NETFIGO SCORE BATTLE

ORIGINAL DATA

Risk Appetite

Peter Lynch
5
Lark Davis
9

Contrarian Index

Peter Lynch
6
Lark Davis
5

Track Record

Peter Lynch
10
Lark Davis
5

Accessibility

Peter Lynch
9
Lark Davis
10

Time Horizon

Peter Lynch
Long-Term
Lark Davis
Medium-Term

AT A GLANCE

Peter Lynch
Lark Davis
$450M
Net Worth
$5M+
American
Nationality
New Zealander
Long-Term
Time Horizon
Medium-Term
5 / 10
Risk Score
9 / 10

INVESTING STYLE

Peter Lynch

Lynch invented the phrase "tenbagger" — a stock that returns ten times your money. He was specifically looking for companies that could do that.

His method was deceptively simple: invest in what you know. Not what you know about macroeconomics or interest rates — what you know about everyday life.

What stores are you shopping at? What products are your kids obsessed with?

What new thing are you using that feels like it could be everywhere in five years? If you're noticing a company before Wall Street analysts have caught on, you have a real edge.

He categorized stocks into six types: slow growers (stable, boring), stalwarts (big companies, modest returns), fast growers (small and aggressive — where the tenbaggers live), cyclicals (tied to economic cycles), turnarounds (troubled companies that might recover), and asset plays (companies with hidden value the market hasn't priced in). His genius was applying rigorous fundamental analysis to companies most Wall Street analysts dismissed as too small or too mundane to bother with.

Lark Davis

Davis covers the full crypto market — not just Bitcoin. His content focuses on identifying altcoin opportunities, understanding new blockchain projects, DeFi protocols, and layer-2 ecosystems.

His strategy is higher risk than Bitcoin-only: he looks for early-stage projects with high upside potential and significant downside risk. He has been transparent about both wins and losses in his portfolio.

He advocates dollar-cost averaging into positions and taking profits during bull markets — lessons he admits he learned the hard way during the 2018 bear market.

FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY

Peter Lynch

He believed the average person has a real edge over professional fund managers — specifically the access to everyday life that analysts in offices don't have. You know which stores are packed on Saturday afternoon.

You know which new products your kids are obsessed with. Wall Street analysts often don't.

His most repeated principle: invest in what you know. His second: love a company's product is not sufficient on its own — you still need to understand the fundamentals.

Third: stomach matters more than brain in investing. The biggest thing separating successful investors from unsuccessful ones isn't intelligence — it's the ability to stay calm when the market drops 20 percent and everything feels like it's ending.

Lark Davis

His philosophy is that crypto represents the biggest wealth transfer opportunity of his generation. He believes in holding Bitcoin as a base position and using a portion of the portfolio for higher-risk altcoin exposure.

He has said his biggest financial lesson was not taking profits during the 2017-2018 bull run — a mistake he actively advises his audience to avoid repeating.

RISK TOLERANCE

Peter Lynch

Lynch ran a very diversified portfolio — sometimes over 1,000 positions — which cuts against the concentration gospel of Buffett and Munger. He justified it simply: if you find enough genuinely great small companies, you don't need to pick just one.

Some will fail. The tenbaggers more than compensate.

He wasn't reckless — he did detailed fundamental research on every holding. But he was comfortable owning things that looked messy or unfamiliar on the surface if the numbers told a better story.

He famously said he'd rather own 20 stocks he didn't know well than five stocks he thought he knew perfectly. The point being: false confidence in a concentrated position kills you.

Breadth buys time.

Lark Davis

Davis has been public about holding altcoins that went to zero and investing in projects that turned out to be fraudulent or simply failed. He does not hide the losses.

His risk management has evolved directly from those mistakes: he now advocates taking partial profits at every major price milestone, maintaining Bitcoin as a core position, and treating altcoins as a speculative sleeve rather than a primary strategy. The lesson he repeats most often from 2018: not taking profits during euphoria is itself a high-risk decision — most people just don't recognize it as one until prices have already collapsed.

THE PLAYBOOK

Peter Lynch

After retiring from Magellan in 1990, Lynch has spent most of his time on philanthropy. He and his wife Carolyn donated tens of millions to education through the Lynch Foundation, focusing on Catholic education and scholarship programs in Massachusetts.

He lives quietly for someone worth hundreds of millions. He speaks at Fidelity events occasionally, plays golf, and is generally not seeking attention.

He has said that the best decision he ever made was retiring at 46 — that no amount of money is worth missing your kids grow up.

Lark Davis

Lives in Thailand with low overhead costs. Has spoken about the power of geographic arbitrage — earning in dollars and crypto while living somewhere with a lower cost of living.

He exercises consistently, says a healthy body supports a clear financial mind, and advocates for a simple, mobile lifestyle. Does not flaunt luxury publicly.

BIGGEST WIN

Peter Lynch

Fannie Mae. Lynch bought it heavily in the mid-1980s when almost nobody wanted it.

