Capital at risk
Actual investors look to the future. Not the past.
- Great companies grow by anticipating and adapting to change. The best ones drive economic growth rather than relying on it
- One defining characteristic is that management invests to secure the revenues of the future rather than maximising short-term profitability
- Even established companies can reinvent themselves through disruptive innovation
‘Look to the future’ is hardly an original maxim, and it’s a rare investor who doesn’t claim to live by it. More remarkable is how often the future is seen as a mere continuation of the past. What has been will continue to be.
According to this mindset, share prices are determined by extrapolating past operational performance into the future. It’s an easy mental shortcut but a spurious basis on which to calculate a company’s worth. Such projections often ignore the potential impact of changes in the market or of technology shifts in the wider world. From healthcare to energy, we’ve seen how the game can change completely.
We call ourselves Actual – not just active – investors, because the companies we seek are those investing to secure their place in the world of the future. The best companies adapt, evolve and innovate, and we encourage them to do that, not just to aim for quarterly earnings targets. For Actual investors, extrapolation is unimaginative and usually misleading. It can also be destructive of value for index investors as swathes of once-reliable stocks are displaced by businesses exploiting newer technologies.
Thinking ahead
Take energy, for example. Solar and wind are becoming cheaper than fossil-fuelled energy, even without subsidies. Solar panels and wind turbines are cheaper than ever to make and more efficient to operate. They make sense economically regardless of carbon pricing policy, which is likely to toughen as greenhouse gas emissions attract political attention. Renewable energy is where future growth will come from. But despite the end probably now being in sight for the legacy technologies of ‘big oil’, investors remain rooted in the past, leaving the major producers still enormously valuable in stock market terms.
For Actual investors to ‘look to the future’ should be more than: ‘This oil company looks cheap this week, but the oil price will go back up and it still has billions of barrels under the Gulf of Mexico’. Valuing on the basis of reserves makes no sense. Oil likely to stay underground has no value.
As ‘the future’ will be unrecognisably different from the present, it’s better to invest in a business because of what it can become, not because of how profitable it is now.
It’s future profits that count
Many investors avoid yet-to-be-profitable companies for fear of looking stupid if they never generate free cash. Actual investors don’t care so much. Or rather, we care more about how a company might make money in the future. If we can envisage that, we ask how much capital it needs to be able to sustain itself through its own cash flow.
Healthcare offers a good example of how our lives will be transformed. From trial-and-error methods of drug discovery, we’re getting better at understanding the genetic causes of disease and tailoring therapies to the patient. The cost of the gene sequencing that enables this has collapsed, thanks to firms such as Illumina. Along with telemedicine – turbocharged by the Covid-19 pandemic – it points to a massive disruption of healthcare, so assuming the continued dominance of today’s ‘big pharma’ makes little sense.
Imagining the new healthcare world means backing the companies likely to thrive there, such as vaccine maker Moderna or cancer drug developer Genmab. Some companies we own are not yet profitable, nor would we expect them to be at this stage. Working at the frontiers of medical science, some will bear fruit, and others will be proved wrong. But waiting until a company is profitable before anticipating further growth is not what Actual investment is about.
Not just new companies
Future-mindedness doesn’t just mean prospecting for exciting new companies. Familiar and unloved businesses that have shown minimal growth and whose stocks are undervalued can sometimes reinvent themselves. They sort out internal problems, outfox competitors caught on the wrong side of the capital investment cycle, or successfully move into an adjacent business.
Netflix offers an extreme example of the last of these, a DVD rental business that disrupted its own model to become the world’s largest content streaming service. CEO Reed Hastings sidestepped future failure and imagined a new kind of entertainment service.
None of this is to argue that the past never matters. Baillie Gifford was founded in 1908 when we invested in Malayan rubber to supply tyres for the Ford Model T. The automobile age and many subsequent waves of innovation taught us how new technologies attract capital and how the cycle of investment and return plays out. We learned to imagine how future industries and companies could emerge.
Looking to the future will always be an imprecise art, but it’s important to practice it. We should assume that almost anything in any industry can be done better. Actual investors support those companies looking for a better way in the hope that the value of that discovery will be recognised.
Actual insights in your inbox
Offering you insights from our fund managers, on topics ranging from the changing face of growth to the energy transition.
Ways to invest
Products to fit your choice of investment style, asset type, type of fund and geographic region.
Important information
By clicking on South Korea, you have confirmed that you are based in South Korea and that you meet the following requirements.
The information in this area of the website is intended for qualified professional investors and consultants based in South Korea. It is not intended for use by any other persons including members of the general public or investors from other jurisdictions.
Please remember that all investment strategies have the potential for profit and loss and your or your clients’ capital may be at risk.
Baillie Gifford Overseas Limited is wholly owned by Baillie Gifford & Co. Baillie Gifford Overseas Limited provides investment management and advisory services to non-UK clients. Both are authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Baillie Gifford Overseas Limited is licensed with the Financial Services Commission in South Korea as a cross border Discretionary Investment Manager and Non-Discretionary Investment Adviser.
Baillie Gifford Asia (Hong Kong) Limited 柏基亞洲(香港)有限公司 is wholly owned by Baillie Gifford Overseas Limited and holds a Type 1 licence from the Securities and Futures Commission of Hong Kong to market and distribute Baillie Gifford’s range of collective investment schemes to professional investors in Hong Kong.
Baillie Gifford Asia (Hong Kong) Limited 柏基亞洲(香港)有限公司 can be contacted at Suites 2713-2715, Two International Finance Centre, 8 Finance Street, Central, Hong Kong, Telephone +852 3756 5700.
The information provided does not constitute an offer of or solicitation for purchase or sale of securities or provision of any investment services. Any general enquiries regarding Baillie Gifford should be directed to the relevant individual as noted in the Contact Us section.
The information contained in this website has been compiled with considerable care to ensure its accuracy at the date of publication. However, no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made to its accuracy or completeness. Nothing in this information or elsewhere in this website shall exclude, limit or restrict our duties and liabilities to you under the United Kingdom's Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 or any conduct of business rules which we are bound to comply with.
This website is informative only and the information provided should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation to buy, sell or hold a particular investment. Read our Legal and regulatory information for further details.
Any stock examples, or images, used on this website are not intended to represent recommendations to buy or sell, neither is it implied that they will prove profitable in the future. It is not known whether they will feature in any future portfolio produced by us.