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Dimitry Nakhla | Babylon Capitalยฎ
What have I done ๐Ÿ˜‚

Bill Ackman was on Fox Business this week saying โ€œvery high-quality businesses are showing up at very attractive levelsโ€

He added that Pershing Square is approaching 15% cash & is โ€œfinishing due diligence on a company weโ€™ve really wanted to own for years โ€” now available at a bargain priceโ€

Over the last several weeks, Iโ€™ve shared that many quality compounders are trading at the lower end of their 3-year valuation ranges and look attractive relative to their growth, durability, & moats

Before going any further I want to be clear: ๐ž๐ฏ๐ž๐ซ๐ฒ๐ญ๐ก๐ข๐ง๐  ๐ข๐ง ๐ญ๐ก๐ข๐ฌ ๐ฉ๐จ๐ฌ๐ญ ๐š๐›๐จ๐ฎ๐ญ ๐ฐ๐ก๐ข๐œ๐ก ๐œ๐จ๐ฆ๐ฉ๐š๐ง๐ฒ ๐๐ข๐ฅ๐ฅ ๐œ๐จ๐ฎ๐ฅ๐ ๐›๐ž ๐œ๐จ๐ง๐ฌ๐ข๐๐ž๐ซ๐ข๐ง๐  ๐ข๐ฌ ๐ฉ๐ฎ๐ซ๐ž๐ฅ๐ฒ ๐ฌ๐ฉ๐ž๐œ๐ฎ๐ฅ๐š๐ญ๐ข๐ฏ๐ž

I simply enjoy analyzing great investors and their frameworks, & @BillAckman has been one Iโ€™ve respected for years

Now lets guess ๐Ÿค”

I believe the company is potentially Mastercard $MA & hereโ€™s why:

@KoyfinCharts recently shared Billโ€™s investment principles & $MA checks off every box

๐Ÿ. ๐Š๐ž๐ฒ ๐›๐ฎ๐ฌ๐ข๐ง๐ž๐ฌ๐ฌ ๐œ๐ก๐š๐ซ๐š๐œ๐ญ๐ž๐ซ๐ข๐ฌ๐ญ๐ข๐œ๐ฌ

โœ…Simple predictable FCF generative business

โ€ข $MA runs a toll-road-like payments network along with value added services & solutions & maintains >50% FCF margins

โœ…Formiddable barriers to entry

โ€ข $MA operates in a duopoly โ€” a new competitor would need global merchant onboarding, bank integrations, regulatorsโ€™ approval, & brand trust, among other things

โœ…Limited exposure to extrinsic factors that we cannot control

โ€ข $MA revenue is very stable especially over long periods & the company does not lend money, so it has no direct credit or balance-sheet risk

โœ…Generally low financial leverage levels

โ€ข $MA uses modest conservative leverage with strong interest-coverage ratios & stable cash generation

โœ…Minimal capital markets dependency

โ€ข Given its predictable recurring-like FCF, $MA is a self-funded business

โœ…Typically highly liquid mid & large cap companies

โ€ข $MA has a $488B market cap

๐Ÿ. ๐€๐ญ๐ญ๐ซ๐š๐œ๐ญ๐ข๐ฏ๐ž ๐ฏ๐š๐ฅ๐ฎ๐š๐ญ๐ข๐จ๐ง

โœ…Fair price as is but a substantial discount to optimized value

โ€ข $MA trades for 29x (lower end of its 3 year range & a PEG <2.00)
- Dimitry Nakhla | Babylon Capitalยฎ
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Quiver Quantitative
BREAKING: Representative Jared Moskowitz just filed new stock trades.

He bought up to $30K of stock in Taiwan Semicondcutor, $TSMC.

Moskowitz sits on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Full trade list up on Quiver. https://t.co/56WhL0mZgT
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EndGame Macro
This Chart Says More About the Economy Than Any Headline

When you look at this lumber chart, the surprising thing isnโ€™t just that prices are falling, itโ€™s how indifferent the market is to the tariff backdrop. A new 10% tariff kicked in on October 14th, 2025, and Canadian lumber is effectively facing a 35% tariff load. In a healthy, growing economy, that kind of supply side tax would have pushed prices sharply higher. But instead, lumber futures slid right back to the same lows we saw a year ago and are now sitting on a clear double bottom.

That price action tells you everything: the market doesnโ€™t believe demand is strong enough for tariffs to matter. Businesses are the ones who actually pay tariffs upfront, and when the consumer is slowing down, those businesses canโ€™t pass the cost along. So futures donโ€™t price in higher costs ahead, they price in weaker demand ahead.

Why Demand Is Overpowering the Tariff Story

The best confirmation comes from the ground level: Home Depotโ€™s own language. Theyโ€™re saying customers are fatigued, pulling back from home improvement projects, and trading down to cheaper materials. Thatโ€™s exactly the kind of environment where lumber struggles regardless of tariffs. Big projects get delayed. Renovations get scaled back. Builders order only what they must, not what they want.

When demand is rolling over like that, even a tariff shock gets absorbed by distributors and mills rather than passed on to buyers and the futures market sees that instantly.

How the Chart Fits the Cycle

Thatโ€™s why this chart looks the way it does. Lumber isnโ€™t responding to the headline or the policy change. Itโ€™s responding to the psychological turn in housing and renovation. Futures traders are asking one simple questionโ€ฆhow much lumber will America actually need in 2026 if consumers remain cautious and the economic outlook softens?

And their answer is written right there in the priceโ€ฆless than before.

