Funds

Baron Opportunity Fund Q4 2023 Shareholder Letter


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DEAR BARON OPPORTUNITY FUND SHAREHOLDER:

PERFORMANCE

During the fourth quarter, Baron Opportunity Fund (MUTF:BIOIX, the Fund) rose 15.10% (Institutional Shares), outperforming the broader market, including the Russell 3000 Growth Index, which gained 14.09%, and the S&P 500 Index (SP500, SPX) , which advanced 11.69%. For the full-year 2023, the Fund increased nearly 50%, materially ahead of both indexes, and a solid rebound after a challenging 2022.

Table I. Performance† Annualized for periods ended December 31, 2023

Baron

Opportunity

Fund Retail

Shares[1],[2]

Baron

Opportunity Fund Institutional

Shares1,2,[3]

Russell

3000

Growth

Index1

S&P

500

Index1

Three Months4

15.03%

15.10%

14.09%

11.69%

One Year

49.55%

49.98%

41.21%

26.29%

Three Years

(1.51)%

(1.26)%

8.08%

10.00%

Five Years

20.40%

20.71%

18.85%

15.69%

Ten Years

13.78%

14.08%

14.33%

12.03%

Fifteen Years

17.21%

17.52%

16.37%

13.97%

Since Inception (February 29, 2000)

8.97%

9.14%

6.75%

7.40%

Performance listed in the above table is net of annual operating expenses. Annual expense ratio for the Retail Shares and Institutional Shares as of September 30, 2023 was 1.32% and 1.06%, respectively. The performance data quoted represents past performance. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. The investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate; an investor’s shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original The Adviser may reimburse certain Fund expenses pursuant to a contract expiring on August 29, 2034, unless renewed for another 11-year term and the Fund’s transfer agency expenses may be reduced by expense offsets from an unaffiliated transfer agent, without which performance would have been lower. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data quoted. For performance information current to the most recent month-end, visit Baron Funds – Asset Management for Growth Equity Investments or call 1-800-99-BARON.

†The Fund’s 3-, 5-, and 10-year historical performance was impacted by gains from IPOs and there is no guarantee that these results can be repeated or that the Fund’s level of participation in IPOs will be the same in the future.

[1]The Russell 3000® Growth Index measures the performance of the broad growth segment of the U.S. equity universe comprised of the largest 3000 U.S. companies representing approximately 98% of the investable U.S. equity market. The S&P 500 Index measures the performance of 500 widely held large-cap U.S. companies. All rights in the FTSE Russell Index (the “Index”) vest in the relevant LSE Group company which owns the Index. Russell® is a trademark of the relevant LSE Group company and is used by any other LSE Group company under license. Neither LSE Group nor its licensors accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the indexes or data and no party may rely on any indexes or data contained in this communication The Fund includes reinvestment of dividends, net of withholding taxes, while the Russell 3000® Growth Index and S&P 500 Index include reinvestment of dividends before taxes. Reinvestment of dividends positively impacts the performance results. The indexes are unmanaged. Index performance is not Fund performance; one cannot invest directly into an index.

[2]The performance data in the table does not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund distributions or redemption of Fund shares.

[3]Performance for the Institutional Shares prior to May 29, 2009 is based on the performance of the Retail Shares, which have a distribution fee. The Institutional Shares do not have a distribution fee. If the annual returns for the Institutional Shares prior to May 29, 2009 did not reflect this fee, the returns would be higher.

4Not annualized.


REVIEW & OUTLOOK

U.S. equities rose sharply in November and December, pushing the broad market indexes to double-digit gains for the quarter and reversing the losses suffered over the preceding three months. Moderating inflation coupled with a softening labor market and a perceived peak in the current cycle of interest rate hikes were the main drivers of the broad-based rally. The S&P 500 Index (SP500,SPX) was up more than 26% for the year, closing at a new all-time high, while the NASDAQ Composite Index (COMP.IND) appreciated nearly 45%, its best year since COVID in 2020. Most of the gains in the major market indexes came from the so-called Magnificent Seven, which together were up 76% for the year, driven, in part, by excitement surrounding their ability to gain from widespread adoption of artificial intelligence (‘AI’). The Fund remains exposed to AI and other industry trends driving the performance of these technology leaders. We have significant investments in individual companies such as Microsoft Corporation (MSFT), NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA), Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), Tesla, Inc. (TSLA), and META Platforms, Inc., and we are overweight across the software, cloud computing, semiconductor, and electric vehicle (‘EV’) industry verticals.

