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Tom Putnam Discusses Succession Planning with the Albany Business Review

Tom Putnam Discusses Succession Planning with the Albany Business Review

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    Tom Putnam shared his insights and changes to his role in the Albany Business Review article, “The next step in Fenimore’s succession plan, decades in the making.”

    As the next step in Fenimore’s succession plan, Tom mentioned that he is stepping back from his role as Portfolio Manager in Fenimore’s three mutual funds at the end of 2021. He will continue to serve as Executive Chairman and help manage the firm’s mission, vision, and culture.

    Tom began to create the firm’s succession plan in 1993.”Our outside board urged me to think of succession,” Mr. Putnam said. “It’s been going on for a long period of time, our senior management teams and board have been discussing that, and it’s gone smoothly.”

  • Tom Putnam

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Both the long tenure of the other Portfolio Managers and their consistent investment approach play integral roles in the succession plan. “I always had a philosophy that the way to be successful is to find talented people who are curious and have intellectual honesty and can grow,” Tom said. “If you find those people and they have those qualities, you give them responsibilities and let them run with it.”

Things change, but Tom wanted to reiterate what will remain the same – the continued goal of investing for long-term success.

“I get letters all the time, ‘We’ve been with you for 20 years and if you weren’t fostering our assets the way you have, we wouldn’t be able to have the second home, or send our kids to college, or generate funds for our grandchildren,'” he added. “That’s the rewarding part of our businesses and why we do it.”

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Marc Roberts

Marc Roberts Named Portfolio Manager of Fenimore Mutual Fund

Marc Roberts Named Portfolio
Manager of Fenimore Mutual Fund

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    Cobleskill, N.Y. (October 12, 2021) – Fenimore Asset Management, an independent, Capital Region-based investment advisory firm and manager of the FAM Funds family of mutual funds, has named Marc Roberts as a Portfolio Manager of the FAM Value Fund.

    Established in 1987, the FAM Value Fund is one of three mutual funds that Fenimore manages. The FAM Value Fund, with $1.5 billion in assets under management as of September 30, 2021, seeks to maximize long-term return on capital by investing in quality companies with growing cash profits, strong balance sheets, and exceptional management.

    Mr. Roberts joined Fenimore in 2007 as an Investment Research Analyst and became a Portfolio Manager of the FAM Small Cap Fund in 2012.

  • Marc Roberts

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In 2016, he relocated to Chicago and continued his career in the investment industry before returning to Fenimore in March 2020. Mr. Roberts holds the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA®) designation and focuses on understanding and evaluating quality businesses including, but not limited to, those in the core bank processing and payments, connectors and sensors, and specialty insurance industries. He earned a bachelor’s degree in Finance from Siena College.

“Marc made a very welcome return to the Fenimore family last year and quickly reminded us of his investment research acumen and commitment to our investment philosophy,” said Fenimore CEO John Fox. “He has demonstrated tremendous value for our investors in the past as a Portfolio Manager and we look forward to seeing his talents at work for our FAM Value Fund shareholders in the years to come.”

Mr. Roberts joins Chief Executive Officer John Fox and Portfolio Manager Drew Wilson in managing the FAM Value Fund. Fenimore’s Founder & Executive Chairman Tom Putnam has announced that he will transition away from his Portfolio Manager role in all three of the FAM Funds at the end of 2021 to concentrate fully on his role as Executive Chairman. Mr. Putnam actively guides the firm’s overall investment-research and service-focused culture.

Founded by Mr. Putnam in 1974, Fenimore Asset Management is an independent, nationally recognized investment advisor with more than $4.2 billion in assets under management, as of September 30, 2021, through its Cobleskill and Albany offices. Fenimore offers both customized separately managed accounts and a family of mutual funds that can be used for retirement and other long-term investment planning. The firm’s team of professionals prides itself on investing in carefully selected quality businesses and providing its investors with highly personalized investment services.

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Helping Those Who Help Others

HELPING THOSE
WHO HELP OTHERS

The Fenimore team was excited to kickoff summer by planting flowers outside the Cobleskill Regional Hospital. We sincerely hope the beautiful flowers and bright colors serve as a welcome sight for patients, visitors, and our healthcare workers.

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The Quest for Quality Small-Cap Stocks

THE QUEST FOR QUALITY
SMALL-CAP STOCKS

FAM Small Cap Fund Portfolio Managers Andrew Boord and Kevin Gioia chat with Senior Vice President Anne Putnam about Fenimore’s relentless quest for quality small-cap stocks. This pursuit began in 1974 and continues today.

Podcast Highlights Include:
  • Fenimore’s proprietary, in-depth, quality and margin-of-safety screens.
  • Our select, investable universe.
  • Interesting examples of the types of holdings we seek.
  • Fenimore’s actively managed approach to constructing a concentrated portfolio of small-cap equities.
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Letter from Cobleskill – Autumn

Letter From Cobleskill

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    Dear Fellow Shareholder,

    Since the pandemics onset, we have taken two steps forward and one step back on several occasions. This is another one of those times. Corporate earnings for 2021’s first two quarters exceeded expectations and stock prices followed upward. During the third quarter, however, we saw the economy, earnings, and stock market slow down. It happened suddenly, but it is nothing to be alarmed about from our long-term investment perspective.

    A visit to your local grocery store provides a telling picture of what is going on — some shelves are sparsely stocked and more customers are wearing masks.

