Sonu Chawla - Managing Mid Cap Exposure - $TSCM
Growth with a Conscience, New ETF Launch (TSCM), Investment Ideas (Argenx, JFROG, Cheniere Energy, Carpenter Technology)
Short Overview
In this discussion, Sonu Chawla of Times Square Capital Management explains her “growth with a conscience” investment philosophy, emphasizing disciplined valuation, high-quality management teams, and long-term growth opportunities. The conversation covers how her team identifies promising companies early in their scaling phase, examples from biotech (Argenx), aerospace, energy, and software (JFROG), and why mid-cap stocks offer a compelling balance of growth and risk-adjusted returns. Sonu also discusses current market volatility, the software sector sell-off (SaaSacre), and opportunities created by headline-driven trading.
Timestamped Sections
4:35 – Introduction & Market Backdrop
Summary
The conversation opens with a discussion of the current market environment, characterized by volatility, macro uncertainty, and themes such as AI and geopolitical risks affecting investment decisions.
Key Takeaways
- Markets are experiencing elevated volatility driven by macro events, tariffs, and AI-related investment trends.
- Rapid information flow and geopolitical developments require investors to remain flexible and informed.
5:59 – Sonu’s Background & Career
Summary
Sonu outlines her professional journey—from technology consulting to hedge funds to her current role as portfolio manager overseeing mid-cap growth strategies.
Key Takeaways
- Over 20 years of investing experience with a consistent focus on growth investing.
- Technical background in mathematics and computer science combined with an MBA provides a blend of analytical and business perspectives.
7:07 – Investment Philosophy: “Growth with a Conscience”
Summary
Sonu explains her approach to growth investing, which combines growth potential with strict valuation discipline and a deep evaluation of management teams.
Key Takeaways
- Investments must be grounded in fundamental valuation discipline.
- Strong management teams with aligned incentives are critical.
- Competitive advantages (patents, regulatory barriers, unique products) are key drivers of long-term growth.
- Preference for companies with recurring revenue, strong balance sheets, and free cash flow potential.
9:55 – Evaluating Management & Early-Stage Opportunities
Summary
A major differentiator is their ability to uncover early‑stage growth opportunities by looking beyond traditional quantitative metrics that screen out non-earners and investing ahead of profitability.
Key Takeaways
- Avoids strict quantitative screens to identify companies earlier in their growth cycle.
- Focus on companies before profitability if a clear path to profitability exists.
- This allows investing in the “second or third innings” of growth rather than later stages.
11:48 – Case Study: Argenx (Biotech Investment)
Summary
Sonu highlights Argenx as an example of identifying a high-growth company early, before it became profitable.
Key Takeaways
- Revenue grew from ~$440M in 2022 to ~$4.2B in 2025.
- Early identification of strong drug pipelines and scaling potential can generate outsized returns.
- The firm prefers execution risk over regulatory risk, meaning the drug must already have FDA approval.
19:03 – Stock Example: Carpenter Technology (Industrials)
Summary
Sonu discusses Carpenter Technology, showing how cyclical downturns can create attractive investment opportunities.
Key Takeaways
- Aerospace supply chains experienced depressed volumes but strong long-term demand.
- Carpenter’s specialty alloys benefit from industry consolidation and pricing power.
- Valuation relative to peers and customers can reveal mispriced opportunities.
26:08 – Why Mid-Cap Stocks Are Attractive
Summary
The conversation shifts to the structural advantages of mid-cap investing.
Key Takeaways
- Mid-caps historically deliver strong risk-adjusted returns, outperforming large and small caps.
- They combine established business models with meaningful growth potential.
- They represent an “alpha-rich hunting ground” for active managers.
29:55 – Stock Example: Cheniere Energy (Energy)
Summary
Cheniere Energy is discussed as an investment initiated near the end of its heavy buildout phase, when free cash flow was expected to inflect, and capital allocation would shift toward shareholder returns. The company’s long-term LNG contracts provide strong visibility into cash flows, while disciplined management execution and balance sheet improvements have supported strong shareholder outcomes.
Key Takeaways
- The investment was initiated as Cheniere completed its capital-intensive buildout and began generating meaningful free cash flow for buybacks and shareholder returns.
- Most LNG production is sold through long-term contracts, limiting exposure to commodity price volatility and improving earnings visibility.
- Management focused on deleveraging, disciplined capital allocation, and maintaining high utilization of LNG assets.
34:35 – Software Sector Selloff & AI Impact
Summary
Sonu discusses the recent weakness in SaaS and software stocks and explains why the selloff may be overdone.
Key Takeaways
- Software companies are experiencing valuation compression due to uncertainty around AI disruption.
- Enterprises typically adopt AI through existing vendors rather than building systems internally.
