Marvin Liao Marvin Liao

Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads November 26th, 2023

“Creativity takes courage.” —Henri Matisse

  1. "Bansko's growing digital nomad population is at its most visible during the festival, but that's only half the story. According to online resource Nomad List, the town is the world's "most-consistently growing remote work hub" of the last five years. Since 2018, it has grown by 231%, more than Warsaw, Madrid and tech media darling Tallinn. 

This seems somewhat anomalous: surveys suggest digital nomads generally favour coastal cities (Lisbon, Barcelona), islands and beach destinations (Madeira, the Canaries, Bali). So, why are more and more people heading for a small inland mountain resort in Bulgaria?" 

https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20231003-bansko-bulgarias-unlikely-new-digital-nomad-hub

2. Ohio is well positioned for the future. Manufacturing is back in America. More work to be done though.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yr0VQxfjAQI

3. Hmmm.....

"Adam Neumann is rich thanks to WeWork. Now, he has a chance to buy something on the cheap that he once held dear.

Neumann reportedly made about $770 million when the office space company went public via a special purpose acquisition vehicle in October 2021. And he sold hundreds of millions of dollars worth of stock before that. (It’s worth remembering that he made a fortune while many employees and shareholders saw their positions decimated as WeWork’s value fell.)

Now that WeWork has filed for bankruptcy protection, will the company’s wealthy and infamous founder tap some of that fortune to rescue the brand that he willed into being by sheer force of personality?

Today, one former WeWork executive texted me that he thought Neumann would try to reclaim the company he founded in 2010."

https://www.newcomer.co/p/will-adam-neumann-rescue-wework

4. "There is no one doing more interesting work, more quickly than OpenAI right now. The company’s rate of progress is staggering, and it doesn’t look to be slowing down any time soon. At this conference, the word on the street was that OpenAI is a talent juggernaut, and that it feels very much like Stripe in its prime. (In fact, I’ve heard that OpenAI has hired a lot of people who used to work at Stripe.)

The energy in the room was palpable. I don’t think there’s a bigger or more interesting story in technology. The coming months and years are going to be wild."

https://every.to/chain-of-thought/what-i-saw-at-openai-s-developer-day

5. Founder-operator led fund for Southern Europe. It's much needed.

https://techcrunch.com/2023/11/07/yellow-a-new-vc-firm-from-glovo-founders-and-atomico-investor-is-betting-on-southern-europe/

6. This is an excellent discussion this week on the OpenAI developments and big changes in the VC industry.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2Oph1zAELo

7. This is an excellent discussion. Pomp is a friend and is building a media empire in an incredibly smart way.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-oGXQab1oJQ

8. An excellent episode with lots of interesting perspectives on AI and the various key players. Also SBF.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o6n1PSW9do0

9. "The EUR 925m acquisition required Allegro to issue new stock and take on some debt, but in return it got access to another 32m consumers across five countries, 4.7m of whom were already active users of the various sites.

Suddenly, Allegro was the number #1 or #2 e-commerce player in not one but four countries of the region, and it got a less established but growing position in a further two countries. These new markets also came with a bigger catch-up potential than Allegro's home market: below 8% e-commerce market penetration, compared to 11% in Poland. Eventually, Central and Eastern European consumers will give in to the convenience and price advantages of online shopping to the same degree as consumers elsewhere (in the UK, 25% of all retail sales are done online).

Plus, there is the ongoing overall economic growth aspect. As readers of my recent feature about Hungary will know, Central and Eastern European countries are generally growing at a faster rate than their counterparts in the Western half of the European Union.

In summary, Allegro has the chance to grow its markets to two to three times the current size, and backed by faster underlying organic growth.

After taking a look at it from a 33,000-foot perspective, it appears like the combination of structural growth and a strong market position makes Allegro worth doing a bit more homework (which you should always do before deciding on an investment!)."

https://www.undervalued-shares.com/weekly-dispatches/allegro-a-new-cycle-for-the-polish-e-commerce-giant/

10. "Our gurl Yellen publicly supports her boss, but in private she is scrambling to ensure the empire can issue debt at an affordable price to keep the children fed. Who are the children? Baby boomers who are getting old, sick, and need an ever-increasing amount of healthcare goods and other entitlements. The military-industrial complex needs to be fed an ever-expanding defence budget to produce more bullets and bombs. Interest to rich savers needs to be paid so that promises are kept to hodlers of debt.

Yellen might be a bad bitch, but the market ain’t buying what she is selling. Yields on long-end treasury debt (maturities >10-years) are rising faster than short-end yields (maturities <2-years). This presents a deadly problem to the financial system called the “bear steepener”.

https://cryptohayes.substack.com/p/bad-gurl

11. Brad Gerstner is one of the best tech investors in the world period.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TyHRj_WxJx4

12. An incredible conversation here on Venture capital from some of the best in the business. Benchmark Capital.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsGJr_NKEOM&t=1s

13. "Meanwhile, under this onslaught of Russian and Chinese messaging, the U.S. government stands serenely aloof from the fray. Administration officials will give speeches and pen the occasional op-ed in Foreign Affairs, government officials make anodyne tweets, and the Voice of America is still putting out articles that no one reads, but the kind of coordinated forceful official advocacy of liberal values that we saw under FDR is considered propaganda to be avoided at all cost. 

It should be obvious that this is a recipe for liberalism’s utter defeat. Imagine if a country being invaded by a conquering army declared that government shouldn’t get involved in violence, and outsourced the defense of the nation to private citizens with homemade guns? That is effectively what the U.S. government is doing by ceding the information sphere to foreign governments and private citizens. We are so afraid of being propagandists that we are refusing to counter the efforts of powers who have no such fear. 

The U.S. government needs to get back into the information warfare game. 

But simply sitting back and trusting in the Marketplace of Ideas to reach an optimal equilibrium is no longer a viable option for a liberal society. Totalitarian powers are on the march, and social media gives them the opportunity to reach American hearts and minds more directly than ever before.

One of our government’s essential functions is to guard us against such powers. If we force it to abnegate that function, mainlining totalitarian propaganda out of fear of creating our own, we’re all a bunch of suckers."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/liberalism-is-losing-the-information

14. "With 37 million people, Saudi Arabia is the 40th most populous country, trailing Ethiopia, Myanmar, and Morocco. The ocean of accessible oil beneath its desert makes it arguably the greatest swing vote in the world. Venezuela has greater reserves, and Iran and Canada are in the same class, but the Saudis’ wealth carries more weight. They understand they sit at the pivot point — able to swing east or west.

The most visible facet of their strategy is the normalization of relations with Iran in the face of proxy wars in Syria and Yemen while edging closer to diplomatic relations with Israel. The Iran connection was facilitated by China, with whom the Saudis are forging closer ties. (China is the largest importer of Saudi oil.) All the while, the Kingdom is still maintaining its tight relationship with the United States.

The measured, steady liberalization of Saudi Arabia, which MBS is undertaking at some riskto his power within the ruling family, is, I believe, a deft foreign policy maneuver. MBS didn’t spend $250 billion to win the 2034 World Cup, but to become the world’s soccer mom. The Kingdom is gaining influence, and the U.S. would be well served to counter China’s rapidly improving ties with Saudi — just as the Kingdom’s best post-Gaza move would be to normalize relations with Israel. That this is even feasible (it was in the works pre-October 7) is a function of MBS’s pivot from Islamism to capitalism. Like him or not, MBS might be one of the best things to happen to the West in a decade.

