Most hedge fund managers brag about their wins and shy away from their losses – Martin Hughes is not most hedge fund managers.
“You never boast the best. I remember the worst: Washington Mutual,” he tells The Australian Financial Review as he prepares to reveal his latest stock pick at the Sohn Hearts and Minds conference on Friday.
Hughes is remembering the 2008 global financial crisis, when his hedge fund Toscafund took out a major stake in the struggling bank.
A few months later the Washington Mutual fell into receivership. Tosca’s flagship fund was down a massive 67.5 per cent for the year to November 30, 2008.
“I’d managed the fund quite well up until 2008, then I wrote a large check,” Hughes says.
It marked a low-point in the fund’s then eight-year history, but despite the stumble Tosca has gone on become one of London’s most renowned and notorious hedge funds.
Hughes started the fund in 2000 after hedge fund pioneer Julian Robertson closed Tiger Management, which Hughes had chaired in Europe.
Hughes subsequent success thrust him into the ranks of the so-called “Tiger Cubs”, a collection of highly regarded fund managers who set up their own outfits following Tiger’s closure.
He says he never intended to break away and start a fund, which he set up with long-time friend and fellow former Tiger staffer Johnny de La Hey.
“The reason for starting Tosca was Tiger was closing – I’d be still working for Julian if we didn’t have to go,” Hughes says.
Following the collapse of Washington Mutual, Hughes hunkered down with La Hey to figure out their plan for Toscafund’s survival.
“When all the money was lost in 2008, we had a pint of beer and chatted about it,” he said.
“We said let’s just get through and come out the other side.” It’s a two-decade partnership Hughes speaks of fondly.
“When Johnny turned 50, I said to his wife, I’ve been working with him since I was 26 years old – I think that makes me his wife.
“But we never row. I can’t think of one we’ve had in all this time.”
The partnership has held the firm in good stead in the decade-and-a-half journey since 2008. The funds house, which boasts outgoing Westpac chairman John McFarlane among its board members, has since earned back its returns and reputation.
Hughes has also developed a reputation as an activist investor in his own right, a role that earned him the nickname ‘rottweiler’ in the 2010s.
However, Hughes appears to consider his form of activism as more understated than his nickname might suggest.
“I sit tight and write letters. That’s it.” he says,
“I write suggestions to boards and wait patiently to meet and agree, and then at some stage, there’s an agreement reached, which is generally in the best interest of all stakeholders.
“If there’s a big disagreement, we are not one that tries to force it through or force ourselves on the board, we would sell the position and move on.”
Though understated, Hughes’ approach has had its fair share of successes and surprises. In 2019, Tosca took a major stake in clothing brand Ted Baker as well as telecommunications company TalkTalk, the latter of which it ultimately took private in a £1.1 billion ($1.68 billion) takeover in December 2020.
It’s Hughes’ ability to read people that he prides as is his strength, rather than his financial prowess – “I don’t number crunch or use artificial intelligence – it’s people,” he adds.
“The most important thing in an investment is to look someone in the eye that you’re considering investing in and think they’re telling the truth.”
It’s an internal compass Hughes says has steered him in the right direction – most of the time. Ever to dwell on his misses, rather than his hits, Hughes admits he got it wrong when he made a play for an unnamed music streaming services several years ago.
“It was just a bit of bad luck. I believed in a concept called music streaming, So I went to Singapore to meet with a company. I should have gone to Sweden,” he says.
“If I had gone to Sweden I would have invested in Spotify. I went another way – but I got the concept right.”
When pushed to name his fondest moments, Hughes recalls a phone call from Scottish financier and client Sir Angus Grossart, founder of merchant bank Noble Grossart, who passed away last year, aged 85.
Grossart’s call came after Toscafund had sold UK insurance outfit Esure for over £1 billion, more than five times what the firm had originally spent in a bid to take it private.
“We did have mobiles, but he rang up on the old landline, and he told me ‘thank you’.”
“I don’t remember the success of the investment. I remember Angus Grossart saying thank you – in 23 years, that’s the only ‘thank you’ we’ve ever had.”
Martin Hughes will speak at Sohn Hearts & Minds at the Sydney Opera House on November 17. All profits will support Australian medical research organisations. The Australian Financial Review is a media partner for sohnheartsandminds.com.au
This article was originally posted by The Australian Financial Review here.
Licensed by Copyright Agency. You must not copy this work without permission.
Grounds, Fowler, and Weiss set up the Australian version, the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference in 2016, with the first meeting at the Sydney Opera House.
Healthcare stocks – from sleep apnoea giant ResMed, to cancer diagnostic biotech Telix Pharmaceuticals – were recommended at the Sohn Hearts & Minds Investment Leaders Conference on Friday.
Munro Partners partner Kieran Moore believes London-listed money transfer company Wise could see its share price soar 50 per cent by 2025, as its problem-solving business model gains traction while benefiting from higher interest rates.
Institutional investors such as super and pension funds are investing in private equity at “exactly the wrong time”, a top hedge fund manager has warned, as sharply higher interest rates threaten a wave of bankruptcies.
The world’s highest-profile tech investor, Cathie Wood, might be bruised but she is certainly bullish. Nor is she holding back. “I have always hated searching on Google,” she says of the search giant.
