Short Briefings on Long Term Thinking - Baillie Gifford
The science and art of picking growth stocks
What counts as a growth stock is ever-changing. Mark Urquhart shares lessons from 27 years of investing to explain how he decides what to buy and how long to hold as he continues his hunt for outsized returns. Background: In 1996, our largest investments included oil and gas companies and high street banks. These days, our biggest holdings specialise in computer chips, ecommerce and biotech. We still pursue long-term growth – companies we believe will reach their potential given time. But we find it in different places. In this episode, partner Mark Urquhart explains how he tries to identify companies that can grow for a decade or longer, allowing their sales, profits and share prices to compound along the way. He discusses the changing nature of the businesses that qualify and what gives him the confidence to back maverick founders. Other topics he covers in conversation with managing editor Malcolm Borthwick include lessons from the pandemic and the growth companies that most excite him today. Resources: The changing face of growth Four cardinal questions for growth investors Mark Urquhart’s LinkedIn page 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare Past podcasts Timecodes: 00.00 Introduction 1:20 Joining Baillie Gifford in the pre-Google era 03:45 An evolving attitude to growth companies 05:20 Looking for stronger compound growth 06:35 Investing in Microsoft 08:00 The quest for companies like Hermès 09:55 Learning to be open-minded in Japan 12:10 The importance of mavericks 13:40 How Tesla hit its targets 14:40 Investing in times of crisis 17:35 What the Covid pandemic teaches growth investors 23:05 Today’s most exciting growth companies 25:15 Book recommendation Follow us via: Twitter LinkedIn Email Companies mentioned include: Alphabet (Google) Apple ASML Dexcom Don Quijote Hermès MercadoLibre Microsoft Netflix Peloton SpaceX Tesla