@DarkRange55 Also the "New York Museum of Art" doesn't exist lol. Do you mean the Met?
Lol my mistake
thank you for catching that. I haven't lived in New York for a very long time. Thats what I meant! Thanks, lol
Professions that draw psychopaths and also ones that by nature are ruthless
Lawyer (naturally), chef & surgeon (a lot of cutting), clergy (I can also personally vouch for this statistic as at one point I was enrolled in a PhD program in divinity of theological seminary), politicians (of course), bankers and CEO's (of course and again I can personally vouch for the bankers as I started in investment banking), first responders like I said above, sales, supposedly NGO's, journalists and HR. I've had a little experience working with NGO's but not certain.
Yeah, wondering that too: how to position oneself to the finance industry?
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Selling pickaxes to goldrushers is a common tech industry mindset. (Example: Amazon's cloud essentially takes a cut of the tech industry's revenue.) This means finding investors/traders, and automating their pain-points, or opening new possibilities
From that standpoint, I guess you'd learn a bit about what these investors/traders know & how well they perform. And be in a better position to decide whether to become an investor/trader
Selling-pickaxes-to-goldminers sounds relatively cooperative. Builds relationships with people who have more incentive to help rather than hurt
The companies that supply miners have traditionally made more money in the early stages.
The vast majority of traders underperform the market (
in the long-run) even managed funds and there's plenty of empirical data on that. Warren Buffet didn't use traditional strategies to grow Berkshire (there's a good book on that), but he recommends the Boglehead method to most people. On stock picking, it's almost never worth it unless it's your full time job and even then only some are actually good at it.
I think it depends on what you want to do. Finance is a very pedigree driven industry and is also about connections. An MBA from a top 25 university is often times seen as a golden ticket (but doesn't have to be). Most people start in investment banking but it's a HORRIBLE job for the low-level: 80-100hr weeks. Very high burnout rate. Most people that get a bachelors in finance end up selling life insurance (financial advisor). But I think it really just depends on what you want to do, how you market yourself/degree/skills.
99% of people are just better off with the Boglehead method: max your tax advantage accounts by buying broadly diversified low-cost index funds and maximize your skills in your given profession / career.
I did a VC apprenticeship that's fairly selective
- sure I've built a small time biz (no funding, no exit), but let's be honest, am I going to sit on boards without some track record and advise founders managing large teams in hyper growth?
No.
- No deal experience a la banking can hurt
- Take 7-10 yrs due to fund lifecycle to know if one is even good at VC. Plus not getting any carry unless Senior Assoc./Partner. Less pay than banking usually.
To me it seems VC is best as a later career move it one just loves the startup eco/has a track record of entrepreneurship
VC - I know some extremely, extremely successful VC's (example: my friend's dad is famous and was an early investor in Apple, Skull Candy & Starbucks and made ~$400mil, one of my friend's brother-in-laws is the CFO of a VC fund and another friend of mine is a big tech VC) but for the industry:
The primary providers of funding to the venture capital industry are managers of large pools of capital. These entities include pension funds, university endowments, charitable foundations, and, to a much lesser extent, insurance companies, wealthy families and corporations.
Most large asset pool managers would like a 5 – 10% allocation to venture capital because of its past returns and anti-correlation with other asset classes. Unfortunately they can seldom reach their desired allocation because there aren't enough VC firms that generate returns that justify the risk. That's because the top 20 firms (out of approximately 1,000 total VC firms) generate approximately 95% of the industry's returns… with greater risk comes an expectation of greater return. Venture capital has the greatest risk of all the asset classes in which institutions invest, so it must have the highest expected return.
According to research by William Sahlman at Harvard Business School, 80% of a typical venture capital fund's returns are generated by 20% of its investments. The 20% needs to have some very big wins if it's going to more than cover the large percentage of investments that either go out of business or are sold for a small amount. The only way to have a chance at those big wins is to have a very high hurdle for each prospective investment.
Traditionally, the industry rule of thumb has been to look for deals that have the chance to return 10x your money in five years. That works out to an IRR of 58%.
If 20% of a fund is invested in deals that return 10x in five years and everything else results in no value then the fund would have an annual return of approximately 15%. Few firms are able to generate those returns.
Over the past 10 years, venture capital in general has been a lousy place to invest. According to Cambridge Associates the average annual venture capital return over the past 10 years has only been 8.1% as compared to 5.7% for the S&P 500. That clearly does not compensate the limited partner for taking the increased risk associated with venture capital. However the top quartile (25%) generated an annual rate of return of 22.9%. The top 20 firms have done even better… human nature is not comfortable taking risk; so most venture capital firms want high returns without risk, which doesn't exist. As a result they often sit on the sideline while other people make the big money from things that most people initially think are crazy.
"When it comes to investing in venture capital I would follow the old Groucho Marx dictum about 'never joining a club that would have you as a member.' Beware private wealth managers who offer you access to venture capital fund of funds. I can assure you, as a past partner of a premier venture capital fund that no firm in the top 20 would allow a brokerage firm fund of funds to invest in their fund."
