Why Your Old Playbook Might Be Useless
For years, investing in resources meant one thing: buying commodity stocks and hoping prices went up. That’s a cyclical game of boom and bust. I think that playbook is becoming obsolete. The real opportunity isn't in the raw materials themselves, but in the technology and services that help us use them more efficiently. It’s a fundamental shift from speculating on price to investing in solutions.
This is about backing the innovators who are turning scarcity into an asset. These are the companies building water recycling systems, pioneering precision agriculture, and designing next generation materials. A collection of these businesses, like the Resource Scarcity Portfolio, offers a different way to think about this theme. It focuses on the problem solvers, not just the stuff we’re running out of.
Of course, no investment is a sure thing. This isn't a magic bullet. Technology companies face risks, new solutions might fail to scale, and markets can be volatile. But the underlying driver, scarcity, isn't going away. Demand for water, food, and materials is not cyclical. It doesn’t vanish in a recession. If anything, the pressure only intensifies, which could provide a powerful tailwind for the companies positioned to solve these very real, very urgent problems.