For the full-year 2023, we had 21 stocks that delivered total returns over 50% each, driving the Fund’s return of nearly 50%. In the table below, we show our top 12 contributors to portfolio return for 2023, as well as the key secular megatrends driving these businesses.

Table II. Top contributors to performance for the year ended December 31, 2023

Company Name

Total Return

Percent Impact

Secular Trends

NVIDIA Corporation

239.6%

10.13%

AI

Semiconductors

Cloud Computing

Microsoft Corporation

58.2

8.43

AI

Cloud Computing

SaaS

Amazon.com, Inc.

80.9

4.64

Cloud Computing

E-commerce

Digital Media/

Advertising

Tesla, Inc.

101.3

4.43

EVs/Autonomous

Driving

AI

Robotics

Meta Platforms, Inc.

193.4

2.45

Digital Media/

Advertising

Mobile

AI

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.

128.0

2.17

Semiconductors

AI

Cloud Computing

ServiceNow, Inc.

81.8

2.15

SaaS AI

Alphabet Inc.

57.1

2.14

Digital Media/

Advertising

Cloud Computing

AI

CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.

142.2

1.71

Cybersecurity

SaaS

AI

Shopify Inc.

126.2

1.21

E-commerce

Electronic Payments

AI

Workday, Inc.

65.0

1.04

SaaS AI

Guidewire Software, Inc.

74.3

1.03

SaaS

AI

As we start the new year, it appears the market is trying to find its 2024 footing. On the one hand, an extension of the past few years, it continues to be dominated by the macro uncertainties and debates about such hard-to-forecast issues as inflation levels (falling rock or persistent), an economic soft landing versus a recession, when the Federal Reserve will first cut rates and how many cuts will it make, wars in Europe and now the Middle East, U.S. trade relations with China, and the upcoming 2024 presidential election. On the other, the market has rewarded the secular winners, as just described. But the mere act of flipping the calendar sometimes has a short-term impact on market sentiment and trading. Some investors look to sell winners and buy laggards. Every sell-side analyst announces top picks and favorite trends for the new year. But arbitrary dates – yes, even January 1 – has absolutely no impact on fundamental business trends and secular themes.

I caution those trying to time the market or bet on short-term leadership changes. Our founder, Ron Baron, has written eloquently many times regarding the perils of market timing. I have echoed his wisdom in several of my own letters. I remind our investors (as I have done in the past) the simple but fundamental basics of investing (as opposed to trading): the market and individual stocks need a sustainable increase in earnings (‘E’) and free cash flow to yield durable returns, and not merely gyrate with shifts in investor sentiment. We have a century of data that prove this dictum: the economy grows, businesses grow, earnings grow, and the market rises – the S&P 500 Index has delivered a 6% to 7% annualized price return over the past 60 years.[4] The only way to realize a persistent increase in E is to consistently grow sales. The best stocks in the history of the stock market have been the most durable, long-term growers (our faster-for-longer). Our Firm’s 40-year investment approach has relentlessly been to find and own more of them – driven by indisputable, generational, permanently disruptive long-term secular growth themes and trends.

The trends we emphasize are real and they are intact; they are not stopping or pausing. AI is real. Cloud computing is real. Digital media, entertainment, commerce are real. Electric vehicles are real. Semiconductors powering every single digital or electronic device are real. I understand fears sometimes arise regarding hype cycles, these days mostly centered around AI. But AI is NOT hype. The impact it is having – and will have – is real. And we are now just glimpsing the dawn of the AI era. At the start of my career, people worried whether the internet was hype. But today there is no longer a shred of doubt how it forever changed the world. At the time of its launch, people argued the iPhone was hype and that smartphone adoption would be a challenge. But today it is near universal, and no one disputes how a computer in the palm of our hand has transformed our lives. It is the same with AI. The way we interact with a computer and with our data will forever change. It’s what we were waiting for. It’s the future we predicted in every science fiction movie ever made. You just talk to the computer, and it does what you want. It’s a new world…again. We heed the lessons of the last new worlds – own the trends, own the winners.

