 estimate: $172,500 in lifetime after-tax healthcare costs for a single 65-year-old with Medicare. An early retiree has no Medicare until 65. The enhanced ACA credits that bridged that gap expired January 1, 2026. Above roughly $62,600 of MAGI — based on 2025 federal poverty guidelines — the restored subsidy cliff can eliminate thousands in annual premium assistance overnight. In many markets, unsubsidized early retirees in their early 60s face four-figure monthly premiums before a single claim is filed. * The guardrails alternative and Social Security. Morningstar's 2025 research found a specific guardrails configuration supported a 5.2% starting rate on a 40/60 portfolio versus 3.9% for fixed withdrawals — but with spending variability as the price. For an early retiree with no Social Security income for 25 years, and zeros filling the 35-year benefit formula that determines the eventual benefit, that guaranteed income floor may not exist when it is needed most. * FIRE is a spectrum. Barista FIRE pairs a mid-size portfolio with a part-time job that provides employer health coverage — solving the pre-Medicare problem structurally rather than hoping the ACA holds. Coast FIRE requires only enough invested early enough that compound growth carries the rest: at 5% real, a 35-year-old targeting $1.5M needs roughly $347,000 today. The real value of financial independence is not the day you stop working. It is what it does to your negotiating position long before then. Read the written version — with the full data, withdrawal rate breakdowns, and card layouts — at quietvelocity1.substack.com, the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

27. maj 202633 min
episode The Ouroboros Quarter cover

The Ouroboros Quarter

In most earnings seasons, the profit reported is the profit earned. Q1 2026 was different. The most important number in Alphabet's results was not on the revenue line, not in the cloud segment, and not in operating income. It was in a footnote — and it accounted for an estimated 46% of the company's headline net income. The market celebrated the headline. Almost no one read the footnote. In this episode: * Why Q1 2026 was the most circular earnings season in Big Tech history — and how a GAAP accounting rule (ASU 2016-01) allows unrealized private equity markups to flow directly through the income statement, turning a funding round valuation into reported corporate profit before a single dollar of cash changes hands * The ouroboros mechanism in full: Alphabet invests in Anthropic, Anthropic trains on Google Cloud, Google Cloud revenue supports Anthropic's valuation, Anthropic's valuation flows back through Alphabet's income statement as reported net income, and that net income justifies more investment — every link GAAP-compliant, the loop entirely circular. Amazon runs the same structure. The estimated after-tax contribution from unrealized equity gains accounts for a significant portion of both companies' headline Q1 numbers. * Why Nvidia's $48.6 billion of company-level free cash flow is categorically different from what Alphabet and Amazon reported — and what $91 billion of Q2 company-level revenue guidance, with China data-center compute excluded from the calculation, actually tells you about the state of global AI demand outside the world's second-largest economy * The Federal Reserve transition most investors are reading wrong: the real question is not whether Kevin Warsh cuts rates, but whether he changes which inflation gauge the Fed uses to decide — and why a 70-basis-point gap between Core PCE at 3.2% and Dallas trimmed mean PCE at 2.4% is a policy lever, not a measurement dispute. Core PCE already excludes food and energy. The gap is explained by shelter and services — which is also why the new framework carries the risks it does. * The Cisco counter-case: in March 2000, Cisco had real orders, real revenue growing at 50% annually, a backlog booked two years forward, and a market cap above $500 billion. The stock fell nearly 90% by late 2002. Not because the internet was fake — because the valuation had been pulled further into the future than genuine demand could reach before monetary conditions tightened. The case for why real underlying demand does not protect against valuation reset. * CoreWeave on May 7: $2.08 billion in Q1 revenue, up 112% year-over-year, stock falling after hours as soft Q2 guidance and capex intensity unsettled investors — and what a triple-digit growth company declining on an earnings beat tells you about what this market is actually pricing * The Buffett Indicator at roughly 229%–235% depending on methodology, Amazon's trailing twelve-month free cash flow down 95% to $1.2 billion, and why the bull case and the bear case for this market are not opposites — they are the same thesis at different time horizons. The question is not whether bubble-like conditions exist. The question is where you are inside them, and what the monetary hinge looks like when it moves. Read the written version — with the full accounting breakdown, the sourced data, and the card layouts that don't translate to audio — at quietvelocity1.substack.com, the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

