Meet Armina Rosenberg: Mike Cannon-Brookes' former PM harnessing AI to outperform the market
The Rules of Investing - Ein Podcast von Livewire Markets
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In a world where artificial intelligence dominates headlines, few fund managers have harnessed it as boldly as Armina Rosenberg. For those who don't know her, "Arms" made a name for herself at Grok Ventures, the family office of Mike Cannon-Brookes. Now, she's paving a new path at AI-backed Minotaur Capital, alongside Perpetual alumnus Thomas Rice. The duo have developed Taurient, a software system that uses large language models for everything from idea generation to portfolio construction. In this episode of The Rules of Investing, Arms outlines how you can use AI to level up your own investment strategy, as well as a few stock ideas to get you started. Note: This interview was recorded on Wednesday 9 October 2024. Timecodes 0:00 - Intro 2:13 - Lessons learnt from managing the wealth of Australia's mega-rich 7:32 - Family involvement in investment in family offices 8:56 - Differences between how retail investors and mega-wealthy invest 10:01 - What makes Minotaur Capital different from its peers 13:23 - How Arms and Thomas met 15:26 - How Minotaur's AI system Taurient works 25:21 - Mix of fundamental investing and AI 26:30 - Can AI help to know when to sell a stock? 27:37 - Can investors develop an AI-backed system themselves? 29:04 - How investors can use ChatGPT to make smarter investing decisions 31:21 - The future of funds management in an AI world 34:32 - Where the team sees opportunity today i.e. exciting themes 37:13 - Energy companies making waves on the global stage 39:10 - AI winners - why Minotaur is backing smaller players over the behemoths 39:55 - Healthcare ideas - and an emerging oral GLP-1 winner in Japan 41:25 - Why Japan is a "once in a generation opportunity" 42:53 - An example of a company Minotaur is shorting 45:18 - What the market is getting wrong today - private credit 47:36 - Stories of wins and losses and lessons from these 51:51 - Two stocks for the next five years (if the market were to close in that time)