Indeed, the best technology investments of the last half century are those companies that forged disruptive trends and grew faster for longer than consensus estimates initially predicted. But the market has historically underestimated the long-term growth potential for top companies in new and innovative verticals. The market misjudged the growth that would be achieved by such disruptive and revolutionary developments as Microsoft’s Windows operating system, Google’s internet search engine, Amazon’s e-commerce platform, Apple’s iPhone, and Tesla’s EVs. These companies always looked expensive when valued based on then-current Street estimates; but they weren’t. They yielded great returns not because they were awarded premium multiples but because they crushed expectations, delivering loftier revenues, earnings, and cash flow than most investors thought they would. We believe the same thing will drive returns for the innovators across many layers of the AI stack, from semiconductors to cloud services to applications.

Morgan Stanley’s fourth quarter 2023 CIO Survey, one of the reports we track each quarter, provides real-time evidence of these disruptions. At the highest level, the survey indicates that overall Information Technology (‘IT’) spending growth is expected to accelerate in 2024 from 2023 levels – 3.3% overall growth from 2.6% growth last year. More specifically, AI rose to the top of the CIO priority list for the first time, with 68% of CIOs expecting AI to directly impact their investment priorities, up from 45% back in the first quarter. Moreover, in the fourth quarter survey, 23% of CIOs (vs. 9% in the first quarter) reported “starting pilot projects” and 7% (vs. 2% in the first quarter) reported “launch[ing] significant new projects.” The top 5 CIO priorities[5] encompass major technology themes reflected in the Fund: AI (13.3% of responses), data warehousing/analytics (8.3%), security software (8.0%), digital transformation (8.0%), and cloud computing (7.3%). The “most defensive” IT projects3 – security software, AI/machine learning/ process automation, and ERP applications – are also highly represented in the portfolio. Regarding cloud computing, CIOs reported an “acceleration in the public cloud transition,” with 36% of application workloads residing in the public cloud today, a “significant uptick” from the 27% reported a year ago (fourth quarter 2022 survey). Morgan Stanley noted that “the ~9% jump surpass[ed] the historical pace of ~2 points per year by a wide margin.” Going forward, CIOs expect the percentage of workloads stored in the public cloud to increase from 36% today to 43% by the end of this year and 53% by the end of 2026 (vs. 46% in the first quarter). As workloads shift to the cloud, Microsoft and Amazon remain the clear leaders and “best positioned to gain incremental share of IT budgets.” Microsoft Azure remained CIO’s preferred public cloud vendor and is expected to remain so over the next three years, followed by Amazon AWS.

We continue to run a high-conviction portfolio with an emphasis on the secular trends discussed above. Among others, during the fourth quarter we initiated or added to the following positions:

  • Semiconductors and Semiconductor Equipment: Lam Research Corporation (LRCX), Advanced Micro Derives, Inc. (AMD), indie Semiconductor, Inc. (INDI), and Marvell Technology, Inc. (MRVL)
  • Digital Media/Advertising: The Trade Desk (TTD), META Platforms, Inc., and Alphabet Inc. (GOOG,GOOGL)
  • Software: Dynatrace, Inc. (DT), HubSpot, Inc. (HUBS), Ceridian HCM Holding Inc., and Workday, Inc. (WDAY)
  • Biotechnology/Pharmaceuticals: Structure Therapeutics Inc. (GPCR), Viking Therapeutics, Inc. (VKTX), and Legend Biotech Corporation (LEGN)
  • Health Care Equipment: Shockwave Medical, Inc. (SWAV)
  • Electric Vehicles: Rivian Automotive, Inc. (RIVN)

Below is a partial list of the secular megatrends we focus on:

  • Cloud computing
  • Software-as-a-service (‘SAAS’)
  • AI
  • Mobile
  • Semiconductors
  • Digital media/entertainment
  • Targeted digital advertising
  • E-commerce
  • Genetic medicine/genomics
  • Minimally invasive surgical procedures
  • Cybersecurity
  • Electric vehicles/autonomous driving
  • Electronic payments
  • Robotics

Table III. Top contributors to performance for the quarter ended December 31, 2023

Percent Impact

Microsoft Corporation

2.95%

Amazon.com, Inc.