The Kingdom is not alone. Turkey has emerged as Europe’s swing player in recent years, extracting concessions on its priorities to accept Finland and Sweden into NATO, even as it buys Russian military equipment. Turkey’s stance in the pivot comes naturally; it is the geographic and cultural bridge between Europe and the Middle East. Istanbul also boasts a great Soho House. But I digress."

https://www.profgalloway.com/swingers/

15. A good talk with Jared Kushner, I am definitely becoming a fan of his. Very rational and insightful conversation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EFk40AbO94

16. "In summary, 2024 will see a ramp up of AI, powering tech and business market transitions at a speed we’d never seen before. This will result in many winners and losers, ranging from countries and economies to corporations and startups. I am optimistic that we are going to bypass a recession, inflation will come back under control, and companies will start to invest in growth again – despite interest rates remaining higher for longer than desired.

So, I think 2024 will be a better year than most expect but I caveat this with concern for the current geopolitical climate, as this is the real wildcard here, maybe more than any other time in recent history."

https://theinnovator.news/john-chambers-2024-predictions/

17. "In a challenging market where new customers are a challenge, how does a company grow? Increase price & cross-sell."

https://tomtunguz.com/vendr-q3-report/

18. "Thorp beat the casinos at Blackjack and Roulette, set up the first market neutral hedge fund, Princeton Newport Partners, and pioneered strategies like convertible arbitrage.1 Before he shut down PNP, he was basically turning it into the first multi-strategy hedge fund (and later invested in the most prominent one, Citadel). If I had to summarize his story, it would be ‘genius2 becomes obsessed with games, repeatedly finds edge, survives, wins, and leaves to enjoy life.’"

https://alchemy.substack.com/p/ed-thorp-survival-of-the-fittest

19. "Walt Whitman wrote, “America…counts…for her justification and success…almost entirely on the future. . . For our New World I consider far less important for what it has done, or what it is, than for results to come.”

San Francisco, too, counts for its justification entirely on the future. It is a synecdoche for America. The future is what is important. This is its sin and its charm, its peril and its undeniable promise.

In San Francisco, the future, too, is hot and cold. When the next round closes, the sun is on your face. When the acquihire falls through, the shade is cold as ice. On Monday, AGI and universal prosperity are at hand. On Tuesday, apocalyptic doom looms, or worse, stagnation—progress’s dreaded asymptote. Feast or famine. Fever is the nature of the future."

https://every.to/chain-of-thought/a-day-at-the-center-of-the-ai-boom

20. "I have provided you with sufficient data to show you that people need our help, so we must rise to the challenge—isn’t that the whole point of Fintech?

There is ample business opportunity in providing value to customers of financial products. But if benevolence does not compel you enough, consider the massive economic opportunity that exists.

Not long ago both public and private markets understood how massive that opportunity was…and then the reckoning came. It appears that the pendulum has swung probably too far in the other direction. Remember, be greedy when others are fearful."

https://www.chaos-engineering.dev/p/our-money-in-data

21. "Today, I see similar forces driving American politics into similarly shocking outcomes. Americans are abandoning politics and the political parties. Politicians are now attacking the party system from the inside. As a result, the United States may be about to elect a President who is independent of the existing two parties while simultaneously bringing the party system itself to an end."

https://drpippa.substack.com/p/independents-day-and-the-7th-party

22. Lots of insights here on living well and how to deal with money and the future. Really worth listening to.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=InQb76J9-HY

23. This seems to be a naive and complacent view. Hope they are right.

"For all these reasons, the consensus I heard was that China will not make any military moves on Taiwan anytime soon. It’s just too messy, too noisy, and too likely to cause disorder and chaos — all of which the PRC disdains.

While many in Taipei conceded that Taiwan’s situation parallels that of Ukraine’s in some ways, they did not feel the situation was entirely analogous. Even as Putin amassed troops and materiel along Ukraine’s border in early 2022, the consensus in Kyiv was that Russia would not invade, and that the moves amounted to an empty threat.

By contrast, those in Taipei point to the fact that any serious effort to mount a military takeover of Taiwan would require preparation up to at least a year in advance. While China has increased its provocations in the South China Sea, they seem primarily intended to project a sense of strength and looming menace, amounting to inexpensive information warfare operations. But there is no sign that a major military operation is forthcoming anytime soon. However, there was at least some sense that if Ukraine did succumb to Putin’s invasion, Xi and the CCP may accelerate efforts to absorb Taiwan."

https://washingtonspectator.org/reality-in-taiwan-differs-from-perception-in-dc/

24. "Lessons Learned

— If you’re in regulated market, often the game is rigged by incumbents

Understand Rent Seeking and Regulatory Capture

You need a lobbying/government relations strategy from day one

— Choose VCs who understand how to play the game not those who hope it stays away

— The CEO needs to get out of the building to understand the regulatory ecosystem

CEO and board need to be in sync about the learning and strategy

— Hire initial lobbyists (but learn from them, not just outsource to them)

As the company gets larger staff an internal public affairs group to manage the lobbying effort

— If you figure out the regulatory game, it can be your defensible moat"

https://medium.com/@sgblank/even-the-smartest-vcs-sometimes-get-it-wrong-bill-gurley-and-regulated-markets-0e07b57c9143

25. "Note: You can have the perfect plan and all the skill in the world and still fail. Sometimes, life is just bullshit. You have to be able to take that data, recalibrate and attack again. Don’t overextend yourself so that the inevitable hits that you do take are not catastrophic."

https://www.bowtiedhitman.com/p/on-planning

26. "Once entrepreneurs achieve product-market fit and have the start of a repeatable business model, they should undertake the 10X exercise. Thinking through what the business would look like at 10 times the scale, 10 times the revenue, and 10 times the customers is crucial. Going through this exercise will help foresee some of the challenges, start conversations on potentially challenging elements of the business, and overall help the entrepreneur orient more towards a long-term horizon."

https://davidcummings.org/2023/11/11/the-10x-exercise-for-entrepreneurs/

27. "So much of the world has become short-sighted, focused on profit margins and earnings in the next quarter, maybe two (what are you, Warren Buffett?) Personally, we're centered around immediate satisfaction, status, and dopamine. We've built our stories, our values, our heroes, and our ambitions to be centered around things that, very often, will not last.

Original thinking comes from casting off the myopic mythologies that are institutions have increasingly become built on and, instead, ideating new institutions that should get built up. What are the organizations that you want organizing the people, places, and things around us? And then do what you can with what time, talents, and energy you have, to bring those institutions to bear.

We need new stories that will drive us, and that will outlast us."

https://investing1012dot0.substack.com/p/the-bubble-brains-of-venture-capital

28. "While western democracies were involved in these long duration but low intensity conflicts, emerging competitors such as China and Russia became richer developed new modes of competing with the West. These new approaches broadened the conception of national security and embraced all elements of national power in strategic competition.

Their new strategies were designed to play out over longer periods of time than Western nations and governments might otherwise prefer. They developed forms of competition that exploited western predilections for short war, through political warfare, lawfare and unrestricted warfare.

Western nations had begun the slow process of strategic adaptation required to address these Russian and Chinese strategies in the wake of Iraq and Afghanistan when the war in Ukraine forced a reappraisal of modern war. It saw the return of high intensity and large-scale war, as well as long duration conflicts. This was a strategic surprise for Western politicians whose approach to strategic risk management over the previous decades had assumed away the need for the capacity for large scale mobilization of people and industrial capacity.

Countries like China and Russia were now exploiting time – especially Western impatience - in the development of their strategic concepts for competing against the United States and other democracies."

https://mickryan.substack.com/p/the-clock-is-always-ticking

29. "I see so many entrepreneurs falling into the trap of hyper complacency, from investors telling them what their ego wants to hear, promising the world to them, and making them shiny introductions that are just too soon or, down the line, worthless. 