21. maj 202629 min
episode Fluent in Money, Illiterate in Wealth cover

Fluent in Money, Illiterate in Wealth

In most languages, the word for wealth still carries traces of its origin — wellbeing, capability, the conditions of a good life. In English, that meaning was stripped out somewhere between the Champagne Fairs and the Industrial Revolution. What remained was net worth. The vocabulary change was not neutral. It was a cognitive trap — and almost every personal finance mistake you can make flows directly from it. In this episode: * Why the word "wealth" has already corrupted your financial decision-making — and why Latin, German, and Scandinavian speakers are working from a less broken map than their English-speaking counterparts * Pierre Bourdieu's 1986 framework: economic, cultural, social, and symbolic capital — why the person who understands the conversion rules between them holds a structural advantage over the person who only tracks one column, and what the data on education premiums, referral hiring, and superstar CEO compensation actually shows about how capital moves * The 2020–2025 American monetary cycle as a masterclass in wealth as flow: three phases, three completely different winning asset classes, and why the common variable in every case was not the asset — it was understanding where the credit was going before it arrived * The subprime counter-case: how $19 trillion in household net worth evaporated not because houses changed, but because the flow of credit around them reversed — and what that means for every asset you currently treat as permanent * Four wealth traps that recur across income levels and generations: the signifier fallacy, financial FOMO (57% of Americans have made a financial decision after seeing someone else's lifestyle online), the experience economy, and the relative comparison trap that explains why a country with one of the highest GDP per capita levels among large advanced economies ranked 24th in the 2025 World Happiness Report * The Rockefeller versus Vanderbilt case: why one of the greatest fortunes in American history was gone within two generations while the other is still distributing income to 170 heirs across six — and why the difference had nothing to do with the original amount * The mathematics of freedom: why cutting $10,000 in annual spending has the same effect on financial independence as accumulating $250,000 in capital, and why temporal sovereignty — the capacity to control your own time — may be the only form of wealth that cannot be manufactured, borrowed, or stored Read the written version — with the data, the Bourdieu framework laid out in full, and the card layouts that don't translate to audio — at quietvelocity1.substack.com, the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

14. maj 202631 min
episode Every Chip, Every Ride cover

Every Chip, Every Ride

Here's the description with numbers converted: Missiles in the Persian Gulf. Oil at a hundred dollars a barrel. Consumer sentiment near its prior trough. And somehow, the Nasdaq closed the week at an all-time record — carried almost entirely by AI earnings. Two companies reported on the same day. One posted the best quarter in its 35-year history and got sold. The other missed its headline revenue number and rose sharply. Both are asking the same question in the same week: what happens when a toll collector starts driving on its own road? In this episode: * Why Arm's record quarter — $1.49 billion in revenue, 49% operating margins, data center royalties doubling for the 4th consecutive quarter — still produced a reversal after hours, and what the RPO miss actually means for a licensing business whose fastest-growing revenue line doesn't show up in backlog at all * What AGI actually stands for in "Arm AGI CPU" — it is not what you think — and why the chip that generated more than $2 billion in customer demand 6 weeks after announcement may be the product of a $6.5 billion acquisition made 4 months before anyone announced it * The revenue capture math that makes the silicon move significant: Arm's traditional licensing generates roughly $0.10 to $2.00 per chip; a complete data center CPU sells for thousands * Why Arm lost round one of its lawsuit against Qualcomm — and why Qualcomm's separate countersuit, which directly targets Arm's intent to compete in silicon, is the legal risk that actually matters for the long-term thesis * The optionality tension most analysts are not naming clearly: operationally, the AGI CPU is optionality on top of a royalty engine that already works — but at roughly 100x forward earnings, the valuation is not optional at all * Why Uber's 14.4% revenue growth was 9 percentage points lower than it would have been under prior accounting treatment, and why the $2.3 billion in free cash flow in a single quarter is the only number that actually matters * The AV data from the markets where autonomous vehicle competition is most advanced — what it says, why Deutsche Bank and MoffettNathanson read it in opposite directions, and what that disagreement tells you about where the thesis actually stands * The Morgan Stanley 2032 model: the most specific and uncomfortable version of the Uber bear case, stated fairly and answered directly Read the written version — with card breakdowns, segment data, and the sourcing that doesn't translate to audio — at quietvelocity1.substack.com [http://quietvelocity1.substack.com], the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

8. maj 202630 min