The Rock and Turner Investment Podcast

James Emanuel, Rock & Turner Investment Fund

The podcast for the intellectually curious, with analytical minds who like to challenge conventional wisdom. Join us for a deep and open-ended exploration into the often-overlooked facets of investing. The podcast is designed to introduce anyone in the investment community to fresh mental models and unique perspectives, empowering them to navigate the complex investment landscape with greater confidence. Whether they’re a seasoned investor or just starting out, our discussions will equip them with the tools needed to enhance their decision-making and improve their chances of achieving favourable investment outcomes. The podcast will discuss a wide range of subject matter from analyzing individual companies to exploring macro-economics and timeless investment principles. rockandturner.substack.com

  1. FEB 7

    Kingsway Financial Services (CEO Interview)

    DISCLAIMER & DISCLOSURE: The author holds a position in Kingsway Financial Services at the date of publication but that may change. The views expressed are those of the author and may change without notice. The author has no duty or obligation to update this information. Some content is sourced from third parties believed to be reliable, but accuracy is not guaranteed. Forward-looking statements involve assumptions, risks, and uncertainties, meaning actual outcomes may differ from those envisaged in this analysis. Past performance is not indicative of future results. All investments carry risk, including financial loss. This analysis is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or recommendations of any kind. Conduct your own research and seek professional advice before investing. This podcast/video interview focuses on a company that almost nobody understands correctly, which is exactly why it’s so interesting. This is not a stock that currently screens well. It’s misunderstood and financial metrics are misleading. So don’t get lost in the numbers. This is a qualitative investment thesis. The business piqued my interest because I am particulalry focused on companies with an opportunity to reinvest capital at high accretive rates of return over the long-term, and which have first class management teams. This one ticked both of those boxes. Here’s what you really need to understand: * ‘Search Funds’ are a niche “entrepreneurship through acquisition” (ETA) model. * Stanford professor Irv Grousbeck (not merely an academic, but successful entrepreneur with a net worth of a couple of billion dollars, and co-owner of NBA Boston Celtics) and Will Thorndike (author of ‘The Outsiders’ book and seasoned investor himself) helped popularise the ETA model. * ETA involves backing talented early-career CEOs (often MBAs) to find, acquire and manage an acquired business. * Acquisitions are private mom-and-pop type lifestyle businesses which are capital light, enjoy recurring revenues and have no customer concentration risk, but which have been operated as lifestyle businesses and starved of growth capital. Without succession plans in place, founders ultimately look to cash out. This generally means that they are available to buy at low single digit multiples. * Investments are typically too small for traditional PE firms, but too complex for individual investors. * In 1994, Thorndike founded Housatonic Partners, a fund focused on the ETA model and he enjoyed enormous success. He has quietly been one of the most significant investors in this model for decades. * Thorndike is on the Advisory Board for the International Search Fund Center at IESE Business School and frequently lectures at Stanford and Harvard. * The Center for Entrepreneurial Studies at Stanford Graduate School of Business conducts biennial studies of all core search funds. Its findings reveal that, since 1984, the ETA model has generated steady IRRs ~35% through various economic cycles. Now that I have your attention, please be aware that until now there have been a few issues with search funds: * The ETA model has, until now, been the preserve of wealthy private investors. Retail and other public market investors had no way to access search funds. * Each search fund focused on the acquisition of one company and so there was a high level of concentration risk. * Without the liquidity of a public market, private investments in search funds require an expiry date so that investors know when to expect a return on their money. This forces short-term thinking and exit decisions at inopportune moments. * Thorndike has conducted his own analysis that many of these search fund businesses have been sold too early and go on to achieve outsized returns over the medium to longer term, meaning too much vaue has been given away historically. The answer to all of these challenges is to create a publicly listed permanent capital vehicle focused on deploying the search fund model, building a diverse portfolio of search fund businesses, owning them for extended periods (maybe even forever) and enabling public market investors access to this asset class for the first time. Kingsway Financial Services is the only such business. It is run by CEO JT Fitzgerald, himself a search fund veteran. Will Thorndike is both an investor and a member of the advisory board. And if that hasn’t captured your imagination, so too is Tom Joyce, previously CEO at Danaher and the architect