
#33 David Salem - A Deep Dive into Capital Allocation
07/05/19 • 68 min
#33 David Salem - A Deep Dive into Capital Allocation
This interview is a true master class for anyone interested in capital allocation and manager selection. We had the great pleasure to speak to David Salem, the Co-Chairman of New Providence Asset Management, a firm that provides investment office solutions for endowments, foundations and family offices. David is also a contributor to Epsilon Theory, an online community in which he writes extremely thoughtful articles about investment management and combines it with his passion for the game of baseball.
Before assuming his current post, David served as a Managing Partner at Windhorse Capital Management, which merged with New Providence in 2018. For almost two decades before that, David served as the Founding President and CIO for the Investment Fund for Foundations (TIFF), a non-profit investment cooperative that managed over $8bn on behalf of more than 700 endowed charities by the time he left.
We discuss many different topics during our conversation, which includes the Yale Model, which then became known as the Endowment Model and why David thinks it may be dangerous for institutions to try to replicate it. We also discuss David’s framework for selecting money managers, what his due diligence process looks like and what he focuses on when meeting a money manager for the very first time.
The topics discussed include:
02:00 – David’s background
06:00 – David’s opinion what it takes to become a great investor
10:00 – The Endowment Model and why David thinks it may be dangerous for institutions to try to replicate it
16:00 – How does David thinks about diversification, as well as his thoughts on how to design an investment program
24:00 – David’s thoughts on how one should account for human biases in the measurement of risk tolerance
33:00 – David’s thoughts on Private Equity and crypto currencies
39:00 – David’s personal process on how to select investment managers
43:00 – Characteristics David looks for (and seeks to avoid) in vetting money managers
49:00 – How does David prepare for a first meeting with a money manager, and what he spends the first meeting on
55:00 – What David thinks about the use of Investment Committee in making investment decisions
59:00 – How does David decide on how when to part ways with managers he has invested in
62:00 – David’s thoughts on mentorship
Please keep in mind this is not investment advice. Full disclaimer at the end of the podcast.
As always, make sure you share the podcast with anyone you think might benefit from the information. And don’t forget to leave us a 5-Star review on iTunes!
Luke, Leo & Andy
#33 David Salem - A Deep Dive into Capital Allocation
This interview is a true master class for anyone interested in capital allocation and manager selection. We had the great pleasure to speak to David Salem, the Co-Chairman of New Providence Asset Management, a firm that provides investment office solutions for endowments, foundations and family offices. David is also a contributor to Epsilon Theory, an online community in which he writes extremely thoughtful articles about investment management and combines it with his passion for the game of baseball.
Before assuming his current post, David served as a Managing Partner at Windhorse Capital Management, which merged with New Providence in 2018. For almost two decades before that, David served as the Founding President and CIO for the Investment Fund for Foundations (TIFF), a non-profit investment cooperative that managed over $8bn on behalf of more than 700 endowed charities by the time he left.
We discuss many different topics during our conversation, which includes the Yale Model, which then became known as the Endowment Model and why David thinks it may be dangerous for institutions to try to replicate it. We also discuss David’s framework for selecting money managers, what his due diligence process looks like and what he focuses on when meeting a money manager for the very first time.
The topics discussed include:
02:00 – David’s background
06:00 – David’s opinion what it takes to become a great investor
10:00 – The Endowment Model and why David thinks it may be dangerous for institutions to try to replicate it
16:00 – How does David thinks about diversification, as well as his thoughts on how to design an investment program
24:00 – David’s thoughts on how one should account for human biases in the measurement of risk tolerance
33:00 – David’s thoughts on Private Equity and crypto currencies
39:00 – David’s personal process on how to select investment managers
43:00 – Characteristics David looks for (and seeks to avoid) in vetting money managers
49:00 – How does David prepare for a first meeting with a money manager, and what he spends the first meeting on
55:00 – What David thinks about the use of Investment Committee in making investment decisions
59:00 – How does David decide on how when to part ways with managers he has invested in
62:00 – David’s thoughts on mentorship
Please keep in mind this is not investment advice. Full disclaimer at the end of the podcast.
As always, make sure you share the podcast with anyone you think might benefit from the information. And don’t forget to leave us a 5-Star review on iTunes!
Luke, Leo & Andy
Previous Episode

#32 Iven Kurz – Passive Dynamic Investing
We had the pleasure to chat with Iven Kurz, founder and CEO of Evergreen GmbH. Evergreen is a German retirement focused Robo advisor. Before founding his own company, Iven was a total return fund manager for two of the biggest German Private Banks. The total return investing style Iven uses is called Passive Dynamic Investing, which is based on the Black-Scholes Option Pricing Theory and he used for many years. We dive deep into the weeds of this investment form and see why it is being used for retirement saving. Please keep in mind this is not investment advice full disclaimer at the end of the podcast.
The topics discussed include:
03:00 - investment philosophies
04:30 - How Iven got into Total Return investing
07:00 - portfolio insurance investing and what is passive dynamic investing (PDI)
12:30 - deep dive into PDI and Option Pricing theory
17:30 - what is the goal of PDI
23:55 - how does risk work in PDI?
26:40 - PDI for retirement planning and risk
29:00 - risk budgets
32:00 - predicting returns for PDI Investing
35:25 - about long-short total return investing
37:30 - What Evergreen does
40:50 What Evergreen does differently
43:30 - costs and risk premium for robo-advisors
47:20 - PDI and black swan events
50:15 - closing questions
As always, make sure you share the podcast with anyone you think might benefit from the information. And don’t forget to leave us a 5-Star review on iTunes!
Find out more at https://www.thewallstreetlab.com/
Luke, Leo & Andy
Next Episode

#34 Paul Smith - President and CEO of the CFA Institute
This week, we had the pleasure to speak to the current (as of July 2019) CEO of the CFA Institute, Paul Smith. In our conversation, we cover some of Paul’s challenges in running the CFA Institute during his almost 5-year tenure, the future of the investment management industry, his vision for the organization, why he thinks it is important to have a mandatory Continuing Professional Development requirement for CFA Charterholders, as well as why he thinks young professionals interested in in investment management should strive to become CFA Charterholders. For more visit: www.thewallstreetlab.com
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