Why “Cheap” Deals Are Often the Most Expensive

“Cheap” is one of the most dangerous words in investing.

Because cheap rarely means undervalued.

More often, it means misunderstood.

Or worse:

mispriced risk.

The Attraction of “Cheap”

Markets are built on one core instinct:

Buy low. Sell high.

It sounds rational.

It feels disciplined.

And it creates a powerful bias:

If something is priced below expectation — it must be an opportunity.

But that assumption is flawed.

Because price does not explain why something is cheap.

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The Missing Question

Most investors stop at:

“What is the price?”

Few ask:

“Why is it priced this way?”

That question changes everything.

Because in many cases, “cheap” assets are not undervalued.

They are:

• structurally complex
• operationally fragile
• politically exposed
• execution-heavy

In other words:

They are difficult to realize.

The Reality Behind “Cheap”

Cheap assets often come with hidden layers:

👉 unresolved stakeholder issues
👉 unclear governance structures
👉 dependency on future assumptions
👉 execution challenges that are not priced in

These are not visible in simple valuation models.

But they define the outcome.

Statement – Martin Wolfram Steininger

Senior Managing Partner // CEO, BlackSwan Capital

“A low entry price does not create value. It often reflects unresolved complexity that the market has already recognized.”

Statement – Alfredo dos Santos Schimidt

Head of Development Brazil, BlackSwan Capital

“In many projects, what looks cheap is simply difficult to execute. And execution is where most of the cost sits.”

The True Cost of “Cheap”

The real cost of a deal is not the entry price.

It is the total cost of realization.

This includes:

• time
• complexity
• execution risk
• capital required post-acquisition

A “cheap” asset can quickly become expensive if:

• timelines extend
• costs escalate
• alignment breaks down
• execution fails

This is where most miscalculations happen.

The Execution Multiplier

Cheap deals tend to have one common characteristic:

They amplify execution risk.

Because:

• more issues need to be solved
• more stakeholders need to be aligned
• more uncertainty needs to be managed

This creates a multiplier effect:

Small errors become large problems.

Delays become structural.

And costs escalate beyond initial assumptions.

Why the Illusion Persists

Despite this, “cheap” remains attractive.

Because it offers:

• perceived upside
• emotional comfort
• justification for risk-taking

But this is often an illusion.

Because upside only exists if execution succeeds.

And execution is the least predictable part of any deal.

The BlackSwan View

At BlackSwan Capital, we approach “cheap” with caution.

We do not ask:

“Is it cheap?”

We ask:

👉 Can it be executed?
👉 Can complexity be managed?
👉 Can alignment be achieved?

If the answer is unclear, price is irrelevant.

Because:

A cheap deal without execution is an expensive mistake.

The Structural Shift

The market is slowly adjusting.

From:

price → opportunity

to:

execution → reality

This changes how value is assessed.

And it shifts the advantage toward those who can:

• understand complexity
• structure effectively
• execute under pressure

Conclusion

“Cheap” is not a strategy.

It is a signal.

And that signal must be interpreted correctly.

Because in many cases:

Cheap is not an opportunity.

It is a warning.

The question is not:

“How low is the price?”

It is:

“What does it actually cost to make this work?”

Those who understand this will avoid false opportunities.

Those who don’t will continue to pay for value that never materializes.

When capital is critical, execution matters.


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