of the acclaimed Danaher Business System (DBS), a version of which Kingsway is deploying itself. In this interview with JT Fizgerald (CEO of Kingsway), we breaking down how Kingsway is using that playbook to build a programmatic acquisition engine, why accounting quirks are actively hiding the real economics and how a shifting business mix could make the financials suddenly “snap into focus.” This is a story about misunderstood numbers, hidden compounding, no analyst coverage, a wonderful business flying completely under the radar and valuation multiples that don’t reflect what’s actually being built. At the moment it is merely a micro-cap, capitalized at ~$400 million, but it has an enormous growth runway ahead. Oh, and one more thing. It has over $600 million of NOLs on its balance sheet from legacy operations when this company used to operate as an insurer prior to the GFC. It has entirely reinvented itself, with a completely new model and management team and so while the legacy issues are in the distant past, all earnings and capital gains over the next 5+ years will be entirely tax free. Ignore this opportunity at your peril. For further reading: Receive more like this direct to your inbox: Highlights from the Interview *Not a verbatim transcript, so please do listen to the recording The Evolution: From Insurance Co. to Public Vehicle for Search Funds James Emanuel: I’m James Emanuel, and joining me today is JT Fitzgerald, CEO of the U.S.-listed business Kingsway Financial Services (KFS). This may be one of the most exciting companies that most people have never heard of. It has a market capitalization of just shy of $400 million and a very interesting story. It is a new company and an old company at the same time. Founded in 1989 as a niche insurance business, Kingsway thrived for nearly two decades. However, the Great Financial Crisis hit the company hard, leading to large losses that became an existential threat. These net operating losses (NOLs) became an attractive asset because they can be used to shield future returns from tax. At that point, Joseph Stilwell, an activist banking investor, stepped in to exploit those NOLs and turn Kingsway into a merchant bank. Insurance operations were shut down, but the merchant bank struggled as a public vehicle. In 2016, JT Fitzgerald entered the stage to explore the introduction of warranty operations, with very attractive commercial attributes, within the business. However, JT had experienced success with search funds, having launched his own company, Argo Management Group. He had the idea to transform Kingsway into a publicly listed search fund business. It took time to convince the board to dispose of legacy assets and restructure, but ultimately, JT became the CEO. He has proven that this model works and is an effective way to exploit those net operating losses. The first search fund launched within Kingsway delivered a 10-times cash return on investment in just over four years. Since then, the company has gone from strength to strength. JT, welcome. JT Fitzgerald: Thank you, James. Happy to be here. James Emanuel: For those unfamiliar with search funds, would you explain the model? JT Fitzgerald: In essence, the search fund model is an investment and acquisition strategy where a group of investors partner with a talented, early-career entrepreneur to search for and acquire small operating businesses. After the acquisition, the entrepreneur transitions into the day-to-day management of the company, typically transitioning out the retiring founder. James Emanuel: This model was spawned out of U.S. business schools where MBA students were anxious to embark on a career, and private equity investors provided the funding. They find a “mom-and-pop” shop with great potential where the founder has no succession plan. The search fund buys out the owners, and the MBA student steps in as the new CEO to scale the business. Is that fair? JT Fitzgerald: That’s right, with one distinction: the model existed long before it was formally called a search fund. The term started to come into existence roughly 30 years ago, spawned out of Stanford and Harvard. One distinction is that the equity supporters generally have gone down this path themselves. It’s not private equity in the traditional sense. I view it as “craft investing” in the artisan-apprentice sense. The folks backing today’s searchers typically have been operators themselves. The Thesis of Permanent Capital James Emanuel: In the past, these search funds were the remit of private investors. You saw an opportunity to launch this model within a listed entity to give you access to a permanent capital vehicle. This allows you to grow a diverse portfolio while providing investors the liquidity of the public market with no lock-in periods. Was that your perspective when you joined in 2016? JT Fitzgerald: When I came to Kingsway, the thesis was the attractiveness of the platform as a permanent capital vehicle. Research shows that search fund return profiles have been very good. However, if you look at the returns to the people who acquired those businesses when the searcher exited, the next seven-to-ten-year returns have been just as good. This means that, historically, searchers and their investors have been exiting too soon. The idea of a platform where you could own those businesses for a longer period and continue to compound capital was very attr

