Patient Capital Management, LLC 13F holdings and portfolio analysis
سجّل الدخول لاستنساخ فرع جديد من الخطة المختارة، ثم تابع التحسين في الفرع الجديد.
Baseline
رسائل التحليلأسئلة وأجوبة مُولَّدة مسبقاً حول هذا الصندوق. تُستخدم كسياق مرجعي لتحليلك.
Directly following the baseline exposes an investor to a concentrated, filing-lagged portfolio with meaningful idiosyncratic and sector-rotation risk. The top 5 holdings are 28.92%, the top 10 are 51.49%, and the top 20 are 81.99%. Health Care is 25.28% and Consumer Discretionary is 22.63%, so nearly half the portfolio sits in those two sectors alone. The strategy also depends on delayed 13F implementation, with 408 trades and turnover reaching 66.78% in one rebalance period, so investors are not buying the manager’s positions in real time.
The trade-off is easiest to see in the contrast between a few strong winning periods and several sharp setbacks. The best recent period was 2024-06-30, when the baseline returned 19.33% versus SPY’s 9.83%, a 9.5-point excess return, and 2023-03-31 also beat by 4.74 points. But the downside was real: 2022-12-31 lost 8.62% while SPY lost only 0.25%, and 2024-03-31 fell 2.4% while SPY gained 2.31%, a -4.71-point excess result. Those swings help explain why the full-period return is respectable at 11.22% annualized, yet the max drawdown still reached -23.04% and the benchmark-relative record is described as inconsistent.
A user should inspect three things next: concentration, sector dependence, and implementation drag. First, top 10 concentration is already 51.49%, so a few names dominate results. Second, Health Care is 25.28% and Consumer Discretionary is 22.63%, which means sector outcomes matter a lot. Third, the backtest warns that delayed disclosure matters: there were 408 trades, total estimated cost was 0.5017, and one period saw 66.78% turnover. Those details determine whether the baseline is tolerable as a copy strategy rather than just an interesting holdings snapshot.