1.36

NVIDIA Corporation

1.28

CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.

1.00

Gartner, Inc.

0.97

Microsoft Corporation is the world’s largest software company. Microsoft was traditionally known for its Windows and Office products, but over the last five years, it has built a $135 billion run-rate cloud business, including its Azure cloud infrastructure service and its Office 365 and Dynamics 365 cloud-delivered applications. The stock contributed to performance because of continued strong operating results, and investor enthusiasm regarding Microsofts’s leadership across the secular megatrends of AI and cloud computing. As highlighted above, Morgan Stanley’s fourth quarter 2023 CIO Survey confirmed the strength and attractiveness of Microsoft’s product portfolio among its customer set: (1) 63% of CIOs expect to use at least one of Microsoft’s generative AI products over the next 12 months; (2) “Microsoft widened its lead as the #1 share gainer of IT wallet share as a result of the shift to the cloud on both a 1-year and 3-year view;” (3) Microsoft Azure ranks as the preferred cloud vendor today (with 48% of application workloads today) and is expected to extend its lead over the next three years (to 50% of workloads). For the September quarter, Microsoft again reported better-than-expected financial results, highlighted by Microsoft Cloud growing 23% in constant currency and Azure revenue growing 28% in constant currency, a one-point acceleration from the June quarter, bolstered by ramping AI revenue contributing three points of growth (vs. guidance of two points). December quarter guidance came in well ahead of consensus, driven by continued strong trends across Microsoft Cloud, Azure, and AI. We remain confident that Microsoft is one of the best positioned companies across the overlapping software, cloud computing, and AI landscapes, with its vertically integrated technology stack and broad sales distribution. We believe Microsoft will continue taking share across its business, driving durable, long-term, double-digit growth and best-in-class profitability.

Amazon.com, Inc. is the world’s largest retailer and cloud services provider. Shares of Amazon were up in the quarter. Reported results were better than consensus estimates, with a significant beat in North American operating profit and stabilization of AWS cloud computing trends. We believe the AWS cloud division has many years ahead of growth, with recent customer optimizations attenuating and AI emerging as a key driver. On the September quarter earnings call, CEO Andy Jassy declared: “AWS’s yearover-year growth rate continued to stabilize…cost optimization…continued to attenuate as more companies transition to deploying net new workloads…[W]e’re seeing the pace and volume of closed deals pick up…Top of mind for most companies continues to be generative AI…on AWS’s AI work…we’re focused on doing what we’ve always done for customers, taking technology that can transform customer experiences and businesses, but that can be complex and expensive, and democratizing it for customers of all sizes and technical abilities.” We also believe Amazon is well positioned in the short-to-medium term to meaningfully improve core North American retail profitability to above pre-pandemic levels, benefiting from its new regionalized fulfillment network and its growing margin accretive advertising business. Longer term, Amazon has substantially more room to grow in e-commerce, where it has less than 15% penetration of the total addressable market. Amazon also remains one of the clear leaders in the vast and growing cloud infrastructure market, with large opportunities enabling generative AI workloads.

NVIDIA Corporation is a leading semiconductor company that sells chips and software for accelerated computing and gaming and is indisputably recognized as one of the leaders and pioneers of AI. The stock rose in the fourth quarter, finishing the year up over 200% because of the unprecedented demand acceleration for generative AI. CEO Jensen Huang put it straight on the company’s November 21 earnings call:

“The generative AI era is in full steam and has created the need for a new type of data center, an AI factory, optimized for refining data and training and inference and generating AI. AI factory workloads are different and incremental to legacy data center workloads supporting IT tasks. AI factories run copilots and AI assistants, which are significant software TAM expansion, and are driving significant new investment, expanding the $1 trillion traditional data center infrastructure install base, and powering the AI industrial revolution.”