Search for tough love from your investors, not blindless passion. Expect from them brutal honesty with rational compassion, not blindless support. Ask for real perspective, not ordinary thinking. Look for what’s in-depth, not just at the surface."

https://2lr.substack.com/p/hyper-complacent

30. This seems like a nightmare. Newsom is awful. So is Xi btw.

"In advance of Xi’s visit, Newsom just held up a hand and rolled up SF’s seemingly permanent homeless encampments. He spent the political capital to do this, overriding all the Democrats paid by the city to feed drugs to addicts. Of course, Newsom could have done this at any time2 to the homeless industrial complex, but why now? Because their local business model is temporarily less important than his global power model: the question of how to hold onto power for his Party when his country is in decline.

If Newsom pulls it off, we may soon see rapprochement between the farthest culturally left party in the world (the ultra-woke American Democrats) and the farthest culturally right party in the world (the ultra-nationalist Chinese Communists). That is, after the last few years of kicking and screaming, the declining Democrats may actually settle for a power-sharing agreement with the Communists to become their allies — and perhaps eventually their clients. At least, that’s certainly what Chinese state-run media seems to think of Newsom’s visit!"

https://balajis.com/p/only-newsom-can-go-to-china

31. "The Dollar is the world reserve currency. This meant it would be used in international trade, as central bank forex reserves, to settle financial transactions, and to borrow and lend dollar loans offshore (Eurodollar). However, the rest of the world lacked a crucial factor- the ability to generate dollars. 

The current consensus among macroeconomists is the TINA doctrine- There Is No Alternative. Russia is a commodity exporter (current account surplus), which would need to be switched into deficits to be a reserve currency. China has a closed capital account. India does not have a deep enough bond market. South Africa is politically unstable. None of the above have good enough rule of law.

As Brent Johnson points out, the U.S. has deep and liquid bond markets, rule of law, a sophisticated financial and monetary system, and a gargantuan military to enforce the dollar system- basically everything one could want. This is the system we are stuck in." 

https://dollarendgame.substack.com/p/bitcoin-solves-triffins-dilemma

32. "Eiseman is the person to ask. She’s directed the institute since 1985. She’s been called the international guru of color. Her colleagues have called her “Ms. Color in America.” 

Slight and bespectacled, with a bob that rivals Anna Wintour’s, Eiseman says picking a favorite color is like picking a favorite child: She can’t. 

But she does have to choose. Once a year, she’s tasked with summing up the entire world, and all its complexities, in a single color. 

Every year, she oversees the brand’s wildly successful Color of the Year campaign, unveiled in early December. She turns one color into a celebrity, and watches as consumers around the world pull out their wallets for the results.

Back in 1994, trend forecaster and writer James Woudhuysen took a big swing. “Whoever controls color, controls the world,” he wrote in Marketing magazine. That was before the era of internet dominance, but you get the idea." 

https://thehustle.co/who-chooses-the-worlds-color-of-the-year/

33. The story of cultish and ultra-expensive cool grocery store Erewhon. Worth visiting.

https://www.thecut.com/article/erewhon-smoothie-boston-los-angeles-history.html

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Marvin Liao Marvin Liao

Wear Your Scars with Pride: Experience is Everything

It’s weird to be a relatively old guy in Silicon Valley. A place that is driven by youthful ideas and youthful ambition and energy. A place driven by fast and tremendous change. And it’s definitely age-ist. 

But there are benefits of being the older dude who has been through the cycles. The crazy booms and the painful busts. And having survived them too. History is a great tool to understand, cope and dare I say it, even thrive. 

I admit there are days I wish I was 25 years old again. To have the energy and bright years ahead of me. And to have the time to compete against all the young brilliant smart kids I meet here. A sense of envy and regret from not knowing what I know now earlier and not taking action earlier. 

But I’m eventually able to shake it off. I realize we all have our own paths to take. Entrepreneurship was just not a career path when I was growing up. I grew up in an academic household and was just not aware, nor did I have the right mental frame to do this when I started off. Which is why I am glad I left Canada. It got me into the right circles to find my tribe and path.  

I’ve done all the crap I was supposed to do coming the way up. I’ve worked with awful people and learned to tolerate the indignity. I’ve done the stupid projects for money. But most importantly, I’ve learned tremendous lessons all along the way. Net net: I grew & still strive to grow even more. 

Now because of my convoluted career and journey, I feel like I’ve earned my way to where I am. A life that I’ve wanted for a long time. Travel, books, building, investing and advising & working with interesting, ambitious and Intelligent people I respect. And to be a role model worthy of learning from in a life of generosity and service to others. 

Jason Momoa said it best recently in an interview in Men’s Health magazine a few months back.

“I’m doing everything that I want to do, everything that I’m designed to do. And you’ve got to do that. I want my children to know that and do that. I worked for a very long time when they were young doing shit I didn’t want to do to put food on the table.

And now? You should only work with the people you wanna work with. You should create with the people you wanna create with. And if you’re not, then you got one shot in this life—you gotta get the fuck out. Whatever situation you’re in, you gotta find your path, you know?”

I’ve lived a great adventure all around the world. Finding my fortune and enjoying the ride along the way (most of the time :)) I pinch myself everyday. I wish this for you all as well. 

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Marvin Liao Marvin Liao

Be an Askhole: Curiosity is King

For someone who prides himself on being intelligent, I tend to be dumb and talk too much. I think I’m smart and interesting but that’s probably my arrogance and ego talking. 

They say you have two ears and one mouth. Use them in the same ratio. I try to remember and remind myself of this all the time. 

Ideas happen when you keep your door open. Talking too much is keeping your door closed. 

Yes, of course, do travel, read a lot and explore new ideas. But the way to fine tune these ideas is just to talk to everyone and anyone. Some of my best conversations were not intentional and very accidental. And they help you sharpen your thoughts as you get reactions and feedback to what you say. In fact writing online and Twitter are great ways to do this. If someone disagrees you hear very quickly. 


So a good rule in life: Shut your mouth and ask good questions. This is how you learn & properly fulfill your curiosity. And as Dale Carnegie once said: “If you want to be interesting, be interested”

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Marvin Liao Marvin Liao

Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads November 19th, 2023

“Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak; courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.” —Winston Churchill 

  1. "We all hear it. All the time. “Make onboarding simpler! Get people into your product as fast as possible! Make it free! You'll figure out how to monetize later!”. It makes sense. And it obviously works for some. It just didn’t work for us.

We believe that making people invest time, commit to a trial, and put skin in the game will help you build a more engaged user base. This friction weeds out the people who aren’t serious and creates a sense of urgency. It also forces you to focus on the customers and users that really matter."

https://wraptext.equals.com/the-fallacy-of-freemium-in-saas/

2. "You may have heard Noam Wasserman’s “Rich or King” choice: Company founders are either in it for the money (“Rich”) or in it to build a lifestyle and personal identity (“King”). FogCreek and 37signals are built to be “King;” all venture-funded companies are built to be “Rich.”

Noam says that successful founders make the “Rich or King” decision up front, and that though it doesn’t matter which path you take, you must be consistent in your actions. You can’t mix “be king” tactics with “get rich” end goals.

In short, although the goal was “Rich,” I achieved it by behaving like the goal was “King.” I don’t know why people find this contradictory; after all, acting like “King” means building a long-term, sustainable business, and that’s exactly the kind of business that gets acquired."

https://longform.asmartbear.com/rich-vs-king-sold-company

3. "In other words, there are basically four Global Souths. I think I’ll give them names:

The mostly-developed countries: Industrialized countries that are on the cusp of developed status, and are only thought of as “developing” for historical or political reasons. These include Turkey, Malaysia, and arguably China, Thailand and Mexico.