Cathie Wood has rightly called several of the big themes driving markets this year. But the world’s most divisive investor says we’re thinking about AI in the wrong way.
Tech investment guru Cathie Wood is still a big believer in bitcoin, so it was fitting that she chose Grayscale Bitcoin Trust as her stock pick for the 2023 Sohn Hearts & Minds Investment Leaders Conference.
Speaking at the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference on Friday, the Future Fund’s chief investment officer Ben Samild said it had traded around $65 billion worth of its portfolio for assets with better protection against what is expected to be a long-term inflationary environment.
When Damian Lewis, the actor who plays the ruthless hedge fund boss in the drama series Billions was looking for inspiration, he sat down with Daniel Loeb.
The US financial sector is not without its problems but Ravi Chopra backs Webster Financial Corporation as his stock pick for the 2023 Sohn Hearts & Minds Investment Leaders Conference.
It might be time to look beyond big name, overpriced Wall Street stocks that could struggle to deliver growth. That was the message from top fund managers, company founders and super funds at the Sohn Hearts & Minds Conference.
A year on from the start of ChatGPT, the Future Fund hasn’t decided how to play this phase of the AI revolution but is open to the possibility it will be a major boost to productivity.
The Future Fund, Australia’s $200 billion sovereign wealth fund, has been sounding the alarm on the developed world’s rising levels of debt, the prospect of higher inflation, and the risks in the bond market for longer than most.
Most hedge fund managers brag about their wins and shy away from their losses – Martin Hughes is not most hedge fund managers.
Bryce and Ren from Equity Mates are joined by Ashish Swarup is a Portfolio Manager and Investment Analyst at Aikya Investment Management
Australia’s best stock pickers have just eight minutes to convince the country’s top money managers they have found an investment gem that the market has overlooked.
Daniel Loeb of Third Point says the way companies are dealing with the high cost of debt is delivering new opportunities.
When genomic scientist Daniel MacArthur had the opportunity to set up a new Centre for Population Genomics in Australia in 2019, he jumped at the chance to return home after 12 years living overseas.
European leisure and luxury – a designer handbag, a last-minute flight to Monte Carlo, a stay in a five-star hotel – is where many choose to spend their hard-earned cash. For Sharif el Khazen, it’s where he makes it.
Mining stocks are poised to rise amid tight supply for key commodities such as copper, nickel and uranium, says Terra Capital founder Jeremy Bond.
The culture at Ray Dalio’s massive hedge fund has been a source of intrigue, and with a new book, controversy. Atul Lele says it’s made him a better investor.
Global growth fund manager Munro Partners will have a difficult task choosing a single company to tip to an audience of industry heavyweights at the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference.
Sheila Patel says it’s time for the venture capital sector to “grow up” and higher rates will help do that. VC firms need to think differently about how they invest.
Melbourne scientist Misty Jenkins has had a long-time interest in immunology. But it was a neuroscientist friend who urged her to focus her skills on seeking a cure for brain cancer.
Tom Naughton is Managing Partner and CIO at Prusik Investment and speak with Equity Mates ahead of his appearance at the Hearts and Minds conference.
A true contrarian investor, Chris Kourtis can find himself sounding a lot like a bull when in the company of bears, and there’s a lot to be bearish about at the moment.
As soon as the three musketeers [Guy Fowler, Matthew Grounds and Gary Weiss] spoke to me I said ‘stop’. They said ‘we haven’t finished’. And I said, ‘I’m in’. We invested $10 million in Sohn Hearts and Minds. So substantial enough for a young fellow like me.
Famed hedge fund manager Dan Loeb has been named as one of the headline acts for next month’s Sohn Hearts & Minds philanthropic investment conference to be held in Sydney. Mr Loeb, 61, has built a reputation as a fierce shareholder activist and oversees $US11.7 billion ($18.5 billion) at New York-based Third Point.
When Ravi Chopra reveals his stock pick at the prestigious Sohn Hearts & Minds conference at the Opera House in Sydney next month, it could well be a short bet on a US bank.
Bryce and Ren from Equity Mates are joined by Rikki Bannan, Executive Director and Portfolio Manager at IFM Investors.
Last year, Ravi Chopra was travelling through Europe to shop his latest short idea to potential investors. "Financials are really all in the weeds," Ravi Chopra shared with The Australian Financial Review. "It’s all about numbers, it’s about modeling. It’s not just about looking at earnings reports, but also diving into regulatory data.
“Healthcare is often viewed as a stable, defensive sector to invest in, but in small caps that hasn’t necessarily proven to be the case,” she says in an interview with The Australian ahead of her appearance as a stock tipper at the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference in Sydney next month.
According to Dr Attia - who will speak at the Sohn Hearts & Minds in Sydney next month - nothing is completely random. He has built a career unearthing about what fuels a long life and shared his knowledge in the bestselling book Outlive: The Science & Art of Longevity.
Angela Aldrich bet against Treasury Wine Estates at the top of the market; now the Bayberry Capital founder is preparing to make her next big call.
After a decade of easy money pushing equity markets in one direction, Wall Street hedge fund manager Ricky Sandler says the return of volatility and higher interest rates is seeing money return to long-short strategies.
When New York-based hedge fund manager Ricky Sandler arrived in Australia a year ago to spend time with his son who was studying in Sydney, he didn’t expect to become the reigning champion of a philanthropic investor conference.