WISE plc – Investment Thesis in TransferWise / Wise

I just started using Wise to transfer money across international borders. I am so sick of all the bank fees and the absurd conversion rates that my banks are giving me – and in this day and age, it’s almost risible that they make so much money of remittances and other cross border retail transactions. There had to be a better way, and there was – it was Wise.

I’m not selling the service to you, but it’s pretty apparent that it’s better. The UI is super well designed, it’s intuitive and easy to use, and most of all, the rates are a LOT better than what you would get going bank to bank.

Naturally once I started using the product and liked it, I immediately wondered if I could do an equity investment in it (my golden rule of only investing in products / services that I use and like).

Turns out WISE just went public in London through a direct investment in July.

Here’s my investment thesis for investing in wise:

  • Pros
    • Much better rates on remittances than traditional banks (from experience)
    • Nice clean UI and site sign up
    • Strong name recognition amongst high earning peer community (stanford alumni)
    • Remittance is a huge market that still sucks
    • Integrations across countries is not easy – so may provide a moat
    • nearly 70 per cent of its account openings originate via word-of-mouth recommendations!
    • Did a direct listing (respect!)
  • Cons
    • Valuation is rich – it’s the largest fintech company on the LSE but it’s not as rich as square or PayPal. But then again it does a lot less than they do
    • Lots of competitors in this market – and low barriers to entry?

Net net I am probably going to invest since I love the service and think it’s great.

The Dao of Donhym: Ten Investing Rules for Retail Investors Investing in Stocks

10 Rules for Retail Investors Investing In Stocks

Introduction

Below is a list of ten investing rules for retail investors interested in investing in stocks. What this really is is a codification of basic investing rules for myself. They aren’t very complicated; in fact they’re really straightforward. I need to write them down so I don’t stray from them.

Because every time I do, I lose money. It’s as simple as that.

Let me start by saying I am probably not the most qualified person to write this. I do have a background in finance (many moons ago), I do have an MBA (again, many moons) and I do invest in the stock markets. My investment return has been pretty good (I’m too shy to share actual numbers) and I’ve had the good fortune of holding some of the best multi-bagger shares over the past decade (DPZ, RNG, ROKU, TSLA) from when they were tiny companies just starting out. BUT…I don’t do this full time, I’ve made many mistakes, and I did start from a pretty tiny base, so please take this for what it is.

The Ten Rules I Invest By

Below are the rules:

  1. Invest, don’t trade
  2. Buy what you use
  3. Buy Growth over Value
  4. Ride the stock
  5. Take (some) money off the table
  6. Buy on dips
  7. Just say NO to options
  8. You can’t time the market
  9. Journal your thoughts / trades
  10. Don’t be greedy; do be patient
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