  • Letter From Cobleskill - Fall 2021

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Earlier this year, with COVID-19 cases on the decline and federal stimulus checks in hand, consumers rushed back into the marketplace — buying homes and cars, taking vacations, and attending all sorts of events. This was great for business. Sales were up, corporate profits jumped, and stock prices rose along with them. Until companies just could not keep up.

The reason is when the economy shut down, so did production lines. Then, when consumer demand exploded, manufacturers could not ramp up fast enough or find the employees they needed. Demand is simply outpacing supply. For example, automakers cannot obtain the semiconductors they need to build cars. Homeowners looking to upgrade appliances often cannot find what they need. As a result, people are suddenly spending less.

At the same time, businesses dealing with staffing shortages are reducing hours, further dampening sales. And now the upswing in COVID-19 cases is sending more people back into the safety of their homes and impacting restaurant seatings, air travel, and other elements of the mobile economy. Combined, these economic disruptions have forced some companies to downgrade their earnings estimates and this has slowed stock market growth.

What the fall has in store for us is impossible to predict — and certainly we are concerned about the resurging health impacts of the virus — but in our view the long-term outlook remains bright. Demand for consumer products is still high and the supply chain kinks should get straightened out. Quality businesses typically adapt, continue to grow, and should be bigger and more profitable five years from now than they are today.

We believe this bodes well for the FAM Funds. Our research team seeks quality companies with solid financial footings that we think are ideally positioned to weather any storm and deliver strong results over time. We focus not on the random, day-to-day, short-term turbulence in the economy or market, but on the businesses behind the stocks.

Have there been some unanticipated changes in recent weeks? Sure. But they do not alter our long-term vision. We believe we will take another two steps forward … And the shelves will once again be completely stocked.

Announcing a transition

Fenimore Founder and Executive Chairman Tom Putnam built the framework for a long-term succession plan many years ago to ensure continuity of experience and investment philosophy for years to come. I am pleased to announce the latest step in this plan.

Longtime Fenimore Investment Research Analyst Marc Roberts has been named as a Portfolio Manager of the FAM Value Fund. Marc served successfully in the same role for the FAM Small Cap fund from 2012 to 2016 before relocating to Chicago. He returned to us last year and quickly re-established himself as a key member of our research team. Marc joins me and Drew Wilson in managing the fund.

At the same time, Tom has announced that he will transition away from being a portfolio manager on our funds at the end of 2021 to concentrate fully on his Executive Chairman role. He will continue to be a mentor and an active participant in our research process and strategic direction. The rest of our fund management teams, including those of us who have led these teams for several years, will remain in place. Paul Hogan and Will Preston manage the FAM Dividend Focus Fund and Andrew Boord and Kevin Gioia the FAM Small Cap Fund.

We look forward to continuing Tom’s well-established tradition of collaborative, team management of the FAM Funds and to working diligently every day as we seek to grow your wealth over time.

Lets connect

We value the personal connections we have with our shareholders. You can reach us with any questions at 800-932-3271, through the contact us section of our website, or via info@fenimoreasset.com. Our team also welcomes you to meet with us in either our Albany or Cobleskill office or via Zoom.

We hope to hear from you soon. Thank you for your continued confidence in us.

Sincerely,
John D. Fox, CFA
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

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FAM Dividend Focus Fund: 6 Key Lessons Learned

FAM DIVIDEND FOCUS FUND:
6 KEY LESSONS LEARNED

FAM DIVIDEND FOCUS FUND
25 YEARS OF INVESTING IN DIVIDENDS

As we celebrate 25 years of service to our shareholders, we’re pleased to provide an insight into 6 Key Lessons Learned along the way that have helped contribute to the Fund’s long-term success.

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6 key Lessons Learned

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Albany Business Review Features CEO John Fox

ALBANY BUSINESS REVIEW
FEATURES CEO JOHN FOX

  • John Fox and his insights on investing were highlighted in the Albany Business Review’s article, “Fenimore CEO’s 3 biggest lessons from the year since the pandemic stock market crash.”

    March 23 marks one year since the stock market crashed and bottomed. Compared to 2020, John says 2021 looks favorable, “The stock market is capitalized on corporate profits. If businesses are doing well, prices go up and stock prices tend to follow earnings over time.”

    John shared what he believes are the key lessons from the past year:

    1. “Stick to the Basics” — The fallout from the pandemic reinforced Fenimore’s focus on quality companies that are financially durable and generate cash. By investing in quality businesses, you can be ready for a crash.

      “In a downturn, those tend to do better than the market,” John stated.
  1. “Don’t Pretend to Know How the Market Will Respond” — “Thinking back to February last year, if I said we’d shut down the economy and have the worst quarter of the economy since the Depression and have a lot of illness and fatalities all around the world, your reaction would be to get out of stocks completely and wait for a better time,” John said.

    “All of those things with the virus happened and the economy and the market has done well.”
  1. “The Economy Is Not the Stock Market” — “Last May, where the economy was very tough, we were still mostly closed down and the stock market was two months into its rally.”

    “The stock market is not the economy. The stock market saw the government was putting a bridge under all of us to get through the other side and the market was anticipating where we are today, where things are getting better, we’re getting vaccines and the economy is growing and there’s still a good amount of stimulus.”

The article ended with John reinforcing that, of course, there are risks. It will be some time before we know the true cost consequences of the federal stimulus spending including whether it leads to a period of inflation and higher interest rates. Fenimore’s Investment Research team will be monitoring these risks while staying focused on the positive signs ahead.

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