New Horizons Investment

The Equity Integrity Score: Frameworks for Long-Term Compounding

6 min · I går
episode The Equity Integrity Score: Frameworks for Long-Term Compounding cover

Description

This episode provides an update on Equity Integrity Score (EIS), a proprietary investment framework designed to prioritize long-term compounding over short-term market timing. This system evaluates companies based on disciplined capital allocation, management quality, and business durability to generate a curated watchlist of 33 high-potential stocks. The author Chris Von Hoene, illustrates how different strategies—inspired by Philip Fisher, Warren Buffett, and power-law dynamics—can be applied to these same stocks to achieve various financial goals. The Power-Law Portfolio emphasizes concentrated bets on exceptional outliers like META, UBER, and TOST to maximize wealth creation. The author argues that time and portfolio structure are more vital to success than simply finding statistically cheap bargains.

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91 episodes

episode The Equity Integrity Score: Frameworks for Long-Term Compounding artwork

The Equity Integrity Score: Frameworks for Long-Term Compounding

This episode provides an update on Equity Integrity Score (EIS), a proprietary investment framework designed to prioritize long-term compounding over short-term market timing. This system evaluates companies based on disciplined capital allocation, management quality, and business durability to generate a curated watchlist of 33 high-potential stocks. The author Chris Von Hoene, illustrates how different strategies—inspired by Philip Fisher, Warren Buffett, and power-law dynamics—can be applied to these same stocks to achieve various financial goals. The Power-Law Portfolio emphasizes concentrated bets on exceptional outliers like META, UBER, and TOST to maximize wealth creation. The author argues that time and portfolio structure are more vital to success than simply finding statistically cheap bargains.

Yesterday6 min
episode Nomad Investment Partnership Letters to Partners 2001–2014 artwork

Nomad Investment Partnership Letters to Partners 2001–2014

This episode discusses Nomad Investment Partnership letters, written by Nick Sleep and Qais Zakaria between 2001 and 2014, documents the firm’s transition from seeking "cigar butt" bargains to holding high-quality, permanent assets. The authors advocate for an absolute return orientation and emphasize the necessity of investor patience as a competitive advantage over short-term market participants. By profiling specific investments like Costco, Xerox, and Stagecoach, the letters illustrate a disciplined "value" philosophy focused on buying businesses at a significant discount to their intrinsic worth. Beyond finance, the preamble highlights the partners' commitment to philanthropy, suggesting that true investment success culminates in reinvesting wealth back into society. This podcast also includes correspondence with Warren Buffett, reinforcing the fund's alignment with traditional, long-term capital allocation principles. These reports serve as a comprehensive educational resource for those looking to understand the mechanics of compounding and the psychological rigors of contrarian investing.

8. juli 202645 min
episode Delta: The Gap Between Quality and Opportunity artwork

Delta: The Gap Between Quality and Opportunity

This episode explores Delta, the gap between business quality and investment attractiveness. The Equity Integrity Score (EIS) measures whether a company is structurally sound through factors like capital allocation, revenue quality, and moat strength, while my ranking system focuses on what I would actually buy. By comparing the two, Delta reveals where the numbers and my convictions diverge. Small Deltas suggest alignment between quality and opportunity, while large Deltas highlight areas where future expectations differ from present fundamentals. The framework turns disagreements into research questions rather than conclusions. Delta may be the most important metric in the portfolio because it exposes where conviction, valuation, and business quality collide.

6. juni 202620 min
episode The Equity Integrity Score - Expansion Version artwork

The Equity Integrity Score - Expansion Version

This 19 minute episode introduces the Equity Integrity Score (EIS), a framework designed to separate genuine business compounding from structural equity decay. This is the expansion version looking at over 135+ stocks. Rather than focusing solely on growth, EIS evaluates four core pillars: ROIC stability, revenue quality, dilution discipline, and capital allocation integrity. The central idea is that investors are not buying earnings or revenue streams—they are buying a claim on a compounding machine, and that machine can quietly deteriorate while reported results continue to improve. Using heat maps, scoring systems, and a Top 40 ranking framework, EIS helps identify businesses such as Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, Broadcom, and Google that exhibit broad-based structural strength across multiple dimensions. The framework also highlights value-oriented compounders like MOH, ELV, VEEV, and SFM, which score highly through balance and durability rather than narrative appeal. Portfolio construction shifts from maximizing upside stories to maximizing confidence in the durability of the underlying equity structure. EIS is not designed to predict winners—it is a structural filter intended to eliminate false winners before they become permanent sources of capital loss.

3. juni 202618 min
episode The Equity Integrity Score: Measuring Structural Compounding vs. Decay artwork

The Equity Integrity Score: Measuring Structural Compounding vs. Decay

This episode introduces the Equity Integrity Score (EIS), a financial framework designed to distinguish between genuine long-term compounding and superficial growth. This system evaluates a company’s structural durability by measuring four key dimensions: return on invested capital stability, revenue quality, ownership dilution, and capital allocation. By identifying forces of equity decay like aggressive accounting or misaligned management, the EIS acts as a structural filter to categorize investments into three distinct tiers. The framework shifts the focus of portfolio construction from chasing market narratives to prioritizing capital preservation and per-share value. This methodology serves as a permission structure for position sizing, ensuring that the largest allocations are reserved for businesses with the highest economic integrity.

28. maj 202623 min