cover of episode WTT: The Hardest Day to Invest is Always Today

WTT: The Hardest Day to Invest is Always Today

2025/5/22
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Capital Allocators – Inside the Institutional Investment Industry

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Ted Seides: 我认为现在永远是最难投资的时候。回顾我的投资生涯,我发现在不同的市场条件下,这个观点始终成立。当前市场面临着关税、经济形势、估值、私募市场流动性以及另类投资拥挤等多重不确定性。即使是顶级的宏观策略师也开始质疑美国经济的持续优越性。在股票、债券和另类投资都不具吸引力时,投资者需要认真思考应对策略。虽然各个资产类别都存在风险,但也蕴藏着机遇。我认为最具吸引力的风险调整后机会可能存在于被忽视的市场角落,如房地产、新兴市场股票和中端市场收购。当然,在利基市场和自下而上的集中投资中也存在机会,但这需要非凡的技能和判断力。总之,现在投资可能充满风险,但也可能充满机遇,唯一确定的是,现在永远是最难投资的时候。

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In offering a rare take on the current market, I come back to one of my investment truths. The hardest day to invest is always today. One of my earliest manager meetings was with Jeremy Grantham in 1992. He made a compelling case that the bull market of the 1980s had run its course.

Around the same time, I learned about Warren Buffett and considered buying Berkshire Hathaway stock. At $12,000 per share, Berkshire Class A was beyond my means. I assumed I was too late. The easy money had already been made. But in hindsight, I was standing at the starting line of one of history's greatest bull markets. Over the past four years, we've hosted Capital Allocators University six times.

In each session, I presented a slide titled, The Hardest Day to Invest is Always Today. And every time, new market conditions made that statement ring true. Today is no exception. We face heightened uncertainty from tariffs, economic conditions, valuations, private market liquidity, and crowding in alternatives. Even leading macro strategists have begun to question the durability of U.S. exceptionalism on the Capital Allocators podcast.

When stocks, bonds, and alternatives all appear unattractive, what's an investor to do? I've been thinking about the bull and bear cases across asset classes. None of these observations are earth-shattering, but collectively, they illustrate a complex investment landscape with few compelling opportunities. U.S. equities boast strong, resilient mega-cap companies, a lagging cohort with catch-up potential, and implicit policy backstops from the Fed and Treasury.

But they face headwinds from high valuations, rising government debt, and escalating economic and geopolitical risk. The familiar comfort of buying the dip no longer feels reliable. International developed markets appear cheaper than the U.S., but contend with structural inefficiencies, political instability, and sluggish innovation. Broad exposure remains hard to justify outside of select markets like Japan.

Emerging market equities offer compelling valuations and promising long-term growth fueled by favorable demographics. Still, they remain vulnerable to political volatility, currency risk, and shifting support in a multipolar world. Private equity, especially in the middle market, purports to offer higher long-term returns. However, constrained liquidity, lengthening holding periods, and valuation uncertainty make capital commitments less straightforward.

Private credit has become the alternative of choice. It offers attractive yields, shorter durations, and adaptability to a higher rate environment. But massive inflows have compressed spreads, raised concerns about underwriting standards, and left questions about resilience in a tougher economy. Venture capital benefits from relentless innovation, particularly in AI.

Yet intense competition, limited access to top deals and managers, and constrained exit environments temper its appeal. Real estate remains deeply unloved, despite potential tailwinds from housing shortages and a commercial recovery. Its absolute return prospects are modest, and uncertainties around work patterns and interest rates continue to cloud the picture.

Infrastructure, especially in high-demand areas like data centers, benefits from inelastic demand and government support. But like real estate, infrastructure faces limited upside and lingering macro risk. In a tougher return environment, relative strength is insufficient to meet objectives. So where do we turn?

The most compelling risk-adjusted opportunities may lie in the most overlooked corners of the market, real estate, emerging market equities, and middle market buyouts, although it's hard to call any part of private equity overlooked. Beyond that, opportunities lie in idiosyncratic niches and bottom-up concentration, both of which are capacity-constrained and demand exceptional skill and judgment.

Even so, this feels like one of those moments when the risk of something going wrong is just around the corner. Or maybe, as history has shown time and again, it's a moment full of unexpected opportunities. The only thing I know for sure is this, the hardest day to invest is always today.

Thanks for listening to the show. If you like what you heard, hop on our website at capitalallocators.com where you can access past shows, join our mailing list, and sign up for premium content. Have a good one and see you next time.