The industrializing countries: Rapidly industrializing countries that are still poor or middle-income but are growing fast. There include India, Bangladesh, Vietnam, the Dominican Republic, and potentially the Philippines and Indonesia. 

The resource exporters: Upper-middle-income countries that specialize in resource extraction. These include Brazil, Colombia, South Africa, Iran, Botswana, Namibia, Kazakhstan, and so on.

The poor countries: These countries mostly export natural resources but either don’t have enough of them to afford decent standards of living, or are plagued by war and/or poor governance. These include countries like Nigeria, Ethiopia, Afghanistan, Somalia, Pakistan, Sudan, and so on. 

Every time a country moves from the “industrializing” category to the “mostly-developed” category, the old dividing lines between Global South and Global North become a bit less relevant."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/does-the-notion-of-a-global-south

4. "Carta, an otherwise boring company solving a mundane-if-important problem, managed to get itself in the news this past week for all the wrong reasons. The fiasco was the result of CEO Henry Ward writing a post on recent negative pressthat was presumably intended to inoculate his audience, but instead backfired spectacularly. "

https://kellblog.com/2023/10/28/four-lessons-from-the-carta-communications-train-wreck/

5. “It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy,” she says. “It has a cumulative, rich-get-richer effect, if you’ve managed it successfully.” Sales come and go, but a NYT bestseller bio line is forever."

https://thehustle.co/the-murky-math-of-the-new-york-times-bestsellers-list/

6. Long been a fan of global investor Jim Rogers.

Make sure you have different options in the world, especially now as we move from a unipolar world to a multipolar world.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1iZz1sSs92k

7. "It’s funny: five years ago, I had an interesting-sounding job that paid very well, a brand new charcoal gray Jeep Grand Cherokee Trailhawk, and an abundance of predictability. There was nothing that resembled any kind of tangible crisis, no looming personal apocalypse. Money certainly wasn’t an issue.

I also had no control over my existence. No influence over the direction of my life. No ability to actualize what I really wanted. I spent much of that period thinking about how to kill myself.

Today, all I have is fear, uncertainty, and the threat of insolvency. This has objectively been one of the most challenging experiences of my life. But in many ways my existence has felt easier, or at least more optimistic, than five years ago. How could that be?

The answer is that I’m living a life that is mine.

My operating philosophy over the past few years has been that agency and self-sovereignty are the most important qualities we can cultivate in ourselves. My belief has been that when we develop a deep, genuine understanding of who we are and what we want and then learn to give ourselves permission to pursue that path, we show up as the best version of ourselves in the world and can fully engage with it. This imbues our relationships, our work, and our existence with a fundamental depth and meaning because we are acting from a place of authenticity. 

But it’s easy to justify a belief system when things are going well. I wrote a lot about the transformative power of these ideas when the business was growing and life was relatively easy. Now that I’m confronted with a crisis, it’s a perfect time to ask: does my belief system hold up?

Well, I’m staring down the barrel of bankruptcy with no idea what comes next, and I have a better quality of life than I did when my bank account and 401(k) had big numbers with lots of zeros after them. So I’d say that’s a yes.

Living on my own terms has fundamentally transformed the texture of my existence. The fact that these are problems I’ve chosen, that they are part of what comes with the path I’ve consciously created, makes them worth the cost a hundred times over. It gives them an entirely different flavor. 

Instead of being forced to deal with the challenges of circumstances that were decided for me, I’m grappling with adversity in an arena I’ve built. That’s the kind of life worth living: one in which I control the terms of my engagement with the world, regardless of what happens."

https://newsletter.pathlesspath.com/p/fixing-in-public-guest-post-by-alex

8. This is sad. Despite all the glamor and riches, we usually don't know what other people are dealing with in their life.

https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-67253920

9. "Even though we have a pervasive tendency to hold self-serving views about ourselves, we believe our social lives are more impoverished than others. 

Most of us think our “social CV” is worse than average.

Why is this?

Our standards are biased by extremely visible and prominent people. Even among our social circle, the people we pay most attention to are the popular ones. They set a benchmark in our minds for what other people are up to.

But the paper also found that people do in fact desire a richer social life. They wished they attended more parties, had more friends, dined out more frequently, had a larger social network, and communicated more often with their families.

Furthermore, when people believed that their social lives were more impoverished than others, they reported lower levels of life satisfaction.

Having a more realistic view of the lives of others can alleviate negative feelings brought on by comparing ourselves to the most extraverted and visible people we know."

https://www.robkhenderson.com/p/the-friendship-paradox-and-the-illusion

10. "Creators and advertisers are constantly in need of image content, and supply has grown to meet that demand; the volume of image content has steadily climbed for more than a decade. The number of photos shared over social media has tripled since 2013, with 14.1 billion images shared per day across WhatsApp, Snapchat, Facebook, and Instagram as of October 2023. Even on video-first platforms like YouTube and TikTok, creators and advertisers rely on thumbnail images to get users to click on the video.

Not everyone can take breathtaking photos or draw photorealistic art, but anyone can type an idea for an image that AI can then generate. In its early days, this ability quickly attracted the interest of social media users; for example, Hank Green’“cat”thread on Twitter attracted over 100K likes. Outside of social media, “AI art generator” received an average of 864K searches per month globally from August 2022 to August 2023, while “stock photo” only achieved an average of 94K searches per month globally in the same period. Generative image AI is already being used to quickly produce concept art, make movie trailers, and even win art competitions.

Midjourney describes itself as an “independent research lab” known for producing a generative AI program that creates images based on text prompts. As the demand for online imagery continues to increase, Midjourney could offer a cheaper and more customized alternative to stock photography and reduce time spent on the brainstorming phase for contractors, game designers, and other artists alike."

https://investing1012dot0.substack.com/p/oops-i-did-it-again

11. "Israel now has been forced to look beyond deterrence. It has now concluded that it is dealing with an entity that has never truly been deterred and can’t be deterred in the future. Wilder elements in Israel may fantasise about pushing all the Gazans out of the territory but that is not a serious option. This where the other flaw in Israel’s past deterrence strategy becomes painfully evident. It has not been accompanied by a more positive political strategy.

The only long-term vision Israel offers is a Gaza without Hamas. The chaos and instability that would result if Gaza was turned into an ungovernable space without anyone in charge would serve nobody’s interests. A way will have to be found to fill the space.

The way that Israel has defined its objectives, success for Hamas simply requires surviving in a commanding position in Gaza. Even if is forced to evacuate its positions, Hamas will not disappear. It represents a strong political tradition in the Arab world and whatever happens to it over the coming weeks it will have the capacity to regenerate, and return to power if there is no alternative government in place."

https://samf.substack.com/p/israel-beyond-deterrence

12. "At the G20 Summit, President Biden, along with the leaders of India and Middle East and European nations, unveiled the India-Middle East-Europe Corridor: a project to link Europe and South Asia more closely together via the Middle East. As currently envisaged, IMEC would compromise of two corridors: an eastern one that connects India to the Gulf through sea lanes and northern one that connects Saudi Arabia to Europe through Jordan and Israel.

Once finished, IMEC would establish an efficient transit network that supplements existing transport routes for trade among participating states

Age-old overland and maritime routes around the Eurasian rimland have been and will continue to be reconceptualized. West Asia—the convergence of the Middle East and South Asia—is now being rebuilt as a critical geopolitical and geoeconomics space between Europe and the Indo-Pacific.

America is using its still-dominant global position to steer and influence the process of economic and geopolitical integration among the littoral states of the Eurasian supercontinent, in line with America’s interests. Equally important, it is a shared interest of the IMEC nations to build an integrated economic ecosystem around the Eurasian rimland that, by virtue of its existence, could contest China’s economic dominance in Eurasia.