So the chart isnโ€™t ignoring the tariffs. itโ€™s overriding them. Itโ€™s saying the slowdown in construction, the hesitation from homeowners, and the fatigue that Home Depot is calling out are stronger forces than tax policy. In a tight demand environment, tariffs donโ€™t lift prices. They just compress margins upstream while futures drift lower toward whatever level the market thinks matches the new, weaker reality.

Credit to @Barchart
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Quiver Quantitative
$GOOG has now risen 14% since this post, while the market has fallen.

BREAKING: Warren Buffet's Berkshire Hathaway just filed a portfolio update.

They opened a new $4.3B position in Google, $GOOG.

Full holdings up on Quiver, link below. https://t.co/RoJTmS5xhJ
- Quiver Quantitative
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Quiver Quantitative
Markets are now giving a 75% chance of a rate cut at the next Fed meeting. https://t.co/IZiud12Z1q
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EndGame Macro
The College Promise Is Breaking Down

Whatโ€™s happening in the job market right now is the unraveling of a story we were all told for decades. A record share of unemployed Americans now have college degrees. Recent grads are running unemployment rates higher than the national average. And the shock for a lot of people is that this isnโ€™t happening in soft majors, itโ€™s happening in fields that were once considered bulletproof.

College hasnโ€™t kept up with the world itโ€™s supposed to prepare people for. Schools expanded enrollment, raised prices, and kept telling students that any degree was a ticket to stability. But employers stopped treating degrees as a guarantee. The economy shifted, automation accelerated, and suddenly a lot of credentialed young adults are entering a market where the entry level jobs that used to absorb them just arenโ€™t there anymore.

How Tech Degrees Lost Their Aura

For years, computer science and computer engineering were the safest bets in higher education. These were the majors where you graduated on Friday and started your job on Monday. Then the world changed. Tech massively over hired during the pandemic boom and spent the next two years cutting staff and freezing junior roles. At the same time, AI began swallowing the exact kind of grunt work that used to justify hiring large cohorts of new engineers. And because remote work went global, a new grad in the U.S. is now competing with equally strong talent abroad at a fraction of the cost.

The result is a strange moment where the degrees that once symbolized certainty now come with real risk. The demand for great engineers isnโ€™t gone but the path in is narrower, steeper, and far more selective. The middle of the market has been hollowed out.

Where Parents Should Focus Now

If your kid is thinking about college, the question you should be asking is โ€œwhat kinds of work will still need a human being in ten years?โ€

Jobs that involve touching the real worldโ€ฆbodies, buildings, energy systems, machines arenโ€™t going anywhere. Healthcare roles, skilled trades, infrastructure work, and anything tied to physical safety or compliance will stay in demand. AI can help these jobs, but it canโ€™t replace the hands, judgment, and accountability behind them.

Then there are the jobs that rely on deeply human skills like empathy, trust, relationship building. Mental health work, education, certain advisory roles, coaching, and specialized care. These are fields where people donโ€™t want an algorithm; they want another human being.

And finally, jobs that own problems, not tasks. AI can handle tasks. It still struggles with messy realities: coordinating teams, managing crises, understanding context, balancing tradeoffs. Operations, logistics, product work, cybersecurity, and technical sales fall into this category.

The Takeaway

College can still be the right move. But the days of go anywhere, study anything, and everything will work out are over. The world is moving too fast for that. If anything, the labor market is telling us what colleges wonโ€™t that is that the value isnโ€™t in the credential, itโ€™s in the skills you leave with and whether those skills fit the shape of the economy thatโ€™s actually emerging.

This moment is a sign that the old pipeline has broken, and families need a new way to think about education, work, and what it means to build a durable future.

JUST IN: Americans with college degrees now make up a record 25% of all unemployed.
- Polymarket
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Quiver Quantitative
We are seeing some absolutely massive spending in the Tennessee congressional race taking place next week.

It's a deep-red district, but Democrats and Republicans are both spending millions on ads.

You can track the spending on Quiver. https://t.co/kSx3BNxbEi
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App Economy Insights
๐Ÿ”ฅ Holy sh*t Black Friday is here!

๐Ÿ“Š How They Make Money Premium.
๐Ÿ‘€ 50% off โ€” $199 โ†’ $99/year today.

Unlock thousands of visuals.
Weekly breakdowns and deep dives. https://t.co/hPl4bDyAoo
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WealthyReadings
๐Ÿšจ $NVO hits a new yearly low after disappointing data from its Alzheimerโ€™s trial.

Everyone told you to buy the dip. At $90. At $80. Theyโ€™ll keep saying it. They'll evetually be right. Broken clocks are right twice a day.

At what costs? Financially and mentally?

Cheap usually gets cheaper. And nobody tells you to be patient.

These trials were supposed to be the next big catalyst, the lever of growth many were banking on. That wasnโ€™t analysisโ€ฆ that was investing on hope. Now many are hoping their shares will magically bounce.

Impatience is expensive. Discipline isnโ€™t.

I'll buy $NVO one day. I am convinced of it. But it isn't today and won't be tomorrow. It will be when we can invest on data and an uptrend, not hope.

$NVO is NOT cheap and NOT a buy right now.

GLP-1 was supposed to drive growth but market share is slipping in favor of competition. Growth guidance was cut twice and there are no near-term catalysts nor clarity on what the future will be like.

Lower growth โ†’ lower cash generation โ†’ lower multiples.

This is how the market works. Comparing today's valuation to the last two years' is like comparing apples to bananas. Conditions changed.

$NVO is a fantastic company. Just not a great stock, yet. There are no reasons to rush any purchase, better be patient.
- WealthyReadings
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