What stock will Sohn’s top picker choose next?

On November 18, Griffin – with $4.7bn under management at Munro Partners – heads to Hobart for this year’s face-to-face pitch to investors on his 2023 pick.

What stock will Sohn’s top picker choose next?

October 4, 2022
On November 18, Griffin – with $4.7bn under management at Munro Partners – heads to Hobart for this year’s face-to-face pitch to investors on his 2023 pick.
Read Transcript

Nick Griffin is on track to take out the coveted best stock pick at the Sohn Heart & Minds conference.

It has been a year when most picks were hi-tech stocks that took a hiding. “Tech is yesterday’s story for now – although not necessarily forever,” says Griffin, chief investment officer of growth fund manager Munro Partners.

Last year he pitched Onsemi, previously called ON Semiconductor. “We are one of the few who are up for the year, in fact the only one at this point in time. We are on track for a 15-25 per cent ­return,” he says.

Griffin notes that semiconductors have also fallen this year, being horribly cyclical, but Onsemi has gone up. “Even though it is a semiconductor, it’s not really a technology idea, it’s very much an industrial play on decarbonisation,” he says. “We think that is the next big mega trend.”

Onsemi sells power semiconductors that are critical to converting battery power into electricity. Griffin says the shift in electric-vehicle penetration caused an inflection in demand for power semis. This year, Onsemi has had a series of earnings upgrades, all confirming his investment philosophy.

“We are stock pickers. Most fund managers will try and do the macro, be over or underweight certain sectors, or certain bonds or countries. We think that is a total waste of time,” Griffin says. “The reality is equity markets are made up of very few great companies that grow structurally over a long period of time.

“If you can find a good S curve of adoption, be it smartphones, e-commerce, or digital payments, then that S curve will outrun whatever the economy does in the background. That’s what gives us these double-digit returns for six years at Munro and 10 years prior to that. Over the years that’s been Amazon in e-commerce, Salesforce or ServiceNow in enterprise software, ASML in semiconductors and now we think decarbonisation is the next big structural trend.”

On November 18, Griffin – with $4.7bn under management at Munro Partners – heads to Hobart for this year’s face-to-face pitch to investors on his 2023 pick.

The conference – with a twist – was set up by financiers Matthew Grounds, Guy Fowler and Gary Weiss in 2016. They also built an ASX-listed fund that takes stock picks pitched at the conference. All management fees are donated to medical research.

Munro has three separate ­equity growth funds. Each fund is also quoted as managed ETFs on the stock exchange, allowing retail investors access to potential S-curve opportunities outside Australia, from Netflix to decarbonisation. The Global Growth Fund is an absolute return fund, similar to a Platinum or Antipodes, although these are value funds. Munro is about growth in revenue and earnings – as Griffin describes them, the glass-half-full guys in global equities.

A second fund is global growth equities, but only for long positions and without downside protection tools.

The third is the Climate Change Leaders Fund launched in October last year. Griffin says the fund is not an ESG product, but a thematic fund that can be scaled up. “It’s no different to back in 2005, when everyone was launching tech funds or international brand funds,” he says.

Some $50 trillion is to be spent decarbonising the planet on renewable energy, EVs, and energy efficiency. But energy transition is where Griffith sees some of the best plays.

“Think about the European gas situation. LNG is a clear transition fuel required to fill the gap and most of what will fill the gap in India and China as they come off coal. Gas is classic transition fuel that is being treated like a fossil fuel but it is not,” he says.

Munro is backing Texas-based Cheniere Energy. It is not a traditional gas extractor and producer like Woodside. Instead, it builds terminals on the Gulf of Mexico coast, buys the gas off the grid, turns it into LNG and sells it.

“It has gone from nothing 10 years ago to being the world’s second-largest LNG producer today behind Qatar and we’d expect it to be largest at some point. Cheniere is a transition company,” Griffin says.

Rising rates and fears of recession has inevitably checked Munro’s high-growth strategy. “It’s harder and harder to find those situations when you go into a macro slowdown,” Griffin says. Munro’s funds are down about 15 per cent on a one-year rolling basis, which he sees as fair in terms of the market, but quite good compared to Munro’s growth peers, most of which he says are down 40 or 50 per cent.

All year, the firm has been more defensive with higher cash levels and some short selling on the global growth product.

Last year, Munro off-loaded Spotify, Hello Fresh, Square, The Trade Desk, Atlassian and Uber, favouring big cap companies such as Microsoft and Visa for growth through the cycle or healthcare companies like Thermo Fisher and Danaher.

This article was originally posted by The Australian here.

Licensed by Copyright Agency. You must not copy this work without permission.

Nick Griffin is on track to take out the coveted best stock pick at the Sohn Heart & Minds conference.

