Sabtu, 04 April 2026

What History's Biggest Stock Winners Have in Common

Shield

AN OXFORD CLUB PUBLICATION

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Editor's Note: Warren Buffett... Jeff Bezos... Peter Thiel... Mark Zuckerberg... and 16 other billionaires are all making the same move: dumping massive positions in Big Tech.

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- James Ogletree, Senior Managing Editor

What History's Biggest Stock Winners Have in Common

Kristin Orman, Research Director, The Oxford Club

Kristin Orman

More than twenty years ago, I began my career at Avalon Research Group - a boutique equity research firm that did something unusual. Instead of pitching ideas to everyday investors, we sold our research and stock recommendations directly to hedge funds.

These portfolio managers weren't looking for stocks everyone else had already bought. They wanted one thing from us.

An edge.

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One of the analysts I worked with had a gift for finding it. His specialty was biotech - and he didn't approach it the way most people do. He didn't care about charts, momentum, or whatever was trending. He focused on one thing: what was actually happening inside the company.

I remember our 7:30 a.m. morning meetings. He'd walk us through his latest recommendation on a drug developer most people had never heard of. No hype. No big promises. Just a methodical breakdown: what stage the therapy was in, what the mechanism actually did, where it might succeed - and where it could fail.

Hearing the Signal Over the Noise

He had almost no interest in the story a company was telling. He used the data to write his own.

Biotech is full of press releases, conference presentations, and carefully worded updates that can sound far more important than they are. Too many investors take those at face value. He didn't.

Every time he read an update, he returned to the underlying data - and how that data compared to what actually matters in the real world. Many times, after watching other Wall Street analysts cheer the news, he'd lean back and say something like: "Frankly, the data is unimpressive." Or: "The market is overreacting to something that isn't that negative."

He wasn't being dramatic. He was just being real. And over time, I learned the lesson: the market moves on the headline, but the real opportunity is hidden in the details.

The Lesson Most Investors Miss

In sectors like biotech, the difference between a great investment and a terrible one usually comes down to a very small number of variables:

  • Does the treatment actually work?
  • Is the effect meaningful - or just statistically interesting?
  • Does the market understand that correctly?

Most investors think they have to predict the future to find a 10-bagger. They don't. They need to recognize inflection points - the moments when something fundamental shifts: a new technology starts working, a treatment moves from theory to reality, a business model crosses from niche to mainstream.

That's what our hedge fund clients were really paying for. Not stock tips. Clarity on what was about to change - before it became obvious to everyone else. Because once it's obvious, the biggest opportunity is usually gone.

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Why Biotech - and Beyond - Makes This So Clear

On the surface, most early-stage drug companies look the same: no earnings, years of clinical uncertainty, binary catalysts that can send a stock soaring or crashing overnight. To most investors, that looks like unnecessary risk.

But when a therapy actually works - when the science crosses that invisible line from "interesting" to "real" - something remarkable happens. The company's value can double, triple, or more almost overnight. Not because sentiment shifted. Because the reality of the science changed.

This pattern shows up across industries, not just biotech. The biggest stock market winners tend to start out looking small, unknown, and uncertain - until something changes. A breakthrough. A new capability. A shift most people don't fully understand yet. A handful of industry pros notice first. Then institutions pay attention. By the time everyone else catches on, the biggest move has already happened.

What This Means for You

I was reminded of all this recently while listening to a presentation by Alex Green. He was describing how some of his biggest winners didn't look like obvious opportunities at the time - smaller companies, often misunderstood, operating in areas where most investors lacked the expertise or patience to dig deeper.

He didn't predict their success. He recognized the framework of a reality-changing technology before the market did.

If there's one thing I learned from those early days, it's this: the best investors aren't the ones who react the fastest. They're the ones who understand the deepest - who filter out the noise, focus on the few things that actually matter, and stay grounded when the market inevitably overreacts in either direction.

Once you understand that, you'll start seeing opportunities very differently.

Good investing,

Kristin

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