- Security, infrastructure software, and vertical software remain attractive areas.
45:75 – Stock Example: O’Reilly Auto Parts (Consumer Discretionary)
Summary
O’Reilly Automotive is highlighted as a long-term portfolio compounder driven by strong management execution, consistent market share gains, and a best-in-class distribution network. Despite temporary headwinds in the do-it-yourself (“DIY”) segment and pricing concerns, the company’s fundamentals and operational advantages support its long-term growth outlook.
Key Takeaways
- One of our longest tenured positions, held in the portfolio since around 2011–2012, and considered one of our long-term compounders, due to consistent execution and strong leadership.
- Extensive distribution network and access to ~50,000 SKUs allow fast service to repair shops, driving growth in the do-it-for-me (“DIFM”) segment.
Temporary demand and pricing headwinds have pressured the stock, creating opportunities to adjust position size during market swings.
51:50 – New ETF Launch (Nasdaq: TSCM)
Summary
We recently launched the TimesSquare Quality Mid Cap Growth ETF, an active mid-cap growth ETF designed to meet client interest and the rising investor demand for ETF structures, particularly among financial advisors and wealth platforms. The ETF is closely related to the firm’s existing mid-cap growth strategy but is more concentrated and rebalanced less frequently.
Key Takeaways
- Launched in late 2025 to provide investors with access to the firm’s mid-cap growth strategy in an ETF structure.
- Holds roughly 30–40 stocks, compared with about 70-80 positions in the diversified mid-cap strategy.
- Solves key issues in the RIA and wealth management: Tax-efficient vehicle, broader accessibility than other types of funds, such as mutual funds.
55:33 – Stock Example: JFrog & Volatility Opportunities
Summary
JFrog illustrates how market overreactions can create entry points for long-term investors.
Key Takeaways
- The stock dropped sharply due to a minor revenue miss caused by delayed deals.
- Volatility and headline-driven markets create opportunities for active investors.
- JFrog’s role as a system of record for software binaries gives it strong switching costs and growth potential.
- We are very constructive on JFrog.
61:35 – Headline Investing Creating Opportunities
Summary
The discussion highlights how today’s markets are increasingly driven by headline investing, where stocks can move sharply on news rather than fundamentals. While this volatility can be frustrating in the short term, it often creates pricing dislocations that can create opportunities for active managers like us.
Key Points
- Traditionally stable stocks are frequently moving 5–10% or more on news events.
- Earnings misses or negative headlines can lead to outsized selloffs, especially in small and mid-cap stocks with lower liquidity.
- These dislocations can create attractive entry points for investors who have done deep research and maintain conviction in the underlying business.
Disclosures
Specific investments described herein do not represent all investment decisions made by the Firm. The reader should not assume that investment decisions identified and discussed were or will be profitable. Specific investment advice references provided herein are for illustrative purposes only and are not necessarily representative of investments that will be made in the future.
This podcast does not constitute advice or a recommendation or offer to sell or a solicitation to deal in any security or financial product. It is provided for information purposes only and on the understanding that the recipient has sufficient knowledge and experience to be able to understand and make their own evaluation of the proposals and services described herein; any risks associated therewith; and any related legal, tax, accounting or other material considerations. To the extent that the reader has any questions regarding the applicability of any specific issue discussed above to their specific portfolio or situation, prospective investors are encouraged to contact TimesSquare Capital Management, LLC and/or consult with the professional adviser of their choosing.
Investors should consider the investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. For a prospectus or summary prospectus with this and other information about the Fund, please call (888) ETF-TSCM. Read the prospectus or summary prospectus carefully before investing.
Investing involves risk. Principal loss is possible.
Portfolio holdings will change due to ongoing management of the funds. References to specific securities or sectors should not be misconstrued as a recommendation to buy or sell any security.
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The securities of mid-capitalization companies may be more vulnerable to adverse issuer, market, political, or economic developments than securities of large-capitalization companies. The securities of mid-capitalization companies generally trade in lower volumes and are subject to greater and more unpredictable price changes than large-capitalization stocks or the stock market as a whole.
The Fund will invest in companies that appear to be growth-oriented. Growth companies are those that the Adviser believes will have revenue and earnings that grow faster than the economy as a whole, offering above-average prospects for capital appreciation and little or no emphasis on dividend income.
TimesSquare Capital Management is a boutique investment manager with a 25-year history of managing small to mid cap quality growth portfolios with competitive risk-adjusted returns across market cycles. This new Fund leverages that investment experience, which is expressed in a concentrated offering through a tax-efficient, exchange-traded fund. Prospective investors do not currently have a track record or history on which to base their investment decisions for this exchange-traded fund.
Past performance does not guarantee future results.
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