Do Founder-Led Stocks Outperform?
I created a founder stock index to test this hypothesis and compare it to the broader market.
*Not financial advice. Do your own research. Past performance doesn't guarantee future results.
It's common advice in early-stage investing that the founder is the most important factor. This made me wonder—does the same principle apply to public companies?
Thesis: Founder led companies have a disproportionate advantage.
Why?
This perspective comes from my own limited experience as a founder and observations of many founder friends. It’s also influenced by Paul Graham’s essay, “Founder Mode.”
I could not imagine anyone running Scale AI with more aggression than Alexandr Wang. I could not imagine anyone running Airbnb with more obsession than Brian Cheskey. These companies are successful because of their respective founder qualities.
Simply put, it comes down to two things:
Passion. Founders often view their company as their child. This deep attachment isn't something a salary or title can provide; it's forged through years of highs and crushing lows, almost like a romantic relationship.
Vision. Founders have a greater mission and curiosity they want to chase. Take Mark Zuckerberg, for example. He steered Meta into AR/VR despite initial skepticism, and positioned the company as an AI leader. Both have arguably little connection to Meta’s core business but in 2024 are huge trends. Hired executives will face greater operational challenges when pivoting a company, whereas founders tend to have a stronger grip on the steering wheel.
While I acknowledge that some founders have mismanaged their companies or become less effective as their organizations expanded—the evidence being the existence of private equity—I still believe that most companies thrive under founder leadership.
Building an index
To test this thesis, I scraped the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) to build a stock index1. I include a company in my index if it meets the below conditions.
Current CEO must be the founder/co-founder of the company
Market cap is greater than 1B
In the future, I want to experiment with more sophisticated triggers, but let’s start simple. The above index is composed of 296 companies.
The complete index can be found here.
Benchmarking against SPY
Are we onto something? I compared the index’s returns against the S&P 500 (SPY). To ensure a fair comparison, I market-cap weighted the index to mirror the SPY's methodology.
(@substack please add tables!)
The initial results looked promising, but I needed to account for a significant confounding factor: NVIDIA (NVDA) comprised 35% of the weighted portfolio as the largest holding. To understand the true performance, I conducted a second analysis with NVDA removed.
This adjustment revealed NVDA's outsized influence on the index's performance. However, the most compelling finding remained: even without NVDA, the index consistently outperformed the SPY across all time horizons2. This suggests the underlying strength of the selection criteria extends beyond a single high-performing stock.
Conclusion: over a 10 year time horizon, the founder index3 would beat the SPY by 10,566.99% with an annualized return of 59.52% vs the SPY’s 11.04%.
A complete table can be found here.
Index Composition
By Sector
Most companies in the founder index are technology firms, followed by those in the consumer and healthcare sectors. I found it interesting that these are among the most popular sectors for venture backing, suggesting that a large portion of the index is made up of venture-backed companies. With American Dynamism emerging as a hot investment vertical, I would expect to see more government, energy, and defense companies going public in the coming years (and joining the founder index).
For reference, here is the sector distribution of the SPY:
By IPO Year
The number of founder-led companies has subtly increased every year4. 2021 was a record year for IPOs due to ZIRP, which is reflected in the founder index. However, I wouldn’t consider this outlier as evidence of an accelerated growth rate.
By Market Cap
The initial index has 296 companies with the following distribution based on market cap.
# index distribution based on market cap (1B floor)
count 296.000000
mean 34.575357
std 235.198755
min 1.024893
25% 2.069473
50% 4.194686
75% 13.215535
max 3621.363900
I noticed half the companies had a market cap below 5B and wanted to more intentionally filter smaller companies / penny stocks. I created a second index (133 companies) with a higher market cap floor of 5B resulting in the below distribution.
# index distribution based on market cap (5B floor)
count 133.000000
mean 73.962085
std 347.546234
min 5.093807
25% 8.130798
50% 15.250003
75% 34.386152
max 3621.363900
This change did not make a meaningful change in the annualized returns. Over 10 years, the annualized return is slightly higher at 60.14% versus 59.52%.
A complete list of stocks in the large cap index can be found here, with a breakdown of the returns here.
Follow-ups
What if the founder is not the CEO but on the board (ex. chairman, president, CTO, CFO, etc.)?
Can you judge a company based on college graduate demand? ie. if I took the most desired internships for college students at a top 20 school, how would that index perform? Companies with the best talent should win?
All results can be found here. I plan to post a Jupyter notebook to replicate the above once I finish cleaning up the code.
The index is based on a snapshot taken on November 20, 2024
The index was notably closer to the SPY during the Covid-19 pandemic, suggesting that it was influenced by the same market forces and investor sentiment during that period. It could suggest founder-led companies did not have an edge during these times (dominated by market forces).
If we did not include NVDA, the founder index would beat the SPY by 634.71% with an annualized return of 24.84% vs the SPY’s 11.04%.
This distribution is likely biased by the requirement that the founder must be CEO today. OPEN (Opendoor) would not show up on this chart since Eric Wu is not CEO today (but was CEO when it went IPO in 2020.