    1h 7m
  2. 12/08/2025

    Judges Scientific | UK Programmatic Acquirer

    Judges Scientific Plc (JDG.L), listed on AIM, has built its entire identity around one thing: a disciplined and highly effective buy-and-build strategy. Over the years, that strategy has turned the company into a respected specialist in high-end, niche scientific instruments: pieces of mission-critical kit used by universities, research labs, manufacturers and regulators around the world. Since its founding in 2002 and its first acquisition in 2005, Judges has become one of the most successful consolidators in a fragmented industry. It targets high-quality businesses with dependable sales, profits and cash flow, and once they’re brought into the group, they benefit from steady operational support and the financial stability of a larger organisation. Their cash generation then fuels debt reduction and funds the next round of acquisitions. It’s a flywheel that has been spinning for two decades, helping the company deliver an impressive 24% compound annual growth rate since its IPO in 2003. But the last 18 months have tested that model in ways investors haven’t seen for years. The share price has fallen more than 50%, not because the strategy has failed, but because several challenges arrived all at once. First, the company’s valuation had simply run too hot. After years of near-flawless execution, the stock was priced for perfection, and that left no room for disappointment. The disappointment came in the form of a major acquisition that didn’t perform as expected in its first year, triggering a profits warning and shaking confidence. Then came external pressures. China shifted its procurement policies in favour of domestic suppliers, creating an abrupt slowdown in demand for Judges’ instruments. Meanwhile, in the US, delays and cuts in federal research budgets put pressure on university spending, squeezing order flow from another key region. And layered on top of all of this was the news that long-standing CEO and founder David Cicurel will step down in February 2026. Any leadership transition naturally results in uncertainty and anxiety among investors. Taken together, it was a perfect storm. Yet storms pass, and in Judges’ case, many of the clouds already appear to be clearing. The valuation multiple is now roughly half its peak, creating a far more reasonable starting point for new investors. The large acquisition that stumbled out of the gate is showing clear signs of recovery in its second year. Chinese demand is beginning to rebound, and US university funding conditions are improving. More particularly, the succession plan looks solid: Cicurel will move into the role of Non-Executive Chairman, while incoming CEO Dr Tim Prestidge, currently Group Business Development Director, offers continuity rather than disruption. Crucially, the earnings power of the business hasn’t deteriorated. If anything, the cadence of acquisitions means its long-term potential is stronger than ever. For some investors, the recent sell-off may look less like a red flag and more like an opportunity. Judges Scientific remains a business with a proven model, a strong culture and a two-decade track record of compounding growth. To dive deeper into the company’s history, challenges and prospects, enjoy this podcast conversation with Chris Waller of Plural Investing, author of the Hidden Gems Substack and a former Goldman Sachs Asset Management professional with an MBA from Columbia Business School. Get full access to Rock & Turner Investment Analysis at rockandturner.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 15m
  3. The Market’s Love Affair with Instant Gratification & The Art of Investor Alignment

    10/15/2025

    The Market’s Love Affair with Instant Gratification & The Art of Investor Alignment