For domestic social and political reasons, however, the United States can no longer afford to give concessions that many political leaders and voters believe hurt its heartland and middle class as part of its statecraft. In any case, America’s markets are already relatively open to many of its trade partners. IMEC aligns with the Biden administration's "Foreign Policy for the Middle Class," with Washington as a key driver, without resorting to market access as a bargaining chip for geopolitical and geoeconomic alignment."

https://www.liberalpatriot.com/p/beyond-market-access

13. Excellent framework for looking at and building AI companies.

"As a vertical, point solution, you’ve now delivered successful unbundling. 

Most 'disruption' of the status quo happens through unbundling. But most venture returns are realized through rebundling.

Fintechs specializing in one activity unbundle banks, Healthtech firms specializing in one aspect unbundle healthcare providers, and specialized energy startups unbundle utilities.

Yet, there is no sustainable value capture in unbundling. Unbundling unseats incumbents but doesn't create scalable and defensible value pools.

That is achieved through rebundling. Rebundling involves bundling multiple unbundled capabilities into a cohesive customer-centric offering. 

Most important, the successful ‘rebundlers’ establish a hub position and gain primacy of user relationship.

Venture capital chases unbundling because unbundlers hold the promise of rebundling and capturing value. Yet, most venture money is lost because a tiny handful rebundle.

Square, Plaid, Stripe are a few of the unbundling fintechs that successfully rebundled and dominated one or more horizontal layers in the value chain. Most others fell by the wayside.

The winners in Gen AI will likewise need a path to successful rebundling."

https://platforms.substack.com/p/how-to-win-at-generative-ai

14. One of the best global macro discussions I've listened to for a while.

I don't agree with Arthur Hayes on many things but there are lots of interesting observations here.

Must listen to prepare for the big changes coming in the world geopolitically and economically.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-de-ZIA5ouo

15. Hmmm......this is a bit frightening yet it's happening. There is a matrix it seems.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HcfEZnG2zYo

16. "Data businesses are fiercely competitive, both with other data aggregators, but also with the other players in the value chain (such as the data sources), so moats are foundational to building a large data business. In fact, many of the best data businesses employ multiple of these moats and have several layers of defensibility.

In the decade ahead, there will be dozens more $1+ billion data businesses created, and thousands more created that won’t hit that level of success. The ones that succeed won’t just be the companies with the most comprehensive data or the most curation, but they’ll also require thoughtful strategies designed around strong network effects."

https://medium.com/@travismay/the-six-moats-of-data-businesses-01a69638c8f8

17. Solid interview on B2B enterprise sales for startups.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plH9quZ1Jug&t=2791s

18. "In sum, Asia wants and needs the U.S. to protect it. It needs U.S. military power and economic engagement, not to crush China, but to preserve the status quo that has worked so well. Developed Asian countries want to keep being rich and free, and developing Asian countries want to keep getting rich on their own, and to do this they need the U.S. to deter Xi Jinping from trying to upend the modern world’s greatest success story.

The Middle East is in basically the exact opposite situation.

The U.S. should therefore continue to maintain as light a presence in the Middle East as possible. This doesn’t mean we should withdraw completely. There are extreme cases where judicious, targeted applications of American power can prevent some of the catastrophes that regularly plague the region — protecting the Syrian Kurds from genocide, restraining Israel’s brutality toward the Palestinians, or helping Israel protect itself from wholesale destruction by Iran and its proxies.

But these should always be done with a minimum of force and money and attention, and always with an eye toward withdrawing again. 

In Asia, meanwhile, the U.S. should be beefing up both our defensive power and our engagement with other countries. We need to accelerate the supply of defensive weapons to Taiwan, Japan, Vietnam, India, and the Philippines, and to keep building and strengthening and expanding multilateral organizations like the Quad.

We need to re-engage economically by re-joining the modified TPP, and by creating a dense network of other economic agreements in Asia. And in general, we just need to pay a lot of attention to the region, making sure our allies and quasi-allies and potential allies know we’re there for the long haul, and won’t suddenly withdraw to go plunge into some foolish conflict in the Middle East."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/asia-is-much-more-important-to-us

19. "I’ve done a lot of cost cutting over the course of my career so I thought I’d share one key rule that sometimes gets overlooked when you’re in the thick of this process. Here’s the rule: no matter what you do, no matter how deep the cuts have to be, keep the company a great place to work for those who still work there (aka, the survivors)."

https://kellblog.com/2023/11/02/cut-costs-the-smart-way/

20. "Napkin-math suggests quotas should increase about 20%."

https://tomtunguz.com/how-much-should-quotas-increase-next-year/

21. "And what have Iran, Russia and Hamas in common? And come to think of it, China and North Korea? Look at Armita Geravand. Consider the Russian atrocities committed in Ukraine. And yes, look at how members of Israel’s parliament felt after a private showing of the Hamas GoPro-captured pogrom.

All these nations are united in a total and utter disregard for humanity, even their own people are routinely thrown under the bus. It is a level of institutionalized violence and abuse the likes of which we thought we would never see again. That is the key commonality and that is what we are up against."

https://pieterdorsman.substack.com/p/connecting-the-dots

22. "A founder who has a handful of venture-backed friends—successful ones who have raised multiple rounds of capital and who have grown their companies through different stages—has a huge advantage over one that doesn’t. This group of close connections can not only introduce them to capital but can give strong referrals based on years of shared history. It also provides a built-in set of advisors that can be called upon along the way.

You can tell when a founder has a goto set of people in their network to ask all the dumb, remedial questions about hiring, fundraising, deal doing, PR, etc."

https://www.thisisgoingtobebig.com/blog/2023/11/1/the-advantage-of-having-venture-backed-friends

23. "The CCP has control over the most powerful, yet elegant, weapon in the history of propaganda, and the default position is they (i.e., the CCP) are not using it? I have stated this view before. China cannot beat us kinetically or economically, but it can beat us by tearing us apart from the inside. TikTok, in my view, has the potential effect of several carrier strike forces.

A 21st century Trojan Horse that also generates $100 billion in annual revenue. I was at the White House this week for an AI Summit. Government officials are not allowed to be on TikTok for security reasons. This comes at a cost, as I believe they’d be more alarmed at the skew of information."

https://www.profgalloway.com/short-form-war/

24. "There are no adults in the room

This can be applied to any industry but especially in VC. There is no set formula to be successful in VC, and no matter how much it may seem a partner can predict the next big winner in your portfolio, know that they have made hundreds if not thousands of judgement calls just like that which have not paid off. Everyone is human and putting people on pedestals because of their previous experience will only make learning from them harder."

https://sturgeoncapital.substack.com/p/life-as-a-sturgeon-intern-part-i

25. "There is no substitute — none — for solving real customer problems. No smoke and mirrors, no massive round, no PR and no hype will save you if you’re not solving a top-of-mind problem for your customers. It could be 10 customers or 10,000. But if you ask your customers if you solve their #1 or #2 problem, their answer needs to be “Yes”."

https://medium.com/entrepreneur-s-handbook/i-was-supposed-to-be-a-millionaire-at-25-instead-i-went-bankrupt-ef525370e353

26. This was a super fun interview I did while in Prague at the Engaged Investments Conference.

https://open.spotify.com/episode/44lXpTaB1Ye9GdQpTrp3Ns?fbclid=IwAR15ogF608UpR8Goco0v1xbSR8rjpSfr8Il_Y--Iuv6rbdEAuwU3mD1nW24

27. "With Israel and Palestine we’re now facing a new Current Thing — a situation where people have to take sides — but this time it’s much more complicated. Unlike previous moral movements, it’s unclear what the right Current Thing is.