- Andy Rachleff, is Wealthfront's co-founder and Executive Chairman. He serves as a member of the board of trustees and chairman of the endowment investment committee for University of Pennsylvania and as a member of the faculty at Stanford Graduate School of Business, where he teaches courses on technology entrepreneurship. Prior to Wealthfront, Andy co-founded and was general partner of Benchmark Capital, where he was responsible for investing in a number of successful companies including Equinix, Juniper Networks, and Opsware. He also spent ten years as a general partner with Merrill, Pickard, Anderson & Eyre (MPAE). Andy earned his BS from University of Pennsylvania and his MBA from Stanford Graduate School of Business.
Positive returns: Angel investing can be risky business (one of the things my dad did among others). Most prior studies posit that 5-10 percent of investments will be economically profitable. In The American Angel, investors said on average, 11 percent of their total portfolio yielded a positive exit.
Total Value to Paid In (TVPI)
The ratio of the current value of remaining investments within a fund, plus the total value of all distributions to date, relative to the total amount of capital paid into the fund to date. As defined in the current GIPS Standards (
http://www.gipsstandards.org/standards/current/Pages/index.aspx)
I'm able to make 60-200% on my money every week just using volume profile and orderflow on book map how come hedge funds don't do this too feels like 99% of hedge fund managers don't beat the snp500 cuz they don't have the balls to really trade vs buy a blue chip and milk "management fees"
For HF, VC, PE - one of my best friends from Taiwan worked at HSBC in private wealth management for ultra-high net worth individuals. One of his clients had a PhD in pharmaceutical trials (or something like that!), he started and sold 3 pharmaceutical companies. The last one he sold for a billion dollars. So my friend was managing a lot of money and
he did not like any of those three (HF, PE, VC). BUT every client that wanted to invest in PE, HF and VC lost money on them. One of the multi-family offices my friend is president and CEO of stopped using these three alternative forms of investment. Hedge funds got destroyed in the recent past and in some ways, some of these have relatively speaking fallen out of vogue.
I have most of my money in my IRA. I often wonder how it will fare in the future, particularly regarding inflation. If I build it up for another 20 years, I keep thinking that by then, the Dollar will be worth next to nothing.
How do you view this? Do you think people should be worried about their retirement accounts over the long haul or do you think the value of it will scale accordingly over time? In other words, just keep adding to it and it'll be fine?
Over the past 50-100 years we've had a massive increase in the global population. We've had massive productively gains with technology and overall the world has been pretty prosperous. A big part of that comes from demographics where you have a population pyramid of more young people supporting not that many old people. You have a huge workforce that is paying payroll taxes (at least in the US) and paying Medicare taxes, ect. And that helps support old people and finance the system. Now birthrates are collapsing globally especially in east Asia and the US. America's population pyramid is all from immigration (we'll see how long that lasts…). But overall we've had an inversion of population pyramids. At least in democracies, the old cohort is going to be a massive voting block and they will continue to vote themselves as many benefits as possible as the younger generations continue to shrink as they don't have as much say in politics. Maybe this will lead to some kind of fascism, I don't know. The whole current financial system is based on population growth, productivity gains and the transfer payments from working individuals to retired individuals. So in 100 years when the population begins to collapse and the taxes are much higher - global stock markets, government debt and taxes to support an aging population globally (this will even come for Africa, too, at some point. They probably have it worse because they have huge birthrates now that will probably reverse), whats going to happen? I imagine its going to be worse - taxes and government debt will be high and the stock market (depending on what is representative of the stock market) may not do as well because you have fewer people working in corporations. The only thing that I think would save us would be some type of new technological revolution which maybe enhances lifestyles or lifespans and makes massive gains in productivity for a shrinking working population. Which is entirely possible. If we don't have massive increases in productivity or reverse this crisis, government finances may be so strained that retirement benefits are cut and maybe the global economy starts to flatten out or decline.
I think you might need to save way more than expected (even with an index strategy), live frugally and work longer than expected (even if its part time)
This is a whole area of research and analysis for the USA and many other countries. YES, demographics and intergenerational transfers in many different countries with many complex financial and tax issues.
https://www.nber.org/programs-proje...-disability-research-center?page=1&perPage=50
However,
stocks are the best hedge against inflation, which when measured by CPI, which is a basket (yes, food prices have outpaced), has slowed. Companies can raise their prices.
Gold and silver are shiny rocks (I've studied gold INTENSIVELY, read the Golden Constant), a house - thats in one county in one city in one state and bonds which it depends when you bought them. Crypto is a scam and treasuries can be tax inefficient and yields can go down low. Stocks - I think earnings will continue to grow in the future and I think stock prices will continue to go up eventually in the future and thats why I buy them. I just think stocks are the way to go in the long run. The global economy continues to grow.
Cash which you're guaranteed to loose with inflation over time.
Real estate its not east to make money. Its highly risky and highly concentrated. Real estate over time has matched inflation over 100 years.
It really depends some places appreciated a lot faster and some places didn't. Its not that easy and it really is all dependent on location.
Cash pays interest. Your savings account and treasuries its all cash basically. If you're a billionaire and you have all your money in short-term treasuries you're gonna be fine.
Whats your take on the mrna vaccines and covid? Im concerned we are headed into a mortality/fertility/cognitive health crisis via either or both of those things.
Do you think elites favor a system reset and/or depopulation?
I'll get back to you, I'm on a ski trip in Montana at the moment. There's actually an exclusive private resort for billionaires up here that my mom's friends belong to.
en.wikipedia.org