CAPITAL COMPOUNDS ONLY UNDER GOOD STEWARDSHIP
Management matters because capital compounds only when it is allocated well. A great business with poor management can still destroy value. A good business with disciplined management can compound for decades.
At 4M Works, management quality is judged by behavior and outcomes, not charisma, vision statements, or promotional narratives.
We prefer companies run by founders or by CEOs who have been with the business for a long time, rather than recent hires. In these cases, incentives and accountability are more likely to be aligned with long-term owners.
Management teams most often fail not because they are incompetent, but because they lack integrity or discipline. Unethical or self-interested leaders tend to hire and promote people like themselves. The damage compounds over time and is slow to reverse.
Growth funded by constant reinvestment just “to stay competitive,” rather than to improve economics, is another warning sign. When large amounts of capital are required merely to stand still, competitive pressure is already eroding the business.
Value destruction is often hidden behind acquisitions. If management repeatedly turns a dollar of free cash flow into less than a dollar of long-term value, the business is worth far less than it appears on paper.
Management must act as stewards of capital, not promoters of growth.
Returns on capital, balance sheet discipline, and per-share value creation must support what management says. If incentives, behavior, and results are not aligned with owners, the investment fails this test.
No stewardship, no investment.