Change is often uncomfortable. Cost your mind back to being told you can't see friends or family because of COVID. For a time your travel pounds were disrupted because a plane was cancelled. For many of us, stock market volatility is the latest source of anxiety. And it's natural to feel concerned. Our brains are wired to prefer incremental change over sudden bursts of activity beyond our control.
So, as investors, how are we thinking about recent market turbulence? To find out, I'm joined by Kirstie Gibson, joint manager of both the Billy Gifford US Growth Trust and American Fund. But before we start the conversation, some important information. Please remember that as with all investments, your capsules are at risk and your income is not guaranteed.
There's lots of volatility on the stock market at the moment. Is this a good time or a bad time to be a growth investor?
目前股市波动性很大,这对于成长型投资者来说是好是坏呢?
It's a very exciting time to be a growth investor, but I think it's very uncomfortable time to be a growth investor. That's because we've had a lot of questions over the past year, probably about bubbles and overheating and growth versus value and what remains exciting. Those questions are by no means unfounded, but what makes the most interesting to me is that they're representative of this idea of the human condition, that the human brain is wired to handle incremental change. And we've experienced a lot of change over the past few years. We'd all like to believe we're heading towards a period of stasis where that kind of all of that change is bedded down and we can begin to relax into a sort of new normality.
But what's really interesting to me and what makes being a growth investor really exciting right now is what if we are just at the tip of the iceberg of what change is yet to come?
So how do you stay focused on the long term at times like this?
如何在这种情况下保持对长期目标的关注和专注?
What we're trying to do is to find really great businesses and in order to do that we have to accept the uncertainty that comes with that. It's about recognising asymmetry, it's understanding that plans are not full of straight lines that they tend to zig and zag and it's recognising that straight away and it's therefore opening your mind to the possibility of what a company can become, what a business could achieve in future rather than looking at what it is today and sort of extrapolating from there.
Because I think that is how we as humans feel most comfortable is that we reason by analogy. We like to say well this becomes the this of this, you know, Uber was the this of taxis etc. I think we like to reason by analogy and actually we need to sort of break out of that habit in order to imagine if you're going to invest on a five to ten year view what a company could be.
And imagination is all about thinking differently, let's have a listen to this.
想象力就是不同寻常地思考问题,让我们听一下。
We have all individually developed an internal model of reality which is based on the machine and on mathematics and it's simply antithetical to human life and destructive of the biosphere. And we have heard this person on the podcast before because your colleague Gary talked about him in episode 21 when we talked about Cure Decoganizations, the balance between chaos and order.
Tell me a little bit more about who this is and why what he says is significant.
告诉我关于这个人的一些信息,以及他所说的话为什么重要。
So this is D-Hawk and D-Hawk is actually the founder of Visa. Visa came out of a necessity I guess with a group of banks in the US and they decided that they needed a new way for people to be able to pay on credit and they sort of all club together and I guess you could say D-Hawk was the leader of that.
He wouldn't probably class himself as a founder because of this idea of chaotic organizations as blending of chaos and order. He provided the guide rails, he helped them to lay down the guide rails and he led that business. And interestingly when that was over and when he decided to seek a step back from leading Visa, he actually returned to farming. He decided well my job is done and that's where he spent the sort of the rest of his days was doing that.
And I think this plays into this idea that humans have a preference for structure and ultimately for control and this runs counter to the creativity of human beings as a species and you have to think outside of the box in order to invest on a long term basis. And I think that's why this quote, sort of rings a bell with me is because we really want this kind of control and the more we go through life I guess the more we try to put controls on top of things and actually we need to break out of that and to think about things in a completely different way.
No, I mean I think if we just look in front of you look at your iPhone in front of you and know when when Bardeen invented the transistor no one predicted the iPhone that was 1948 of course no one was going to predict the iPhone and that's not unexpected but we have to accept that we cannot predict the future but that doesn't mean that we can't hypothesize about the future and I think there's a couple of characteristics that we can place emphasis on to understand if we think businesses can achieve different things and solve new problems that may or may not emerge in future and one of those is to do with adaptability is the ability of a management team to be able to alter the path that they're on to navigate different situations whether they be internally internal challenges or whether those be external forces like the macro environment for example.
And give an example of a company that you can think of that fits into that. I think most companies that you have where you have a sort of real strong founder leading that business are very much adapting so a great example would be actually the previous time I was on the podcast we spoke about synthetic biology so a company would be like for example Ginkgo Biowork so we first invested in Ginkgo when it was a private company and at the time Ginkgo was looking to is ultimately this business is looking to make biology programmable so put the tools of biology into human hands and it was very much focused on the flavor and fragrance industry that was sort of that was the opportunity they had in front of it use fast forward you know six seven years now and they they're in agriculture and pharmaceuticals they're doing some work with regard to monitoring you know biosecurity monitoring for pathogens for things like covid so and that's because that's a management team that's adapted with the fact that that business has evolved and the opportunity set has grown over time.
It's probably impossible to envisage what these conceptual breakthroughs are I mean maybe also in the early days of Amazon who was to know that it would be the cloud that would make so much revenue for the company in the future so is it more really about sticking with what you're saying about the culture of the organization and the founders of those companies. Yeah I think I think it's about from me anyways the starting point is to try and understand what motivates those individuals it's about looking back at their childhood they're upbringing about how and why they make the decisions that they do and then being able to think about in future what at different junctures because we're all going to hit those different you know there's different folks in the road at those folks in the road how do you think they are going to react based on the kind of foundational beliefs that they have from life experiences that they have gone through and that helps you to build conviction and ultimately what we're talking about as a long-term investor is building hypotheses and those hypotheses are about saying what do I think could happen but hypothesis is great but if you don't have any conviction in that hypothesis it's just an idea and the only reason that you can make those ideas actionable is by starting to build your conviction in that idea and some of that conviction comes from the fact that you learn and understand what motivates the management team.
