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Fidelity

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Operating PrinciplePower as Potential, Not Guarantee
Operating PrincipleCrafted Not Designed — Strategy Through Experimentation
Mental ModelProcess Power: Complexity Makes Imitation Take Decades
Mental ModelSurplus Leader Margin: Price to Zero-Profit the Follower
Strategic ManeuverConvert Variable Costs to Fixed Costs at Scale
Strategic PatternCounter-Positioning Is Partial — Stack Another Power
Mental ModelSwitching Costs Only Pay on the Second Sale
Mental ModelOnly Seven Moats Exist — Name Yours or You Have None
Mental ModelBenefit Without Barrier Is Just a Head Start
Structural VulnerabilityFive Stages of Counter-Positioned Incumbent Grief
Mental ModelThe Incumbent's Strength IS Your Barrier
Competitive AdvantageAgency and Cognitive Bias Amplify the Barrier
Mental ModelNetwork Tipping Points Make Late Entry Unthinkable
Strategic PatternStep-Function Ascent, Not Linear Growth
Strategic ManeuverCounter-Position by Making the Incumbent's Best Move Suicidal
Mental ModelEvery Power Starts with Invention, Not Analysis
Mental ModelStatics Tell You the Destination; Dynamics Tell You the Route
Mental ModelIndustry Economics × Competitive Position = Power Intensity
Risk DoctrineCollateral Damage Decays Over Time
Decision FrameworkStrategically Separate Businesses Need Separate Strategies
Decision FrameworkCornered Resource Must Be Sufficient Alone
Signature MoveCultural Integration Before Operations
Signature MoveRadical Acceptance in Decision Making
Risk DoctrineAI Disruption Risk Assessment
Cornerstone MoveTech-First Consolidation Play
Decision FrameworkNon-Judgmental Concentration Discipline
Decision FrameworkMeditation as Business Edge
Signature MoveSpeed as Competitive Weapon
Cornerstone MoveFragmented Industry Roll-Up
Strategic PatternObscene Profits Industry Selection
Signature MoveProblems as Value Creation Assets
Operating PrincipleCustomer Dream Tech Discovery
Strategic PatternBig Hairy Deal Hunting
Signature MoveBig Trend Right Everything Else Wrong
Operating PrincipleIntegration Math and Music Balance
Cornerstone MoveOutsider-to-Kingpin Control Loops
Strategic PatternWinning Through Distressed Takeovers
Relationship LeverageCourt of Brokers and Right Hands
Cornerstone MoveAsset Cycling to Capture Volatility
Signature MoveNo-Sentiment Steel Disposal
Strategic PatternOption-Loaded Contract Structures
Risk DoctrineTax Residency as Strategic Moat
Signature MoveMicro-Managed Outsourced Operations
Decision FrameworkBuy Control, Outsource Operations
Competitive AdvantageInformation Edge from Broker Web
Operating PrincipleNo Sentiment for Old Steel
Signature MoveShareholder Cash-Flow Relentlessness
Operating PrincipleDeal-First, Fix-Later Mentality
Cornerstone MoveDeal With Myself for Maximum Leverage
Risk DoctrineFlags and Structures as Shields
Signature MoveRisk Appetite As Primary Weapon

Primary Evidence

"In the Vanguard case, Fidelity looked at their highly attractive active management franchise and concluded that the new passive funds’ more modest returns would likely fail to offset the damage…"

Source:7 Powers

"I also talk to venture capital firms, because they spend a lot of time looking at the big trends in different industries. And, I tap buy-side institutions, like Fidelity, Invesco, Orbis, and Cercano, and successful fund managers who have battle scars from investing in the industry. They know the leading players—companies and customers—as well as the risks and growth factors. They’ve already made and lost money in the industry, so I want to know what lessons they learned from those experiences…"