    Show Notes In this podcast, we explore the fascinating intersection of psychology and investing — why our brains are wired to crave instant gratification and how that shapes our behaviour, valuations and investment decisions. With reference to the behavioural economics concept of hyperbolic discounting, we explore how this can create excellent trading opportunities. We also examine why the type of shareholders a company attracts can define its destiny, showing that investing isn’t just about picking the right business, it’s about understanding who you are getting into bed with. This 16 minute podcast may help you fine tune your investment approach and improve your returns. Have a listen… nothing to lose! Receive more like this direct to your inbox: Transcript Have you ever wondered why some companies seem to command absolutely astronomical valuations while others, seemingly just as solid, trade at bargain-basement prices? It’s all about the quirky, often irrational ways our brains process time and money. While traditional finance models rely on neat, orderly exponential discounting, where every future period gets discounted at the same steady rate, the reality of human psychology is far messier and infinitely more interesting. Hyperbolic discounting is a fascinating concept, borrowed from behavioural economics, which helps us better understand how investors think and why equities are priced as they are. Economics has long been dubbed the “imperfect science” for good reason. Human psychology doesn’t follow mathematical formulas and our pricing models need to account for these beautifully irrational behavioural quirks. Consider this scenario: I owe you $10,000 and offer you a deal. Instead of paying you back today, how about I give you $11,000 a year from now? Your gut reaction is almost certainly a firm, “no way.” You want your money now, you want instant gratification. You’ve already planned how you’ll spend that money and it simply can’t wait. Now imagine you have a savings account that can either pay out $10,000 one year from now, or $11,000 in two years. Suddenly, waiting for that extra thousand seems like a no-brainer. The math is identical, a 10% annualized return in both cases, yet your willingness to wait changes dramatically based on proximity to the present moment. Immediate gratification is no longer a factor, it doesn’t cloud your judgement and your decision becomes more rational. This isn’t a flaw in your reasoning; it’s a fundamental feature of human psychology. We systematically undervalue future rewards when immediate gratification is within our reach, but we become surprisingly rational when dealing with future-only scenarios. It’s the same phenomenon that makes you promise to start that diet tomorrow while reaching for another slice of cake today. Our modern world has turned this psychological quirk into a business model. Ever notice how online retailers charge premium prices for next-day delivery? Or how people line up to pay top dollar for the latest iPhone on release day, knowing full well the price will plummet in six months? We’re literally paying extra to pull gratification forward in time and companies have figured out how to monetize our impatience. As Charlie Munger wisely observed, “Investing requires a lot of delayed gratification.” This simple statement captures the essence of why most people struggle with long-term wealth building. We’re wired to want results now, even when waiting would serve us far better. Our trade-off between today and tomorrow is not the same and we value them differently. This impatience epidemic extends far beyond consumer goods. If people were purely logical, wouldn’t they budget carefully, live modestly and secure a comfortable tomorrow? Yet in reality, many drive expensive cars, wear designer clothes and fancy jewelry - all while burdened with ugly debts and barely any savings. We buy things we don’t need, with money we often don’t have, to impress people we don’t even know. It’s not stupidity, it’s human nature in all its gloriously inconsistent beauty. This is where hyperbolic discounting is most valuable. Not as a new valuation methodology, but as a lens for understanding the investor’s relationship with value. When you recognize that most market participants are trapped by their need for instant gratification, you begin to see opportunities everywhere. When a company tells a good story about its future prospects, people buy into that narrative. There’s insufficient attention paid to long-term risk and competitive threats, so distant future cash flows are under-discounted and over valued. This leads to what Alan Greenspan referred to as “over exuberance”, where stock prices become too inflated - as can be seen in the premium on the long tail of the hyperbolic discounting curve. Worse still, most investors ignore the long-term reality as they are obsessed with the short-term. Their focus is on the next quarterly earnings report. People become focused on beating short-term expectations rather than building long-term value, and their impatience creates a negative feedback loop. When a company reports disappointing quarterly results, its stock price gets crushed as the investors rush for the exits. The market tends to price short-term earnings quickly but often misses the gradual, multi-year improvements. They’re not necessarily wrong about the immediate pain and lack of immediate gratification, but they’re often spectacularly wrong about the long-term opportunity. This creates a “present bias” where immediate outcomes are too heavily weighted. It’s like judging a marathon runner’s potential based on their performance in the first hundred meters. Since the share price was initially over-valued, the sudden pendulum swing in the opposite direction looks even more dramatic, causing short-term panic and often leading to a significant under-valuation. This is where patient investors with a deeper understanding of hyperbolic discounting can find their greatest opportunities. The beautiful irony is that by understanding and working against our natural hyperbolic discounting tendencies, we can capture the value left on the table by those seeking instant gratification. Companies with durable competitive advantages and predictable long-term cash flows are often available at attractive prices, precisely because most investors struggle to properly value the future and place too heavy a weighting on the present. When you can train yourself to think beyond the next quarter, to see through the noise of short-term volatility, and to properly value businesses based on their long-term potential rather than their immediate prospects, you’re essentially arbitraging human psychology. You’re buying what others can’t properly value and holding what others lack the patience to own. In essence, hyperbolic discounting doesn’t just explain market behavior, it reveals the path to potentially superior returns. The key is recognizing that investing, like so many aspects of life, is ultimately a battle between our immediate desires and our long-term interests. The winners are usually those who can consistently choose delayed gratification over instant satisfaction, turning one of humanity’s greatest psychological biases into their greatest competitive advantage. But the story doesn’t end there. It’s not just about investing in a company at the right price. The real plot twist comes when you realize you’re not just buying shares in a business, you’re climbing into bed with a cast of characters who might have wildly different ideas about where this relationship should go. When we analyze potential investments, we dive deep into all the usual suspects. We scrutinize the market dynamics, dissect customer loyalty, examine supplier relationships, and evaluate management quality. Some of us even peek behind the curtain to gauge employee sentiment. But there’s one critical group of stakeholders that most investors completely overlook: the other shareholders. Who are they? What are their objectives? Are they helping or hindering the business? Are they exerting undue influence on management? Why has the company attracted this type of investor? Are the interests of these people aligned with yours? These questions matter far more than most investors realize, because the answers can make or break your investment returns. Sometimes, two investors analyzing the same company, will see it completely differently. This could be because one is looking at it through a microscope, while the other is using a telescope. The investor with the microscope zooms in on spreadsheets, hunts for hidden value in the numbers, searches for any statistical anomaly that screams “bargain!” This is precision investing: surgical, calculated, and decidedly short-term. The second investor prefers a telescope, scanning the horizon for companies with visionary leadership, sustainable competitive advantages and business models built to weather decades of change. This type of investor isn’t looking for quick wins; they’re seeking businesses they’d be comfortable owning forever. They may not have found a bargain, but that’s not the point. What matters is whether management can grow the business, reinvest wisely and compound value. For this kind of investor, management quality, culture, vision, passion and a competitive edge are everything. Here’s where it gets interesting: neither approach is inherently right or wrong, but they’re fundamentally incompatible when forced to coexist in the same company’s shareholder base. The microscope investor lives in a world of catalysts and special situations. They’re betting on near-term events: regulatory changes, management shake-ups, spin-offs, or market sentiment shifts - anything that could trigger a stock rerating. They’re seeking that immediate gratification we dis

