Entity Dossier
Person

Henry Singleton

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Signature MoveStiritz: Poker-Player Odds on Back-of-Envelope LBOsOperating PrincipleBlank Calendar as Competitive EdgeCornerstone MoveOne-Page Analysis Then PounceSignature MoveMalone: Scale as Virtuous Cycle, Tax as ObsessionCornerstone MoveAnarchic Decentralization, Dictatorial Capital ControlRisk DoctrineInstitutional Imperative as CEO KryptoniteDecision FrameworkHurdle Rate as Supreme FilterSignature MoveSingleton: Phone Booth Tender at All-Time-Low MultiplesCornerstone MoveSuction Hose Buybacks at Maximum PessimismCornerstone MoveCash Flow as True North, Not Reported EarningsSignature MoveAnders: Sell Your Favorite Division Without BlinkingIdentity & CultureEngineers Over MBAs at the HelmCompetitive AdvantageConcentrated Bets Over Diversified DribblesSignature MoveMurphy: Leave Something on the Table Then Lever UpCapital StrategyTax Counsel Before Every TransactionOperating PrinciplePer-Share Value Not Longest TrainSignature MoveBuffett: Float Flywheel from Insurance to EmpireStrategic PatternGreedy When Others Are FearfulSignature MovePerot: Obscene Demands Until They Stop Saying NoSignature MoveBuffett: Insurance Float as a Super Margin AccountSignature MoveHuizenga: Close in the Stench Until They Say YesCornerstone MoveSteal the Playbook, Then Outrun the AuthorRisk DoctrineLuck Acknowledged Then Ruthlessly ExploitedIdentity & CultureJoy in the Chase Not the PrizeCapital StrategyHold Your Equity Until It Compounds Past Nine FiguresIdentity & CultureThick Skin Inherited or Forged by FireCornerstone MoveConsolidate Fragmented Industries at Blitzkrieg SpeedCornerstone MoveNobody Got Rich Watching from the StandsStrategic PatternHigh-Growth Industry as the Only On-RampCapital StrategyInsurance Float as Empire FoundationSignature MoveKerkorian: Sell Before the Peak, Never Pick the Bone CleanRelationship LeveragePolitical Access as Wealth Multiplier Not Wealth CreatorCornerstone MoveKeep the Back Door Open on Every BetOperating PrincipleFrugality as Permanent Competitive MoatSignature MoveWalton: Spy on Every Competitor Then Outwork Them AllSignature MoveRockefeller: Silent Desk, Then Swivel-Chair Knockout

Primary Evidence

"A Prediction Today, the combination of record corporate cash levels and generally low interest rates and P/E ratios presents a historic opportunity for aggressive capital allocation. This situation is particularly pronounced among the largest, bluest-chip technology businesses—companies like Cisco, Microsoft, and Dell—many of which are still run by members of their founding management teams, have enormous cash balances, and trade at unprecedented single-digit P/E multiples. I think it’s likely one of these firms will reverse its historic emphasis on R&D investment and move to optimize returns through a combination of dramatically increased buybacks or dividends. Were this to happen, the market’s response would likely be rapturous, and one can imagine Henry Singleton as the CEO of one of these companies, rubbing his hands together in delight at the opportunities."

Source:The Outsiders_ Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success

"Henry Singleton, in a rare 1979 interview with Forbes magazine: “After we acquired a number of businesses, we reflected on business. Our conclusion was that the key was cash flow. . . . Our attitude toward cash generation and asset management came out of our own thinking.” He added (as though he needed to), “It is not copied.”"

Source:The Outsiders_ Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success

"This single-minded cash focus was the foundation of their iconoclasm, and it invariably led to a laser-like focus on a few select variables that shaped each firm’s strategy, usually in entirely different directions from those of industry peers. For Henry Singleton in the 1970s and 1980s, it was stock buybacks; for John Malone, it was the relentless pursuit of cable subscribers; for Bill Anders, it was divesting noncore businesses; for Warren Buffett, it was the generation and deployment of insurance float."

Source:The Outsiders_ Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success

"Henry Singleton has the best operating and capital deployment record in American business . . . if one took the 100 top business school graduates and made a composite of their triumphs, their record would not be as good as Singleton’s. —Warren Buffett, 1980 I change my mind when the facts change. What do you do? —John Maynard Keynes"

Source:The Outsiders_ Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success

"as one of Ralston’s directors said at the time, “Why would you want to shrink the company. Aren’t there any worthwhile growth initiatives?” Stiritz, in contrast, believed that repurchases were the highest-probability investments he could make, and after convincing his board to support him, he became an active repurchaser. He would eventually repurchase a phenomenal 60 percent of Ralston’s shares, second only to Henry Singleton among the CEOs in this book, and he would earn very attractive returns on these buybacks, averaging a long-term internal rate of return of 13 percent."

Source:The Outsiders_ Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success

"When one reads that “Warren Buffett” has bought, [for example], an interest in General Foods, it usually means that an insurance subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway—using its reserves built up against future claims—has made the investment, which can cost more than Berkshire Hathaway, the parent company, could readily afford. . . .The same maneuver, using insurance companies, is per¬ formed by such operators as Henry Singleton, Larry Tisch, Carl Lindner and Saul Steinberg, among others.63"

Source:How to Be a Billionaire : Proven Strategies From the Titans of Wealth

Appears In Volumes