NVIDIA is seeing the fruits of its nearly 20-year investment in AI and accelerated computing with data center revenues growing five-fold from $3 billion in 2019 to $15 billion in 2022, and they are expected to at least triple to $45 billion in 2023. This extraordinary top-line growth drove even faster growth in earnings per share, resulting in multiple contraction despite the rapid rise in shares. Over the last year, since AI’s “iPhone moment” with the November 2022 public launch of ChatGPT, I’ve spent a lot of time answering investor questions about AI and our research, analysis, and investments. I’ve stated publicly that we have been investors in AI for many years and have shared the story of our team’s visit with Jensen at NVIDIA’s headquarters in September 2018, over five years ago now, and a full four years before most people had ever heard of ChatGPT. Here are a few select quotes directly from my notes of that day:

  • “We created something called ‘accelerated computing.'”
  • “We are a full stack computing company…AI from top to bottom…hardware, software, algorithms, frameworks…every layer of AI was redesigned by us to go fast.”
  • “[O]ur computing platform was available to AI pioneers that needed a supercomputer…Deep learning is a supercomputing problem. If we are the supercomputer leader, we will be the training leader…. More than just chips. Large scale issue…. We are a supercomputing company.”
  • “20 m[illion] hyperscale servers in the world. ‘I believe they will all be accelerated.'”
  • “Computer science changed – software that writes software.”

While 2023 was a banner year for generative AI, we remain at the early innings of broad adoption. While the opportunity within the data center installed base is already large at roughly $1 trillion, the pace of innovation in AI in general, and generative AI in particular, should drive significant expansion in the addressable market, as generative AI creates a new way for human-computer interaction through natural language, and as companies are better able to utilize their data for decision-making.

Table IV. Top detractors from performance for the quarter ended December 31, 2023

Percent Impact

argenx SE

-0.66%

GM Cruise Holdings LLC

-0.47

Illumina, Inc.

-0.35

X Holding Corp.

-0.27

Tesla, Inc.

-0.20

Argenx SE (ARGX) is a biotechnology company focused on autoimmune disorders. Shares fell in the quarter on the back of failed clinical trials in immune thrombocytopenic purpura and pemphigus vulgaris that called into question the scope of the FcRn treatment landscape. While the exact nature of these data sets is nuanced and not entirely thesis-breaking, we acknowledge that these trial results raise questions for the FcRn space that have not existed in the narrative for years. On the positive side, the strong launch of Vyvgart, with early sales tripling consensus expectations and global approvals coming earlier than guided, should continue to grow revenue, supporting a defensible valuation based on cash-flow analysis. We expect 2024 to be another year of solid performance, with many catalysts including readouts in myositis, Sjogren’s syndrome, multifocal motor neuropathy, as well as argenx’s subcutaneous formulation launch.

GM Cruise Holdings LLC offers autonomous driving software and a fleet of vehicles aimed at reducing costs and improving the safety of transporting people and goods. We marked down the stock after the company lost its autonomous operating license in California. Despite achieving significant milestones over the past year, including completing millions of fully autonomous miles with passengers in various states and cities, an October incident involving a pedestrian in San Francisco prompted the California DMV to rescind the company’s license. The regulator cited concerns about incomplete incident information disclosure. Consequently, this triggered a near-complete cessation of operations and key management changes at Cruise, as General Motors, the majority shareholder, charts a new course for the organization and its capital needs. While we strongly believe the lifesaving technology achieved through the autonomous revolution holds immense value for both investors and society at large, the path to recovery for Cruise remains uncertain at this juncture, which is reflected in our valuation framework.