Arnold Kling’s theory of politics helps explain what’s happening here: Liberals care about supporting the oppressed vs the oppressor, whereas conservatives care about supporting civilization vs barbarism.

So the left automatically supports what they see as the oppressed class (in this case, mostly Palestine), and the right automatically supports what they see as the more civilized group (in this case, mostly Israel).

And so the fact that the right supports it for bad reasons could drive people on the left to not support it. The same way Trump advocating for coming out of COVID lockdown caused the left to go bananas for endless lockdowns and masks etc."

https://eriktorenberg.substack.com/p/a-schism-in-the-current-thing

28. "While the Americans and the Europeans have taken the initial steps to increase production, it is unlikely that Western defence production, and Ukraine’s indigenous production, will fully meet the needs of any 2024 offensives by Ukraine. Ukraine needs around 1.5 million rounds of ammunition annually. Europe can produce around 300,000 rounds per year and the Americans are building towards a total production of 1.2 million rounds per year.

But at least some of this will be required to backfill stocks that have already been sent to Ukraine. And as the concurrent wars in Israel and Ukraine demonstrate, the US defence industrial base – and that of its allies – are not adequately prepared to support these wars and build up stocks to deter a war with China.

At the same time, Russia increased its defence budget and spent the past year increasing defence production. It is also sourcing defence materiel from the huge stocks of the North Koreans. While Ukrainian munition stocks may last for several more months, the combination of insufficient Western production, dwindling on-hand stocks in the militaries of Europe and the United States, and the increased supply to Russia means that Russia may have an advantage in munitions by the middle of 2024.

None of these headwinds portends disaster ahead for Ukraine, however. It is a nation that has demonstrated widespread individual heroism, societal resilience and a broad spirit of innovation. The political, strategic, and industrial challenges are solvable. But they will demand more attention from Ukrainian strategists – and more assistance from the West – to ensure that in 2024 they do not collectively and with other surprises in war overwhelm a nation that is fighting for its very existence."

https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/ukraine-2024-headwinds

29. "It’s best to start with the subjective experience, because there is no doubt when you have it. (If you’re not sure whether you have Product/Market Fit, you don’t.)

It is a momentum change from “push” to “pull”—a change from fighting for each customer, one at a time, to a flood of signups that you can’t even explain. It’s a change from “how do we get more customers” to “how do we handle the influx of demand?”

It’s working. Something clicked, like a final puzzle piece snapping into place, a “fit,” and suddenly the floodgates are open."

https://longform.asmartbear.com/product-market-fit

30. "Anyway, I don’t want to claim that “demography is destiny” here, and it’s all too easy to look at individual countries and tell just-so stories about how aging and fertility might have affected their conflicts. And even if an older population and fewer children do make war less likely, there are still a handful of war-torn countries — Afghanistan, Yemen, Iraq, Palestine, and Syria — that are still young and still have fairly robust fertility. 

But it’s hard not to look at these graphs and feel that something big is changing. The old Middle East, with massive crowds of angry young people thronging the streets, ready to explode into nationalist or sectarian or revolutionary violence, is steadily disappearing, being replaced by a more sedate, aging society. Given the horrific outcomes of the last few decades, it’s hard not to see that as a good thing."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/the-middle-east-is-getting-older

31. This looks really good. Reminds me that I need to go back to Japan soon!

Man I LOVE that place.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAN5uspO_hk

32. Lots to learn from the legendary Sequoia Capital.

Last couple years have not been great but they are playing the long game.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jv4cwqO87eI&t=160s

33. "They learned that nothing governed by natural laws stays the same - but every spring, the cycle would repeat. The leaves always returned after the winter. They watched the rivers. They learned that the salmon would arrive, depart, and come back again. 

They learned that our world is governed by cycles. 

We say that the most undervalued asset on Wall Street is a history book. I think that same principle extends to government and culture."

https://jaymartin.substack.com/p/merry-go-round-and-round

34. Long overdue. Taiwan needs to arm up and train up fast.

"The $80m is not a loan. It comes from American taxpayers. For the first time in more than 40 years, America is using its own money to send weapons to a place it officially doesn't recognise. This is happening under a programme called foreign military finance (FMF). 

Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine last year, FMF has been used to send around $4bn of military aid to Kyiv. 

It has been used to send billions more to Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel and Egypt and so on. But until now it has only ever been given to countries or organisations recognised by the United Nations. Taiwan is not." 

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-67282107

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It’s A Great Time to Be Alive: Opportunity is Everywhere

It’s so easy to be gloomy about the state of the world these days. War in Europe and the Middle East, economic recession, deglobalization, job loss, a breakdown of law and order. It’s a scary time. 

But there I saw this amazingly illustrative series of tweets by @leadspacer:

“There have never been more opportunities to live the life you want if you are clever enough.

Most of the things we are told we should be concerned about don’t affect us.

With all of the fragmentation taking place in the world right now, it's an opportunity for adventurous risk takers to make huge strides.”

“In great chaos lies enormous opportunity.”

This is all spot on. With everything changing, there will be massive new problems and consequently big opportunities to fix and solve this. It’s an amazing time to be a builder. You can leverage all the amazing technologies and marketing tools that are coming out. Just look at the software tools or ChatGPT or even AutoGPT.

Additionally, there is so much knowledge and expertise that you can access through online classes, podcasts or even just on Youtube alone. You can learn from the best and have it all at your fingertips via your PC or mobile phone. 

So don’t be too worried by the scaremongering media headlines. It is scary and bad things are happening. But also remember that you have agency and control of your mindset. You have an opportunity to make things better around you, by providing the services and products that are needed.

 

If you provide true value to others in the world and approach life as being in service to others, you will be rewarded monetarily and spiritually. That is one thing that has not changed and will never change in the world. 

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Maximum Bullish: Travels to Ukraine

After a long hiatus due to the barbarian Russian invasion in 2022, I finally made it back in September 2023 for the excellent Lviv IT Arena tech conference. The event for tech startups in all of UKraine. It was excellent and full of positive energy and optimism. 

I’ve been coming to UKraine since 2007 and I’ve witnessed an amazing transformation of the country over the last almost 20 years. And I can tell you I’m even more bullish on this country and the people than I ever have been. I love this country. 

The number and high quality  of excellent  tech people has been a badly kept secret for the last decade in tech circles, providing the tech back end for great companies like Ring, now part of Amazon, Grammarly. Also, talk about home grown giants like Genesis, Readdle and McPaw of CleanmyMac fame, this was a tech startup center in the making. The trajectory was incredible especially since 2015 when I came back after Maidan in 2013. 

Unfortunately the war has massively disrupted this and caused mayhem. But like the resilient people that they are, Ukrainians are using their intelligence and creativity to keep building. Founders in Silicon Valley have no idea of the challenges these founders face and overcome every day. 

Random missile attacks against civilian targets, having to work underground in bomb shelters, having team members called up or volunteering for military service on the front line to defend their country against a vicious enemy. An enemy determined to stamp out their way of life and culture. Yet they keep going without complaint. 

I admire them so much and I feel so guilty that I can’t do more than I do now. That I did not sign up for the Ukrainian Foreign Legion to kill Russian invaders or do something beyond donations and charity. 

Remember, Russia invaded Ukraine. This is the most black and white, good versus evil situation since world war 2. There is no gray here. 

And my guilt also bleeds into massive hate for pro Putin supporters or those who try to undermine support for Ukraine. The hard right GOP, Vivek Ramaswamey, David Sacks, Scott Ritter, Douglas Macgregor, Tucker Carlson are absolutely traitors to America & the West as well as being useful Idiots to Russia. You are either part of the solution or you are part of the problem. History will judge them all very severely. May these people burn in hell. 