It was a housing finance company drowning in problem mortgages. Lynch dug into the fundamentals and decided the problems were fixable and the underlying business was genuinely valuable.

He was right. The stock went from roughly $2 to $40.

That single position generated hundreds of millions for the fund. His Chrysler bet was similar — he bought heavily when the company was a bankruptcy rumor and almost no one else would touch it.

Both worked because Lynch was willing to do the research on things everyone else had already decided were too ugly to look at.

Lark Davis

Building one of the largest crypto education YouTube channels in the world during the 2020-2021 bull run. His coverage of DeFi and altcoin projects during that period — when those sectors exploded in value — brought him the majority of his audience and income.

His Wealth Mastery community grew substantially during that period.

BIGGEST MISTAKE

Peter Lynch

Selling great companies too soon. He got into Walmart early and sold too soon.

He did the same with several other retailers that went on to become enormous. By his own account, his biggest mistake pattern was taking profits on genuine multi-decade compounders before they had compounded enough.

He also acknowledged that managing a $14 billion fund was fundamentally different from managing $18 million. The sheer size limited which companies he could meaningfully invest in — you can't move the needle on a $14 billion fund by buying a $50 million company.

He burned himself out keeping up with over a thousand positions. He retired at 46.

He's said he doesn't regret it.

Lark Davis

In 2021, Davis faced significant controversy when it emerged he had been paid to promote certain crypto projects to his audience without clearly disclosing the payments. He issued an apology and said he had followed what he believed were disclosure norms at the time, but the episode damaged his reputation and became one of the most-cited examples of undisclosed crypto influencer promotions.

He also, like most altcoin-focused analysts, saw his portfolio take brutal losses in the 2022 bear market.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

Peter Lynch

Peter Lynch grew up in Newton, Massachusetts. His father died when Lynch was 10, and his mother had to work to keep the family going.

Lynch caddied at the Brae Burn Country Club to help out. One of his regular clients was D.

George Sullivan, president of Fidelity Investments. Sullivan eventually offered Lynch a summer job at Fidelity — the kind of break you earn by showing up and doing the work.

Lynch studied history, psychology, and philosophy at Boston College — not finance — and said later that was probably an advantage. Too many finance students learn to look at spreadsheets and miss the obvious things happening in front of them.

He got an MBA from the Wharton School, joined Fidelity full-time in 1969, and took over the Magellan Fund in 1977. At the time, Magellan had $18 million in assets and was closed to new investors.

When Lynch retired at 46 in 1990, it had $14 billion and was the largest actively managed mutual fund in the world. He beat the S&P 500 in 11 of his 13 years managing it.

He's been a vice chairman at Fidelity in an advisory capacity ever since.

Lark Davis

Lark Davis is a New Zealand-born crypto educator who built his brand primarily on YouTube, starting around 2018. He focuses on cryptocurrency analysis with an emphasis on altcoins, DeFi, and emerging blockchain projects — not just Bitcoin.

His channel "Crypto Lark" grew to over a million subscribers, making him one of the most followed retail crypto educators in the world. He also built a paid subscription community, Wealth Mastery, where he publishes deeper research.

He has lived in Thailand for years, part of a wave of digital nomad crypto educators who operate internationally.

COMPANIES & ROLES

Peter Lynch

His entire professional life ran through Fidelity Investments. He managed the Magellan Fund from 1977 to 1990 — 13 years of sustained outperformance that has never been matched at that scale.

His major holdings during that run included Fannie Mae, which he rode from $2 to $40; Chrysler, which he bought near bankruptcy; and various retailers that nobody on Wall Street wanted to touch.

He was famous for finding companies in everyday life before analysts noticed them. He found Dunkin' Donuts because his wife liked the coffee.

He investigated L'eggs pantyhose after his wife bought them at a grocery store. He'd walk through a shopping mall and watch which stores were packed and which were empty — and then go home and read the financials to see if the story held up.

Lark Davis

Crypto Lark YouTube channel (1M+ subscribers). Wealth Mastery (paid research subscription).

Books: "Cryptocurrency Revolution" (authored). Based in Thailand.

EDUCATION

Peter Lynch

Boston College, class of 1965 — history, psychology, philosophy. Wharton School of Business, MBA.

He's on record saying studying history at Boston College was more useful for investing than anything he learned at Wharton. The historical pattern recognition, the ability to contextualize events — that showed up in how he thought about cycles and companies.

Lark Davis

Largely self-taught in crypto and financial markets. No formal finance credentials.

BOOKS & RESOURCES

Peter Lynch

The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham

The book Lynch himself points to as foundational — it's where his framework for thinking about intrinsic value comes from

Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits by Philip Fisher

The other major influence. Fisher was the one who formalized the idea of looking at qualitative factors — management quality, competitive position — not just balance sheets. Lynch synthesised Graham and Fisher into something more accessible than either

The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel

It's the best modern book on why smart people make bad investing decisions

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Lark Davis

As an Amazon Associate, Netfigo earns from qualifying purchases. Book links above may be affiliate links.

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