    18 min
  4. 09/17/2025

    Fairfax India, The Programmatic Acquirer

    This podcast continues our investigative journey on the theme of programmatic and serial acquirers. Links to the other episodes in this series are: * The Secret of Investing in Programmatic Acquirers podcast - [unlocked] * Relais Group investment analysis - [unlocked] * Teqnion - [unlocked] * Fairfax India (podcast/video presentation) - [unlocked] * Topicus - [45 day partial paywall, after which it will be unlocked] * Valuing Programmatic Acquirers * » Watch this space, more to come « Receive future episodes directly to your inbox: This Episode - Gateway to India India is proving to be a highly compelling investment opportunity, and its story echoes the economic rise of China, with a massive, young workforce and a fast-growing middle class. The country has also positioned itself as a resilient and rapidly expanding economy, especially during its G20 presidency where it moved from a global participant to a key architect of international cooperation. This strong foundation is supported by significant legal, tax and regulatory reforms, as well as tremendous progress in physical and digital infrastructure. For foreign investors, however, the Indian market can be challenging to navigate due to issues like withholding taxes, restrictions on capital movement and language/cultural barriers. Not only that, but some of the best investment opportunities exist among private businesses rather than the hyped and often overpriced publicly listed companies. So how does a non-Indian investor play this wonderful opportunity? A potential answer is proposed in this podcast which first unpacks why India is so attractive right now, but also focusses on a programmatic acquirer, a holding company named Fairfax India Holdings Corporation ($FIH), listed in Canada, it provides foreign investors with exposure to the dynamic Indian market while bypassing these complexities. Ben Watsa, Chairman of Fairfax India and son of the great investor and entrepreneur Prem Watsa, explains why he likes India right now: As a permanent capital vehicle, it focuses on long-term investments in high-quality Indian businesses, leveraging decades of experience from its hugely successful parent company, Fairfax Financial. In one packaged investment, you and I are able to gain exposure to a portfolio of first class Indian businesses, 70% of which are private, in a range of sectors from banking and finance; transport, logistics and storage services; manufacturing; and most important of all, critical infrastructure. Best of all, while almost all of the top performing programmatic acquirers trade at eye-watering premiums to intrinsic value, this one is a rare exception, available at a discount to its net asset value. Listen to, or watch, the podcast to learn more. The video version - on YouTube and the Rock & Turner Substack has images to accompany the narrative. DISCLAIMER & DISCLOSURE: The author has a position in Fairfax India at the time of publication, but that may change. The views expressed are those of the author at the time of publication and may change without notice. The author has no duty or obligation to update this information. Some content is sourced from third parties believed to be reliable, but accuracy is not guaranteed. Forward-looking statements involve assumptions, risks, and uncertainties, meaning actual outcomes may differ from those envisaged in this analysis. Past performance is not indicative of future results. All investments carry risk, including financial loss. This analysis is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or recommendations of any kind. Conduct your own research and seek professional advice before investing. Get full access to Rock & Turner Investment Analysis at rockandturner.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 4m
  5. 09/08/2025