So another example of a sector that's going through transformational change in terms of imagining the future is the metaverse and in many cases I mean trying to some investors with them barely give a question whether not the metaverse exists at all.
Yeah I think it's quite a difficult one and I think there's a difference because there's like lots of different companies now talking about it in different ways so I think you have on the one end of the scale you have kind of this idea of like the full scale we're going to live in a completely different world and then at the other end you have a company like Snap for example that's more talking about this idea of a mirror world so it's about augmented reality it's about accentuating our world and adding a layer on top rather than us living in a completely different world and actually a private gaming company that we have in the portfolio of well called Neantic which is behind Pokemon Go.
There the CEO of that business John Hanky he has quite strong views on this as well this idea that actually what you want is you want people to go outside like we don't want people more in their heads that would be his argument we want people we want people to go outside more so I think I think the sort of jury's out it doesn't necessarily it's not necessarily clearly it's going to play in one way or another and I like the idea of this kind of mirror world that you can that you would get to this to a point where you know I could approach a statue for example and I could learn about the history of that statue or I could I could perhaps play a.
game with my friends or you know I can have a photo etc but it kind of it augments the world around us it doesn't it doesn't mean that we want to block the current world and create a new one it's more about taking what we have around us and saying well how do I make this better so much that is idea behind Pokemon in the sense you go around collecting figures that you wanted to get people outside and it's one of his yeah it's one of his big things is one of his big things has been he's written actually he's there's a letter on the on the Neantic website where he's made a sort of declaration of what he believes and why and I think so I think that Neantic and snap and more closely aligned in that respect a lot of what snap is trying to do is to say we can make the snap sort of camera and the lenses that snap available to everyone we can we can power your mobile app to Disney's Disney's mobile app when you go to their parks all our augmented reality is powered by snap snaps sort of cameras.
Another company that I'm really interested in that you invest in kersti is zipline and how that's transforming the logistics industry yes so zipline is an autonomous drone delivery company and it's based in San Francisco and I think when you say drones everybody thinks of the military and that's not what zipline is looking to do it's looking to transform what is possible in logistics and it was founded with the mission of creating the first logistics system that serves all humans equally and it's making really great progress against this goal while disrupting existing last mile logistics solutions so we first invested in the business in 2018 and the companies had a sort of really direct impact in helping many nations in Africa with the delivery of well actually blood products but since then covid vaccines as well so they started out in rwanda where the government actually hired zipline to deliver blood and medical supplies to hard to reach rural locations so what they basically have is they set up what they call nests which are like little little launch sites where they launch these drones and these drones will fly to more rural hospitals or health centers and they can deliver things like blood and medical supplies.
Now what's really interesting is this allows governments to better manage their planning because you can actually therefore send things that are closer to expiry date you can actually send them at that point because you know they're going to arrive in time you know that they're on a flight that's going to take you know less than 24 hours etc and actually zipline's automated delivery system is now the largest in the world and it's flown significantly more miles and made more commercial deliveries than it's than it's closest competitors so it's at the time of their last sort of public disclosure they've had over 300,000 commercial flights covering more than 20 million miles and all done autonomously and all done with zero instances of injury to anybody because I think what people's fears is sort of drone falling out the sky and dropping on their head and so they now actually operate on three continents and they're currently running a commercial trial in the US for Walmart delivering people with their groceries delivered to their garden and actually when we when I was last in the US earlier this year the CEO showed me a video he went on a on a sort of walkabout I guess with the CEO of Walmart and him to this place called P-Ridge in Arkansas which is where they've been doing this experiment and he's basically standing in people's back gardens and watching fully grown adults sort of almost jumping up and down when a drone came in and dropped a bag of Walmart shopping on their on their front lawn so there's an opportunity there for them to expand into the grocery delivery in the US and also potentially delivering sort of pharmaceutical products as well in the US they've got a few relationships there but it's just really interesting that this has been a business that's been highly highly successful in in really solving a logistics problem in emerging markets and they're taking that learning and bringing it back into the US.
Yeah I mean visually it's extraordinarily looking at their website in terms of how they have launched pads just to fire off the drones isn't it? Yeah and I mean they've delivered over a million COVID vaccines in Rwanda and Ghana and I think there was a there was a piece of work done by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation that showed you know Zipline's direct ability to has had a direct influence on the ability of the individuals in rural parts of Africa to access vaccinations and that's a great post of note 10 the podcast Kirsty thanks very much for joining us thank you very much and thanks to you the listeners for investing your time and showbethings on long term thinking you can find our podcast at beathergiford.com forward slash podcasts or subscribe bit Apple podcasts Spotify or on tune in and if you enjoyed the conversation you can check out previous discussions we've had on the podcast such as why private companies matter more to exploring the innovative Scandinavian country that is an earth global giants such as Ericsson Spotify and IKEA.
What's its secret? Find out by listening to the podcast and there are 26 other episodes so plenty to choose from and if you're listening at home you're listening in the car wherever you're listening stay well and we look forward to bringing you more insights in our next podcast.