But I say this now, when this war is over, I cannot wait to move over and help grow this tech ecosystem and rebuild this country to something amazing. The actual trajectory and destination that it was on before Putin engaged in this awful war. The amount of brilliant people who left the country will come back with their networks and knowledge. The middle class professionals who volunteered and fought off the barbarian Russians will not tolerate going back to a corrupt oligarchic system. And the world will be admiring and supportive as they rebuild Ukrainian infrastructure and integrate them into the EU. 

I’m obviously biased and apologize that this has turned into a personal rant but I am massively and maximum bullish on this country. My radar tends to be pretty good on this stuff, especially emerging companies and emerging countries. So support and watch Ukraine. Slava Ukraini! 

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Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads November 12th, 2023

"It is not the strength of the body that counts, but the strength of the spirit." ― J.R.R. Tolkien

  1. "Everyone thinks they are being discriminated against and that the world is “unfair” to them.

Instead of wasting your time complaining about reality, just recognize reality and play accordingly.

At the end of the day, the buyer determines the value, not the seller.

If you are selling a house, you cannot complain that “people should not care about the broken walls and leaky roof”. The buyer decides what he cares about in the house he buys.

In life, you are selling yourself and you have to go work on what the buyers consider valuable. It’s that simple."

https://lifemathmoney.com/men-are-success-objects-and-women-are-sex-objects/

2. "Instead of underwriting to the idea that some other investor will understand these companies and mark them up, we find ourselves underwriting increasingly to at least one of two other things: (1) breakeven and/or (2) our own convictions. Either a company has a path to get to sustainable growth on its own or it has the ability to achieve milestones such that we ourselves will be able to continue to support them in their growth path — with or without other investors.

Unlike Sam, however, we are not completely convinced that the venture factory is completely shut down. We do continue to occasionally find a company where we think the next step is likely a traditional Series A. It’s just that we increasingly find ourselves backing companies that are building optionality around other pathways to success.

I want to be crystal clear: we remain convinced that now is the best time in recent memory to build a large multi-billion dollar business from the seed stage. That is why we are here — and we continue to see companies that meet that bar. What has changed is not the scale of potential outcomes. What has changed is the way the pathway from seed to huge exit might look. The whole entrepreneurial journey will be far more artisanal and less factory-like."

https://medium.com/angularventures/the-end-of-entrepreneurship-by-autopilot-de4a068b5d0f

3. "Understanding the average net worth by age and how it changes is more than just a financial exercise—it’s also a way to gauge your financial health in the context of your peer group. While the average net worth figures shown above can be skewed by outliers, looking at the distribution of outcomes—and particularly the median—can offer a more relatable snapshot.

Regardless of whether you are at the 25th percentile or the 90th percentile of the wealth spectrum, it’s crucial to remember that these are just benchmarks. Your financial journey is yours alone and will be influenced by a variety of factors such as career choice, inheritance, and luck."

https://ofdollarsanddata.com/average-net-worth-by-age/

4. Xi has squandered China's potential. Well, kind of like the political class in USA but much worse.

"In less than five years, the Party has hobbled industries that once supplied tax revenue, jobs, inspiration, and global stature. For a generation, the Party found ways to put practicality ahead of ideology. “It doesn’t matter if the cat is black or white,” Deng said, “as long as it catches mice.” In the Xi era, that principle has become, in effect: It doesn’t matter if the cat catches mice, as long as it’s red.

For all of China’s ambitions to greatness, it faces a consuming struggle to restore the trust and vigor of its own people. The stagnation could pass, as it did for America in the nineteen-eighties, or it could deepen, as it did for the Soviet Union during the same years."

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/10/30/chinas-age-of-malaise

5. "There is no chance of a rate cut any time soon. As long as unemployment is below 5% or so, there is absolutely no shot of rates being cut. Also. If you look at the commentary he says “over the coming quarters” this suggests the fed is planning to keep rates elevated or even raise them if they don’t get the results they want.

All year we’ve basically said the same for the majority: 1) short term t-bills for your future down-payment and 2) crypto on the other side BTC/ETH ($25Kish and $1,600ish as proxies)."

https://bowtiedbull.io/p/end-of-the-long-cycle-print-or-dont

6. I don't agree with this guys views on Ukraine or his generally anti-Pax Americana view. BUT he has a very good view on global macro.

"And the end game, when yields get too high, is for the Fed to end all pretence that the US Treasury market is a free market. Rather, it will become what it truly is: a Potemkin village where the Fed fixes the level of interest at politically expedient levels. Once everyone realises the game we are playing, the Bitcoin and crypto bull market will be in full swing.

This is the trigger, and it’s time to start rotating out of short-term US Treasury bills and into crypto. The first stop is always Bitcoin, then Ether, and finally my beloved shitcoins. I’ll start small in case I’m wrong, but you can’t sit on the sidelines forever waiting for the perfect setup. The perfect setup is usually staring you right in the face, and you are just too preoccupied with the past to notice."

https://cryptohayes.substack.com/p/the-periphery

7. "We won the first Cold War. And 2022 was a good year for the U.S. and its allies — we set Russia on the back foot in Ukraine, while China’s economy was weakened by Xi Jinping’s mistakes and by the contradictions in its system. But the authoritarian powers — or the continental powers, or the New Axis, or whatever you want to call them — are not out of the fight.

The expansion of proxy conflict to the Middle East, a region where the U.S. lacks strong dedicated allies and moral authority, is bad news, because it threatens to bog American resources and attention down in a conflict far away from the all-important theater of Taiwan and East Asia.

So I think the framework of Cold War 2 isn’t just a useful way to make sense of the blizzard of news right now — it’s a reason for alarm, and for getting serious about addressing the external threats. This is not a situation in which our usual political divides and ideological differences should take precedence."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/a-lot-of-what-you-see-in-the-news

8. "If you haven’t fundraised before or your last fundraising experience was in the Good Times™ of 2020-2021, expect to have a very different experience than what you’ve read about or previously experienced. VCs are still looking to cut checks, but they’re slower moving and more cautious than during times of heightened activity.

Be prepared and stick to the basics. It might take extra work to overcome their inertia, but if you come correct you’ll get the result you’re looking for."

https://chrisneumann.com/blog/the-adrenaline-of-vc-deal-flow

9. "Part of the premise for the rise of seed VC funds in the late 2000s was that cloud computing, other technical innovations, and lean startup thinking meant that startups could get to validation points earlier. Many articles were written about how we would see a generation of capital-efficient startups that would do more with less as a result. This capital-efficient ethos never really took root as it happened to coincide with an unprecedented explosion in the venture ecosystem's access to capital and historically low interest rates. There was no need to be capital-efficient in an era of capital abundance.

With the era of capital abundance coming to an end, the stage might finally be set for the era of the capital-efficient seed stage company. Seed-stage startups are likely to confront a world in which raising Series A rounds of investment remains difficult for quite some time. There will be a premium on execution and doing more with less capital. The necessary pieces might finally be in place to push companies back toward the hoped-for levels of capital efficiency.

