2013 Conference Overview Video (2 minutes)
Michael Price speaking at the London Value Investor Conference 2013
(42 minutes)
View photos from London Value Investor Conference 2013
Moderator: David Shapiro
Wednesday, 8th May 2013 | |
18.00-20.00 | Peter Cundill Reception – See bottom of page |
Thursday, 9th May 2013 | |
08.00-08.50 | Registration |
08.50-09.00 | Opening Remarks – Jonathan Mills, Metropolis Capital |
09.00-09.40 | Michael Price, MFP Investors – The Peter Cundill Foundation Address |
09.40-10.20 | Gary Channon, Phoenix Asset Management – Finding Opportunities in Flawed Heuristics |
10.20-11.00 | David Harding, Winton Capital – Searching for Value in Data |
11.00-11.20 | Coffee and networking break |
11.20-12.00 | Richard Oldfield, Oldfield Partners – Still Simple, Still not Easy |
12.00-12.40 | Simon Denison-Smith, Metropolis Capital – The Network Effect |
12.40-13.40 | Lunch |
13.40-14.20 | Howard Marks, Oaktree Capital – The Human Side of Investing |
14.20-15.00 | Nick Purves and Ian Lance, RWC – New Challenges for Value Investors – Is this time different? |
15.00-15.40 | Jeremy Hosking, How the Money Management Industry Aids Value Seekers |
15.40-15.50 | Charity speaker, Benita Refson OBE – Place2be |
15.50-16.10 | Tea and networking break |
16.10-16.50 | Richard Titherington, J.P. Morgan – Carpe DiEM |
16.50-17.30 | James Montier, GMO – The Foundations of Value Investing |
17.30-18.30 | Anthony Bolton, Fidelity China Special Situations Fund – Q&A Special Situations: East and West |
18.30-19.30 | Networking Reception |
Peter Cundill Reception: 8th May 2013 (6pm-8pm)
To mark the second London Value Investor Conference, The Peter Cundill Foundation generously sponsored a reception on the evening of 8th May 2013, at which the Choir from Canterbury Cathedral performed. The Foundation also made a large donation to the Canterbury Cathedral restoration fund. All conference delegates were invited to attend this reception.
Peter Cundill was one of the most successful investment managers of his generation. Whilst reading about the value investing principles of Benjamin Graham on a flight from Toronto to Vancouver, he had an ‘epiphany’ and determined that “this is what I want to do for the rest of my life”. Over the next 35 years, he built an exceptional track record. He was also a philanthropist and established the Cundill Foundation, which now controls the very considerable wealth he built over his lifetime and supports a wide range of charities.
Michael Price, who knew Peter well, opened the conference with an address dedicated to his memory.