PLAY PODCASTS
108 - Coffee Can Portfolio Investing
Episode 108

108 - Coffee Can Portfolio Investing

The DIY Investing Podcast

January 24, 202143m 39s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (pdcn.co) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

Mental Models discussed in this podcast:
  • Deferred Tax Liability
  • Skin-in-the-game
Please review and rate the podcast

If you enjoyed this podcast and found it helpful, please consider leaving me a rating and review. Your feedback helps me to improve the podcast and grow the show's audience.

Follow me on Twitter and YouTube

Twitter Handle: @TreyHenninger

YouTube Channel: DIY Investing

Support the Podcast on Patreon

This is a podcast supported by listeners like you. If you'd like to support this podcast and help me to continue creating great investing content, please consider becoming a Patron at DIYInvesting.org/Patron.

Show Outline

The full show notes for this episode are available at https://www.diyinvesting.org/Episode108

Coffee Can Portfolio
  • Seeking "Never Sell" stocks - only certain companies qualify
  • Benefits from a deferred tax liability (Can become quite significant over time)
  • Preferable for individual investors. Hard to implement professionally
Characteristics of a Coffee Can Stock
  • An industry that lacks disruption risk
    • Banking (Example)
  • Stable and high returns on capital/equity (15% or higher)
  • Long-term sustainable organic growth of at least 5% but preferably 10-15%. (You don't necessarily want 20%+ growers that will eventually lose all growth)
  • Low competition, could be regulated monopoly or oligopoly
  • Founder led company or a long-term CEO with skin-in-the-game
  • Zero or low debt/leverage policies
  • The ability to be a ten-bagger or a 100-bagger
    • Usually small with the ability to grow large.
    • A small competitor with a competitive advantage (cost perhaps) over larger competitors in a big market.
      • Think early Walmart, Costco, Home Depot, GEICO
  • Intelligent capital allocation strategies that benefit shareholders
    • Lack of dilution
    • Growing dividends or buybacks over time (Dividend Champion type stocks)
    • Unless it is a roll-up strategy, an average to acquisitions can be helpful, because they often destroy shareholder value.
You can't think of your stocks as a "Portfolio"
  • You are a true business owner
  • Judge your success by the performance of individual companies, not the overall portfolio return.
    • Logical point: If every individual company compounds at 10% per year or more, then the portfolio as a whole by definition must also compound by at least 10% per year.
  • Position sizing no longer matters. Your greatest winners may eventually become 50%, 75%, or 90% of your total portfolio. That's okay. That's how the strategy works. This is how the strategy outperforms.
How to implement a Coffee Can Portfolio (The Process)
  • Buy one new stock a year, each year you work.
  • Put all of your savings for the year into that company.
  • Never sell.
  • Ideally register for the shares in direct certificate form. It can be electronically held at a transfer agent, but after the year, don't hold the shares directly with a stockbroker.
    • This limits your ability to sell the shares and is a huge psychological boost in implementing the strategy.
Summary:

In this episode, I discuss the coffee can portfolio approach to investing. This investing strategy involves never selling a stock once it is bought. Therefore, you must seek high-quality companies with long runways for growth and high returns on capital.