It has been a year when most picks were hi-tech stocks that took a hiding. “Tech is yesterday’s story for now – although not necessarily forever,” says Griffin, chief investment officer of growth fund manager Munro Partners.

Last year he pitched Onsemi, previously called ON Semiconductor. “We are one of the few who are up for the year, in fact the only one at this point in time. We are on track for a 15-25 per cent ­return,” he says.

Griffin notes that semiconductors have also fallen this year, being horribly cyclical, but Onsemi has gone up. “Even though it is a semiconductor, it’s not really a technology idea, it’s very much an industrial play on decarbonisation,” he says. “We think that is the next big mega trend.”

Onsemi sells power semiconductors that are critical to converting battery power into electricity. Griffin says the shift in electric-vehicle penetration caused an inflection in demand for power semis. This year, Onsemi has had a series of earnings upgrades, all confirming his investment philosophy.

“We are stock pickers. Most fund managers will try and do the macro, be over or underweight certain sectors, or certain bonds or countries. We think that is a total waste of time,” Griffin says. “The reality is equity markets are made up of very few great companies that grow structurally over a long period of time.

“If you can find a good S curve of adoption, be it smartphones, e-commerce, or digital payments, then that S curve will outrun whatever the economy does in the background. That’s what gives us these double-digit returns for six years at Munro and 10 years prior to that. Over the years that’s been Amazon in e-commerce, Salesforce or ServiceNow in enterprise software, ASML in semiconductors and now we think decarbonisation is the next big structural trend.”

On November 18, Griffin – with $4.7bn under management at Munro Partners – heads to Hobart for this year’s face-to-face pitch to investors on his 2023 pick.

The conference – with a twist – was set up by financiers Matthew Grounds, Guy Fowler and Gary Weiss in 2016. They also built an ASX-listed fund that takes stock picks pitched at the conference. All management fees are donated to medical research.

Munro has three separate ­equity growth funds. Each fund is also quoted as managed ETFs on the stock exchange, allowing retail investors access to potential S-curve opportunities outside Australia, from Netflix to decarbonisation. The Global Growth Fund is an absolute return fund, similar to a Platinum or Antipodes, although these are value funds. Munro is about growth in revenue and earnings – as Griffin describes them, the glass-half-full guys in global equities.

A second fund is global growth equities, but only for long positions and without downside protection tools.

The third is the Climate Change Leaders Fund launched in October last year. Griffin says the fund is not an ESG product, but a thematic fund that can be scaled up. “It’s no different to back in 2005, when everyone was launching tech funds or international brand funds,” he says.

Some $50 trillion is to be spent decarbonising the planet on renewable energy, EVs, and energy efficiency. But energy transition is where Griffith sees some of the best plays.

“Think about the European gas situation. LNG is a clear transition fuel required to fill the gap and most of what will fill the gap in India and China as they come off coal. Gas is classic transition fuel that is being treated like a fossil fuel but it is not,” he says.

Munro is backing Texas-based Cheniere Energy. It is not a traditional gas extractor and producer like Woodside. Instead, it builds terminals on the Gulf of Mexico coast, buys the gas off the grid, turns it into LNG and sells it.

“It has gone from nothing 10 years ago to being the world’s second-largest LNG producer today behind Qatar and we’d expect it to be largest at some point. Cheniere is a transition company,” Griffin says.

Rising rates and fears of recession has inevitably checked Munro’s high-growth strategy. “It’s harder and harder to find those situations when you go into a macro slowdown,” Griffin says. Munro’s funds are down about 15 per cent on a one-year rolling basis, which he sees as fair in terms of the market, but quite good compared to Munro’s growth peers, most of which he says are down 40 or 50 per cent.

All year, the firm has been more defensive with higher cash levels and some short selling on the global growth product.

Last year, Munro off-loaded Spotify, Hello Fresh, Square, The Trade Desk, Atlassian and Uber, favouring big cap companies such as Microsoft and Visa for growth through the cycle or healthcare companies like Thermo Fisher and Danaher.

This article was originally posted by The Australian here.

Licensed by Copyright Agency. You must not copy this work without permission.

Disclaimer: This material has been prepared by The Australian, published on Oct 04, 2022. HM1 is not responsible for the content of linked websites or content prepared by third party. The inclusion of these links and third-party content does not in any way imply any form of endorsement by HM1 of the products or services provided by persons or organisations who are responsible for the linked websites and third-party content. This information is for general information only and does not consider the objectives, financial situation or needs of any person. Before making an investment decision, you should read the relevant disclosure document (if appropriate) and seek professional advice to determine whether the investment and information is suitable for you.

facebook
linkedin
All
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
November 3, 2025

How to beat the market without owning Nvidia shares

Vihari Ross' global fund returned more than 20 per cent in the year to September 30 versus about 10 per cent for the benchmark without owning Nvidia, Meta, Tesla, Apple or Broadcom.

