Why private matters
To remain private is not merely a legal or structural decision. It is a matter of judgement.
External capital brings with it pressures of timing, fashion, and liquidity that are not
always aligned with human-centred ownership. We have chosen a different model: one that
allows decisions to be taken with care, on the right timetable, and in accordance with
enduring rather than temporary considerations.
Aspen Meridian does not seek to raise outside capital, does not manage third-party assets,
and is not organised around an eventual sale. That is not an omission. It is a rewarding
part of the design.
Selectivity as discipline
Breadth, in our view, is not a virtue in itself. Many companies gather widely and oversee
lightly; the result is movement without the rewards of real ownership.
Aspen Meridian is deliberately concentrated, with an eye to the future. We would rather
hold a small number of enterprises of enduring consequence than a multitude of passing
interest. Our preference is for depth over spread, stewardship over accumulation, and for
businesses whose strategic importance is likely to increase with time.
We are not assembling a portfolio for display. We are building and holding a focused group
of investments that merit serious ownership, and governing them with patience, judgement,
and humanity.