Illumina, Inc. (ILMN) has been the leading provider of DNA sequencing platforms. The stock declined due to weak financial results, management turnover, and uncertainty about the outcome of the acquisition of Grail, which regulators have challenged on antitrust grounds and in the meantime has been burning cash flow and hampering Illumina’s consolidated performance. We exited our Illumina position during the quarter but will continue our research and analysis regarding the adoption of Illumina’s new sequencing instruments, management’s plan to divest Grail, the evolving DNA-sequencing competitive environment, and the new company management team.

PORTFOLIO STRUCTURE

We invest in secular growth and innovative businesses across all market capitalizations, with the bulk of the portfolio landing in the large-cap zone. Morningstar categorizes the Fund as U.S. Large Growth. As of the end of the fourth quarter, the largest market cap holding in the Fund was $2.8 trillion and the smallest was $500 million. The median market cap of the Fund was $35.3 billion, and the weighted average market cap was $805.8 billion.

To end the quarter, the Fund had $1.1 billion of assets under management. We had investments in 45 unique companies. The Fund’s top 10 positions accounted for 53.1% of net assets.

Fund flows were effectively flat for the year.

Table V. Top 10 holdings as of December 31, 2023

Quarter End

Market Cap

(billions)

Quarter End

Investment

Value

(millions)

Percent of Net

Assets

Microsoft Corporation

$2,794.8

$161.1

14.2%

NVIDIA Corporation

1,223.2

97.3

8.6

Amazon.com, Inc.

1,570.2

73.8

6.5

Tesla, Inc.

789.9

64.7

5.7

Meta Platforms, Inc.

909.6

43.0

3.8

Gartner, Inc.

35.2

34.7

3.1

CoStar Group, Inc.

35.7

32.5

2.9

Space Exploration Technologies Corp.

31.2

2.8

Visa Inc.

536.8

31.2

2.8

Alphabet Inc.

1,756.0

31.1

2.8

RECENT ACTIVITY

Table VI. Top net purchases for the quarter ended December 31, 2023

Quarter End

Market Cap

(billions)

Net

Amount

Purchased

(millions)

Lam Research Corporation

$103.2

$7.0

Structure Therapeutics Inc.

1.9

5.0

The Trade Desk

35.3

4.2

Viking Therapeutics, Inc.

1.9

4.1

Dynatrace, Inc.

16.1

4.0

Lam Research Corporation is a leading global supplier of wafer fabrication equipment (WFE) and services to the semiconductor industry. Lam’s products tend to focus on etch and deposition process steps and its tools are critical in the production of NAND and DRAM memory chips as well as logic devices. While the share of overall WFE spending looks relatively fragmented across the top four to five players in the industry, each of these leading companies tends to have significant share within smaller slices of the industry, creating a stable and favorable industry structure, with share shifts tending to only happen at times of technology transition in the broader industry. We purchased shares of Lam in the quarter as we believe we are at one of those key transition points in the industry that will disproportionately benefit Lam, with a move to gate-all-around transistors in logic creating an increasing need for complex deposition and etch process stops and the emergence of high-bandwidth memory and advanced packaging requiring increasingly complex high-aspect-ratio (i.e., very deep) etches, where Lam has virtually 100% market share. We also believe the market is underestimating the pent-up earnings power in the company as NAND WFE spending recovers in the coming years from one of its worst downcycles ever in 2023.

We recently initiated a position in Structure Therapeutics Inc., a biotechnology company developing a small molecule oral GLP-1 drug used to treat diabetes and obesity. The space is currently dominated by drugs like Ozempic/Wegovy that offer superb blood sugar control for diabetics, and impressively can drive up to 15% weight loss and improve cardiovascular outcomes in both diabetics and non-diabetic obese patients. We estimate that in the U.S. alone, there are about 32 million Type 2 diabetics and an additional 105 million obese patients who would qualify for GLP-1 drugs, and only about 14% of Type 2 diabetics and 1% of obese patients are currently on GLP-1 medication. We see Structure as a leader in the development of oral options that promise lower pricing and open access to these larger markets. Currently, Structure is in Phase 2 trials and is potentially the second oral option to make it to market this decade after Eli Lilly’s orforglipron.