Read More
November 12, 2025

Square Peg's Ben Hensman names top picks in a hot tech sector

“We’re really looking for people who have that strong growth arc. Even though they’ve reached material scale, they’re still changing and moulding their company to move really fast, and they’re curious.”

Read More
Picture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje Ford
November 14, 2025

'Here to pitch the parent company': Jim Chalmers' Sohn pick

The federal treasurer got into the spirit of the Sohn Hearts & Minds event with a big-picture investment tip – and a dig at our nation’s fundies.

Read More
November 14, 2025

Forget Trump volatility says top investor and focus on China threat to Australia

Australian investors should be more worried about China than sweating on Federal Reserve independence and other market obsessions to do with Donald Trump, says billionaire conservative Baron Michael Hintze.

Read More
Picture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje Ford
November 14, 2025

Activism without proxy fights is like ‘Catholicism without hell’: Loeb

An older, wiser Dan Loeb reckons his activist approach has changed, but the Wall Street icon will never put away the big stick.

Read More
Picture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje Ford
November 14, 2025

Net zero move good, but Libs need ‘north star’: Lord Hintze

Michael Hintze, one of Australia’s richest international ­billionaires and donor to ­conservative parties, says the Liberals are lacking a “north star” but dumping net zero was a smart move.

Read More
Picture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje Ford
November 14, 2025

Third Point’s Loeb leads bullish investors despite stock slump

Major investors say the global economy is strong enough to withstand a bubble in artificial intelligence and turmoil in private credit markets despite a sharp fall on Wall Street and the ASX over the past week.

Read More
November 14, 2025

The 9 hottest stock tips from this year’s Sohn fund managers

Defying markets gloom, top investment chiefs pitched their best global ideas, from an “OG in AI” to a retirement giant.

Read More
Picture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje FordPicture: Katje Ford
November 14, 2025

10 top stock picks from Sohn Hearts & Minds conference 2025

Global fund managers gathered at the 2025 Sohn Hearts & Minds conference to pitch their best stock ideas. Here are all 10 tips in the order they were presented.

Read More
Photo: Kajie FordPhoto: Kajie FordPhoto: Kajie FordPhoto: Kajie Ford
November 18, 2025

Anthony Scaramucci says everyone in Trump's orbit hates him

“The Mooch”, as he’s affectionately known, is a man in high demand. He’s flown into Sydney to headline the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference at the Opera House, an investment community jamboree that raises money for charity. He landed in London the night before, and will leave Sydney the next day for the brutal 24-hour return to New York.

Read More
November 14, 2025

Queenstown to host 2026 Sohn Hearts & Minds Conference

We're thrilled to announce Queenstown, New Zealand, as the destination for the 2026 Investment Leaders Conference, to be held on Friday 6 November.

Read More
November 23, 2025

Nvidia's wild swings and 11 Sohn Hearts & Minds stock picks reviewed

Equity Mates reviewed the high conviction stock picks presented at the 2025 Sohn Hearts & Minds Conference.

Read More
December 19, 2024

Rikki Bannan – Don’t get caught up in momentum

Conference Fund Manager Rikki Bannan, Executive Director at IFM Investors, joins Equity Mates to discuss her standout 2023 stock pick, Telix, and explore what opportunities lie ahead.

Read More
Nick Moakes of the Wellcome Trust told the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference that some investors were too optimistic about a reduction in rates. Picture: Ben SearcyNick Moakes of the Wellcome Trust told the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference that some investors were too optimistic about a reduction in rates. Picture: Ben SearcyNick Moakes of the Wellcome Trust told the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference that some investors were too optimistic about a reduction in rates. Picture: Ben SearcyNick Moakes of the Wellcome Trust told the Sohn Hearts & Minds conference that some investors were too optimistic about a reduction in rates. Picture: Ben Searcy
November 20, 2024

Trump unifies top investors in decade-long bullish outlook for US

Nick Moakes, CIO of the $72 billion Wellcome Trust, told the conference that too many investors were banking on a return to the ultra-low interest rates that prevailed over the past decade.

Read More
Wall Street legend Howard Marks told the Sohn event that US exceptionalism would endure. Picture: Ben SearcyWall Street legend Howard Marks told the Sohn event that US exceptionalism would endure. Picture: Ben SearcyWall Street legend Howard Marks told the Sohn event that US exceptionalism would endure. Picture: Ben SearcyWall Street legend Howard Marks told the Sohn event that US exceptionalism would endure. Picture: Ben Searcy
November 17, 2024

Is anyone brave or stupid enough to bet against America?

Stock pickers have been punished for betting against the US. The choice between consensus and contrarianism on American exceptionalism is now harder than ever.

Read More