New Position:
Shift4 $FOUR
Increased Position:
Fiserv $FI (-3.61%)
Another month, another update.
September hasn’t been great for my portfolio, let’s say. Up 1.9%, while the S&P gained 3.5% and the Nasdaq more than 5.4%. But give me a minute to explain why it might not be as bad as it seems.
First, I should start by pointing out that overall, since the inception of my portfolio, it’s still tied in performance with the S&P and Nasdaq, because August was a better month. But the key thing here is my long-term horizon: The month wasn’t bad, because I opened a new position, doubled down on an existing one, and further reduced my cash quota to less than 26%. I still plan to reduce my cash position to under 10% by the end of the year, and I assume that I’ll get countless chances during next earnings season or a tech rally cooldown. My core principle for reducing cash remains: deploy opportunistically, rather than all at once. Yes, I would have performed better so far if I had invested all the capital from the beginning, but the tides can turn in the blink of an eye, and I want to be 100% confident in my conviction before I pull the trigger.
As far as my two buys go, I discussed both regularly in my daily posts over the last weeks, but here’s a brief summary of my reasoning: Fiserv is undervalued, by any metric. The business is sticky, cash flows are steady and growing, debt is manageable and was necessary for the First Data acquisition. The stock lost almost 40% YTD, leading to compelling valuation metrics like a forward P/E of 16 or a FCF yield around 6%, all that combined with projected top-line growth in the high single digits and earnings expansion north of 30% next year and mid-teens after that. Although Fiserv is an almost irresistible buy right now, with a healthy risk/reward, for me, it’s not a stock for eternity. I wholeheartedly believe that the market will re-evaluate the stock at some point, and re-rate it at least 50-100% higher, but that’s where I see the ceiling for now.
Shift4, on the other hand, is a completely different angle. It’s a FinTech disruptor with a visionary, exciting businessman at the helm. Jason Isaacman has proved flawless execution over the years, so much so that competitors have become increasingly wary in recent history. Toast slashed prices for small restaurants to attract new customers. Why? Because Shift4 is eating into its market share – fast. Not only is that a sign of recognition from competitors and proof that Shift4’s strategy is effective, but Toast’s new model is still significantly more expensive. Shift4 is still in the hyper-growth stage, growing its revenue north of 25%, similar to cash flows. Nevertheless, the valuation is still remarkable with a FCF yield close to 6% and EV/Revenue less than 3. I believe in Jason Isaacman, I believe in the business model, and I believe in its future. This is a position I don’t intend to sell any time soon.
Final thoughts: I remain skeptical about the resilience of the bounce off the tariff lows and still expect some form of correction rather soon. However, I am highly satisfied with my current investments and would embrace a selloff as a chance to double down and open new positions to finally close my cash position. Also, I am weighing in my head whether I should have a hard cap on 15 positions for the future or leave it around 20-25 as it’s currently planned.
Excited for October.
Return since inception: +7.5%