Source:How to Make a Few Billion Dollars

"In the winter of 2000, a new opportunity arose to acquire a shipping company in serious trouble, the Canadian company misleadingly named Golden Ocean. It had sailed from a golden sea to a sea of defaulted loans, and on January 14, 2000, they threw in the towel and asked the United States bankruptcy court in Delaware for protection from creditors. Thus, the wrecked shipping company was given 135 days to sort out its enormous debt. And as is usual in such situations, the bleeding victim immediately attracted the attention of the financial sharks. Fredriksen had been following Golden Ocean for a long time because he considered it a candidate for acquisition. Bergesen also followed the death struggle with interest, but what John Fredriksen didn't know was that the shipping management at Bergehus was loaded with billions, ready to buy the Frontline fleet at a bargain if the company went under. The danger was not yet over, according to Bergesen, and therefore, they chose to let Golden Ocean pass without making a bid. But John Fredriksen was not alone in setting his sights on Golden Ocean. Again, he faced competition from a small firm that specialized in buying debt to leverage such situations. This time it was little Bentley International. The first clash in the battle between Fredriksen and Bentley came in March 2000. Then, Fredriksen bought one-sixth of Golden Ocean's debt, amounting to just over three billion kroner. The price tag was only 40 million kroner, but the status as a creditor gave the Norwegian shipowner a say in the fate of Golden Ocean, which controlled 17 large tankers (VLCC) and a fleet of 11 modern bulk carriers. The battle for Golden Ocean was tailor-made for Tor Olav Trøim and Tom Jebsen. This was their home ground, unlike usual shipping deals where the two shipowners on each side are the main men. Because when Golden Ocean went to bankruptcy court, the owners lost their power. Now, it was a multi-headed troll of creditors and lenders on Wall Street who decided the fate of the shipping company. For Trøim, this meant a series of meetings with bankers in New York. The effort was crowned with success at the end of May, when Trøim managed to persuade the other creditors to approve a plan to save the shipping company. Frontline was willing to enter with 33 million dollars in cash – or Frontline shares for 48 million dollars – to take over. At the same time, Frontline bought the VLCC "Tina" for 74 million dollars from Golden Ocean, thus gaining steering speed through the heavy seas. As a financial maneuver, Golden Ocean was by the book. Frontline issued three million new shares, and placed them with new owners through Fearnley Fonds and Enskilda. This way, the shipping company brought in the 33 million dollars that the deal cost. Among the new major owners was Fidelity – the world's leading asset management company. It would be the beginning of an adventure for both parties and meant a breakthrough for Trøim's work to make shipping palatable to the financial environment in New York."

Source:Storeulv (translated)

"In the winter of 2000, a new opportunity arose to acquire a shipping company in serious trouble, the Canadian company misleadingly named Golden Ocean. It had sailed from a golden sea to a sea of defaulted loans, and on January 14, 2000, they threw in the towel and asked the United States bankruptcy court in Delaware for protection from creditors. Thus, the wrecked shipping company was given 135 days to sort out its enormous debt. And as is usual in such situations, the bleeding victim immediately attracted the attention of the financial sharks. Fredriksen had been following Golden Ocean for a long time because he considered it a candidate for acquisition. Bergesen also followed the death struggle with interest, but what John Fredriksen didn't know was that the shipping management at Bergehus was loaded with billions, ready to buy the Frontline fleet at a bargain if the company went under. The danger was not yet over, according to Bergesen, and therefore, they chose to let Golden Ocean pass without making a bid. But John Fredriksen was not alone in setting his sights on Golden Ocean. Again, he faced competition from a small firm that specialized in buying debt to leverage such situations. This time it was little Bentley International. The first clash in the battle between Fredriksen and Bentley came in March 2000. Then, Fredriksen bought one-sixth of Golden Ocean's debt, amounting to just over three billion kroner. The price tag was only 40 million kroner, but the status as a creditor gave the Norwegian shipowner a say in the fate of Golden Ocean, which controlled 17 large tankers (VLCC) and a fleet of 11 modern bulk carriers. The battle for Golden Ocean was tailor-made for Tor Olav Trøim and Tom Jebsen. This was their home ground, unlike usual shipping deals where the two shipowners on each side are the main men. Because when Golden Ocean went to bankruptcy court, the owners lost their power. Now, it was a multi-headed troll of creditors and lenders on Wall Street who decided the fate of the shipping company. For Trøim, this meant a series of meetings with bankers in New York. The effort was crowned with success at the end of May, when Trøim managed to persuade the other creditors to approve a plan to save the shipping company. Frontline was willing to enter with 33 million dollars in cash – or Frontline shares for 48 million dollars – to take over. At the same time, Frontline bought the VLCC "Tina" for 74 million dollars from Golden Ocean, thus gaining steering speed through the heavy seas. As a financial maneuver, Golden Ocean was by the book. Frontline issued three million new shares, and placed them with new owners through Fearnley Fonds and Enskilda. This way, the shipping company brought in the 33 million dollars that the deal cost. Among the new major owners was Fidelity – the world's leading asset management company. It would be the beginning of an adventure for both parties and meant a breakthrough for Trøim's work to make shipping palatable to the financial environment in New York."

Source:Storeulv (translated)

Appears In Volumes