We added opportunistically to our long-term position in The Trade Desk when shares traded down sharply after the company reported third quarter results and issued initial fourth quarter guidance. While third quarter results were solid, with sales growing 25% year-over-year (and 27% adjusting for political spending in 2022), Trade Desk’s management team gave cautious fourth quarter guidance as they saw advertisers pause or taper advertising spending after the tragic October 7 events in Israel. Apart from this real but short-term pressure, Trade Desk demonstrated how it continued to gain market share, discussed the major drivers of its business, including streaming video advertising and shopper marketing, and expressed optimism for the remainder of the fourth quarter and 2024. We snapped up shares given our conviction in Trade Desk’s business and management team and our longterm investment perspective.

Table VII. Top net sales for the quarter ended December 31, 2023

Quarter End

Market Cap or

Market Cap

When Sold

(billions)

Net

Amount

Sold

(millions)

ServiceNow, Inc.

$144.8

$11.4

CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.

61.3

11.4

TKO Group Holdings, Inc.

14.4

9.9

ZoomInfo Technologies Inc.

6.2

9.8

DexCom, Inc.

30.6

7.5

We trimmed our positions in leading software vendors, ServiceNow, Inc. and CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc., after the stocks performed well in 2023, resulting in higher valuations on both companies. Both remained in the top 25 of portfolio investments at year end. We spread this capital around several of our other software investments (as shown in the Review and Outlook section above), as well as another cybersecurity name we purchased after the first of the year and will discuss in our next quarterly letter.

We exited our investments in TKO Group Holdings, Inc., ZoomInfo Technologies Inc., and DexCom, Inc. during the period.

I remain confident in and committed to the strategy of the Fund: durable growth based on powerful, long-term, innovation-driven secular growth trends. We continue to believe that non-cyclical, durable, and resilient growth should be part of investors’ portfolios and that our strategy will deliver solid long-term returns for our shareholders.

Sincerely,

Michael A. Lippert

Portfolio Manager


Investors should consider the investment objectives, risks, and charges and expenses of the investment carefully before investing. The prospectus and summary prospectus contain this and other information about the Funds. You may obtain them from the Funds’ distributor, Baron Capital, Inc., by calling 1-800-99-BARON or visiting Baron Funds – Asset Management for Growth Equity Investments. Please read them carefully before investing.

Risks: Securities issued by small and medium sized companies may be thinly traded and may be more difficult to sell during market downturns. Companies propelled by innovation, including technology advances and new business models, may present the risk of rapid change and product obsolescence, and their success may be difficult to predict for the long term. Even though the Fund is diversified, it may establish significant positions where the Adviser has the greatest conviction. This could increase volatility of the Fund’s returns.

The Fund may not achieve its objectives. Portfolio holdings are subject to change. Current and future portfolio holdings are subject to risk.

The discussions of the companies herein are not intended as advice to any person regarding the advisability of investing in any particular security. The views expressed in this report reflect those of the respective portfolio managers only through the end of the period stated in this report. The portfolio manager’s views are not intended as recommendations or investment advice to any person reading this report and are subject to change at any time based on market and other conditions and Baron has no obligation to update them.

This report does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of any offer to buy securities of Baron Opportunity Fund by anyone in any jurisdiction where it would be unlawful under the laws of that jurisdiction to make such offer or solicitation.

Free cash flow (‘FCF’) represents the cash that a company generates after accounting for cash outflows to support operations and maintain its capital assets.

BAMCO, Inc. is an investment adviser registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Baron Capital, Inc. is a broker-dealer registered with the SEC and member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (FINRA).


Footnotes

[4]See Baron Funds, The Power of Active, Long-Term Investing. “Staying invested in equities over longer periods increases the likelihood of positive returns. Historically, our economy has grown on average 6% to 7% nominally per year, or doubling every 10 to 12 years, and the stock markets have closely reflected that growth.”

[5]The precise question in the survey was “which three external IT spending projects will see the largest percentage increase in 2024?” 3 The net percentage of IT projects most and least likely to get cut in 2024.


Original Post

Editor’s Note: The summary bullets for this article were chosen by Seeking Alpha editors.

Editor’s Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.



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