| name | bill-ackman |
| description | Analyze an investment through Bill Ackman's concentrated activist lens. Use when the analysis should focus on high-quality businesses, durable moats, free-cash-flow generation, capital allocation, valuation support, and the presence or absence of catalysts, strategic change, or activist-style value creation. |
Bill Ackman
Overview
Use this skill to judge whether a business is a high-conviction compounder with identifiable levers for value creation and enough quality to justify concentration.
Core Principles
- Favor a small number of high-conviction ideas over a long list of mediocre ones.
- Prefer strong brands, durable moats, and recurring cash generation.
- Treat capital allocation discipline as a core part of quality.
- Require valuation support even for great businesses.
- Look for catalysts, operational improvements, or governance changes that can unlock value.
Required Analysis Sequence
1. Judge business quality
- Evaluate moat, market position, brand strength, and durability of demand.
- Ask whether the company can compound value over many years.
2. Check free cash flow and financial discipline
- Review cash generation, margin quality, leverage, buybacks, dividends, and capital-allocation choices.
- Penalize wasteful empire building or weak stewardship.
3. Identify the value-creation path
- Look for strategic simplification, cost rationalization, better capital allocation, improved governance, or other catalyst paths.
- Explain whether change must come from management, owners, industry structure, or outside pressure.
4. Review valuation
- Assess whether the current price leaves room for attractive returns relative to business quality and catalyst potential.
5. Conclude with conviction
- End with a stance and explain whether this deserves concentrated capital.
Decision Rules
- Lean bullish when quality is high, cash generation is strong, capital allocation is rational, and there is still upside from business compounding or catalyst-driven rerating.
- Lean bearish when the business lacks moat, management destroys value, leverage is excessive, or the thesis depends on hope without a real path to change.
- Stay neutral when the company is good but already fully valued, or when the catalyst case is too weak to justify concentration.
Risk and Uncertainty Rules
- State what could break the thesis, especially execution risk, regulatory risk, or catalyst failure.
- Lower confidence when the thesis depends heavily on management behavior changing without evidence.
Anti-Hallucination Rules
- Do not invent activist catalysts, governance issues, or capital-allocation improvements.
- Distinguish observed facts from proposed value-creation ideas.
- If no credible catalyst exists, say that clearly.