Sanjay Ayer, PM at California-based WCM Investment Managers, describes how the Covid pandemic reinforced many of the firm’s core principles, allowing the team to double-down on its culture of challenging established thinking and adapting quickly to new information.
Is there a single market moment of the past 25 years that’s left a unique mark on the financial landscape and how you think about investing?
Sanjay Ayer (SA): At the risk of falling prey to recency bias, I believe the post-Covid period has been the most transformative. It was a real structural break, exposing some of the ‘muscles’ and toolkits that investors grew conditioned to from the Global Financial Crisis all the way up to 2020.
During that era, you could apply a relatively stable set of rules and thrive. There were disruptions, of course, but broadly the playbook stayed the same and rewarded discipline and long-termism. Covid forced all of us to rewire – strategies that worked for over a decade suddenly became liabilities if you didn’t adapt.
For me, it’s made obvious the necessity of both clear ‘game selection’ and the need to have a toolkit that is flexible and adaptable. Without that, even the best investors risk sliding into irrelevance when the backdrop changes for real.
Can you recall the reality of the early days of the pandemic, both on a personal and portfolio level?
SA: The initial shock was enormous. As with all major events, everyone rushed to offer ‘hot takes’, which with hindsight, were mostly way off. Actually, we built an app called Everest that’s effectively a team journal for tracking our views – primarily to encourage learning but also to promote the right temperament, for instance reminding everyone to zoom out and stay objective rather than letting headlines or price action drive their internal narratives.
Post Covid, markets were initially whipsawed by headline interpretations. Take Shopify. As economies froze, consensus saw only disaster for online retail. But within weeks, demand surged as everyone shopped from home. You see the same with AI now – markets reach for a new consensus, and the narrative shifts faster than the real insights can keep up. With Covid, it forced us to accept real uncertainty – walking through the tunnel with a lantern and a rough compass, only seeing as far as the next few steps could take us, but not entirely sure of the exact endpoint.
As late as 2023, investors faced choices: stick to quality companies even as growth was clearly pulled forward, or was maturing, or look anew at what ‘trajectory and ‘quality’ actually meant. Our rallying cry internally was to use what we call ‘moat trajectory’ as our compass and to double-down on it. That means we back only those businesses that continue to improve, focusing on what they will become rather than what they statically are or were. So, it was not about abandoning our philosophy but rather a rigorous return to it, along with a mindset of openness toward real structural change.
How did you manage the team’s mindset, especially among junior or less experienced colleagues during this period of upheaval?
SA: I’m going to give you a nuanced answer, because it wasn’t easy all of the time. It was important for senior staff to help to maintain focus, ensuring the team didn’t chase every new headline or fall prey to short-termism; rather, we searched for truth collectively as a team.