    Lesser Known Scandinavian Acquirers

    Acquisition-as-a-Business (AaaB) This podcast continues our investigative journey on the theme of programmatic and serial acquirers. The first episode in this series was an Introduction to the AaaB model. It explains the compounding power of the AaaB business model and distinguishes between serial and programmatic acquirers. Despite many using these terms interchangeably, they are not the same and it is important to understand the difference. If you haven’t listened to the first episode, I would encourage you to do so before listening to this one. This episode focuses on two lesser known but very interesting acquirers. The first is Teqnion, a programmatic acquirer in Sweden, and the second is Relais Group, a serial acquirer in Finland. The series so far: * The Secret of Investing in Programmatic Acquirers podcast - [unlocked] * Relais Group investment analysis - [unlocked] * Teqnion - [unlocked] * Fairfax India (podcast/video presentation) - [unlocked] * Topicus - [45 day partial paywall, after which it will be unlocked] * Valuing Programmatic Acquirers * » Watch this space, more to come « Receive future episodes directly to your inbox: DISCLAIMER & DISCLOSURE: The author has no position in companies mentioned in this podcast at the time of publication, but that may change. The views expressed are those of the author at the time of publication and may change without notice. The author has no duty or obligation to update this information. Some content is sourced from third parties believed to be reliable, but accuracy is not guaranteed. Forward-looking statements involve assumptions, risks, and uncertainties, meaning actual outcomes may differ from those envisaged in this analysis. Past performance is not indicative of future results. All investments carry risk, including financial loss. This analysis is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or recommendations of any kind. Conduct your own research and seek professional advice before investing. Get full access to Rock & Turner Investment Analysis at rockandturner.substack.com/subscribe

    36 min
  6. 08/21/2025

    The Secret of Investing in Programmatic Acquirers

    Acquisition-as-a-Business (AaaB) This is now the first post in the ‘AaaB’ series. If you missed the others, here are the links: * The Secret of Investing in Programmatic Acquirers podcast * Relais Group investment analysis * Teqnion * Fairfax India (podcast/video presentation) * Topicus - Part 1 * Valuing Programmatic Acquirers * Topicus - Part 2 - How to value Topicus * Judges Sceintic (podcast) * Fairfax India analysis to compliment (4) above Show Notes Most mergers and acquisitions destroy shareholder value: that's not opinion, it's documented fact. Harvard Business Review analyzed 2,500 deals and found over 60% destroyed value, with legendary failures like Microsoft's Nokia acquisition and Google's Motorola disaster serving as expensive reminders. Yet despite these terrible odds, companies continue pursuing M&A as their primary growth strategy. But there's a rare breed of company that has cracked the code. Programmatic acquirers like Constellation Software, Danaher, and several Swedish firms have turned high-risk M&A into systematic value creation machines. Constellation has delivered 37,500% stock appreciation since 2006 through over 900 acquisitions, while Lagercrantz has compounded at 21% annually for 25 years. These aren't lucky streaks, they're the result of treating acquisition as a disciplined business model rather than an occasional strategic tool. This deep dive explores what separates programmatic acquirers from serial acquirers and private equity firms, why they focus on overlooked niche businesses rather than headline-grabbing deals, and how their decentralized operating models create sustainable competitive advantages. We examine cautionary tales like Judges Scientific's costly deviation from proven strategies, analyze the complex accounting challenges that make these companies difficult to compare, and identify emerging European opportunities that might offer exposure to this powerful model at reasonable valuations. Key Companies Discussed: Constellation Software ($CSU), Danaher ($DHR), Lifco ($LIFCO-B), Lagercrantz ($LAGR-B), Berkshire Hathaway ($BKRA, $BRKB), Judges Scientific ($JDG), Brown & Brown ($BRO), Chapters Group ($CHG), Heico ($HEI), Transdigm ($TDG), Addtech ($ADDT-B), Teqnion ($TEQ), Roko ($ROKO-B), Bergman & Beving ($BERG-B), Halma ($HLMA). Next Episode Preview: We'll examine specific emerging programmatic acquirers in detail, analyzing their management teams, acquisition strategies, financial structures, and long-term value creation potential. Get full access to Rock & Turner Investment Analysis at rockandturner.substack.com/subscribe

    44 min

Ratings & Reviews

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About

The podcast for the intellectually curious, with analytical minds who like to challenge conventional wisdom. Join us for a deep and open-ended exploration into the often-overlooked facets of investing. The podcast is designed to introduce anyone in the investment community to fresh mental models and unique perspectives, empowering them to navigate the complex investment landscape with greater confidence. Whether they’re a seasoned investor or just starting out, our discussions will equip them with the tools needed to enhance their decision-making and improve their chances of achieving favourable investment outcomes. The podcast will discuss a wide range of subject matter from analyzing individual companies to exploring macro-economics and timeless investment principles. rockandturner.substack.com

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