Talking Billions with Bogumil Baranowski

Gary Mishuris on Mispriced Fear and Lessons from Warner Brothers: 10 Cents on the Dollar | Excess Returns Pod

4 snips
Jan 24, 2026
Gary Mishuris, MIT-trained investor and CIO of Silver Ring Value Partners, blends intrinsic value analysis with behavioral finance. He recounts lessons from Fidelity and Peter Lynch. Topics include the Warner Bros. Discovery mispricing and spin-off catalyst, using long-dated options selectively, portfolio construction under uncertainty, and how AI augments research without replacing judgment.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Cheap Alone Is Not An Investment Thesis

  • Peter Lynch told Gary, "just cheap doesn't work," forcing a rethink of pure low-price strategies.
  • Cheapness is a sign to investigate deeper fundamentals, not a standalone investment thesis.
ANECDOTE

Childhood Ring Teaches Value vs Price

  • Gary Mishuris recounts buying a cheap ring in Italy that turned out to be silver-plated, not gold.
  • The experience taught him that surface cheapness signals investigation, not value confirmation.
INSIGHT

Good Business + Bad Business Masks Value

  • Warner Bros. combined good and bad businesses, hiding standalone value in the good assets.
  • Activating a catalyst (spin-off) can unlock latent intrinsic value that the market misprices.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app