There will be money for our very best companies. However, This change opens space for us to look at companies where a seed and pre-seed round will give the company the money it needs to become a high-growth company with minimal go-forward external capital needs. This is not about finding small, break-even companies that don’t build to scale. This is really about making sure we find companies where we are aligned with the founders on the long-term capital needs of the business. Those who have joined me on pitch calls of late have probably heard me ask this question of the founders who pitch us."

https://chudson.substack.com/p/the-big-reset-in-seed-to-series-a

10. "Being long-term bullish on crypto is a bet on the following: gambling, degeneracy, greed and desperation. Seems like a pretty easy yes from us. The most important part is staying in the game for a long time and rotating into more risk when you see an opportunity. That is the core working thesis."

https://bowtiedbull.io/p/history-of-crypto-cycles-etfs-and

11. Eric is a friend and this was an excellent interview. So many nuggets of insight. Recommend his books.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2mAL_aQqWMQ&t=1939s

12. Masterclass from one of the best tech investors on the planet.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnDrFBzRfgc

13. Impressive young man. Makes you question your own momentum and ambition level.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46903vxfn-c

14. "Russia is often portrayed as the invincible military power. And yet, this reputation is based on two wars - Napoleonic and WWII. In both cases Russia won only thanks to the alliance allied with *the* leading economic powerhouse of that era. 

Napoleonic Wars were won because of the Russian alliance with the UK. WWII - because of the alliance with the US. In both cases the leading economic, industrial and technological power of the age supported Russia, giving it almost unlimited credit and supply line."

https://kamilkazani.substack.com/p/why-russia-cant-win-against-the-west

15. "Eventually what I decided to do was try and show just how a supply based campaign would be the most effective thing for Ukraine, by talking about the issue of ammunition supply for Russian artillery—which has received a great deal of coverage lately. Long story short, if Ukraine could damage/destroy even a relatively small percentage of the ammunition heading to Russian guns, it would make an outsize difference in the war in 2024.

This is because Russia is not actually a great economic power and is generating relatively little new force (this is also true for tanks and other armored fighting vehicles and artillery pieces). Basically Russia is using and losing far more equipment than in can replace on an annual basis."

https://phillipspobrien.substack.com/p/what-is-the-way-forward-in-a-war-777

16. "While most Christians would say the devil is the best liar in the world, I think the best is the person in the mirror. Self-delusion is perhaps the most challenging aspect of attempting the fuller lifestyle. Avoiding work because you're being negligent and avoiding work because you are achieving balance look identical from the outside.

Getting this right means you have to be able to confront the full breadth of your weaknesses to ensure you aren’t being controlled by them. The hard part of living fuller, not bigger, is being honest with yourself. That there is no answer is the answer. You have to believe that you have the intelligence and grit to figure it out yourself."

https://every.to/napkin-math/live-fuller-not-bigger

17. "While Musk may not be in the business of convincing people he’s less capable, he is hurtling dangerously toward the classic failing of all great hustlers — playing outside of the odds that made him rich in the first place.

Musk’s successes — SolarCity, Tesla, SpaceX and Starlink (which has only recently hit profitability) — come from buying into or building companies that sell something, juicing their revenues and valuations by extolling bright futures of eternal growth, the kind that the market adores.

Anything that Musk talks about is automatically covered by the media, which is something that inherently boosts any company that actually sells something, because there’s a call-to-action at the end of whatever churlish statement he chooses to make. When motivated by greed, Musk can be incredibly effective, because there’s something (theoretically) valuable at the end — Elon Musk has endorsed this product, the product does this, and you should either buy the product or the associated stock.

Every product decision he’s made feels like every time I’ve seen a desperate man lose thousands at a craps table “trying to make his money back,” mumbling that he “has a system” as the dice seem to work against him with every roll. Musk’s playbook has always been to sell the sizzle - that you’re buying into the future of something, even if that future is murky and the something kind of sucks - but it hinges heavily on there being something tangible and “cool” to own.

Musk has ultimately made the biggest mistake one can in gambling or hustling — letting emotion take the wheel. Acquiring Twitter was never about making money."

https://wheresyoured.at/p/junk-bond-trader

18. "At hyperscale, the companies with the deepest AI exposure are enjoying faster growth rates as enterprise demand for these products accelerates."

https://tomtunguz.com/ai_reacceleration/

19. "Mining and processing graphite is an especially dirty business, and China doesn’t mind getting dirty when it can accumulate geopolitical advantages in the process.

The global production share chart for graphite is indistinguishable from countless others we have encountered over the decades. If a commodity is deemed critical and producing it is environmentally taxing, China inevitably comes to dominate it."

https://doomberg.substack.com/p/geopollutical-warfare

20. Always enjoy these conversations. Why do founders stay in their company even after F-- You money.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBE0eDh8CNk

21. "RAADfest’s opening keynote speaker—and a big reason why I am here—is Bryan Johnson, a wealthy tech entrepreneur who has lately become an object of media fixation, owing to his colorful Twitter presence, absorbing diet and fitness regimen, and the fact that he spends most of his time and money on his attempt to live forever. To do so, he has created “Blueprint,” an algorithm using data about Johnson’s various organs that recommends protocols for his health, diet, and fitness.

Johnson is a big deal for the immortalist community. He is a lot younger and richer than most of the other RAADfest presenters, and due to a series of recent articles in The New York Post, Bloomberg Businessweek, and Time Magazine, he is kind of famous. He gets recognized in public a lot. People say things like, “Yo, vampire bro! Can I get some of that blood?” Johnson loves this."

https://www.gq.com/story/raadfest-live-forever-or-die-trying

22. "But in recent years, it was his intense familiarity with those daily rhythms of his in New York City that made him realise it might be time for a major pivot. “After one too many days of doing the same thing, I just got this overwhelming sense that I was still playing the same hand of cards I’d had for a long time – but that I had a better hand to play,” he said. “I was living in this rental place that didn’t feel like home. I was getting the same bacon, egg, and cheese at the same deli. Resisting any lifestyle change.”

All the while, his circumstances had changed. He had grown older. The films were bigger. His profile was immeasurably larger. But he was holding onto something. Why? He had seen it up close in Hollywood. The man-child. The people who so loved playing characters that they played characters in their real lives, too, without actually transforming themselves into more mature human beings. He knew the cliché about celebrities staying developmentally the age that they were when they became famous.

But how is a beloved movie star meant to change the right way? How is he supposed to grow up? How does he meaningfully evolve his life and art without killing his core? This was the most important thing there was for Timothée Chalamet. It might be worthwhile to chart the course. “All I knew,” he said, “was it was time to level up.

It’s difficult to underscore how polar opposite the two ways Timothée Chalamet experiences time are. There are the long stretches during a movie production, during a press cycle, during a fashion campaign, when every minute is scheduled for days or weeks or months at a time. But there are other long stretches, in between the making of films and promoting them, that are seemingly devoid of time as we experience it, with infinite opportunities for developing a film character or developing himself.”

https://www.gq-magazine.co.uk/article/timothee-chalamet-cover-interview-2023

23. This is a good state of the seed vc investing market, I like the concept of inception investing rounds. Some very useful frameworks.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lIx1vnNYj2c

24. "Where does that leave the magical 250m population figure in reality? For many business models, especially those which are common in more developed markets, the real addressable market is perhaps only 10.6m if we include all of Groups 3, 4, and 5. While still a $43bn opportunity, if we factor in the propensity and ability of different ages within those groups to adopt technology, the number may be only half of that.

To build a scalable consumer-focused business in a market like Pakistan requires novel business models and go to market strategies that must be highly localised to succeed."

https://sturgeoncapital.substack.com/p/how-big-really-is-250m-people

25. "Given another few years at this pace of innovation, it’s not unreasonable to expect blockchains to be cost-competitive to classical databases.

More than that, they offer different types of promises to developers for data sovereignty, mathematical proofs, resiliency, & resistance to attack.

It’s the gas gas revolution. As the gas costs fall, more applications will be built on blockchains."

https://tomtunguz.com/aws-eth-cost-reductions/

26. "The starting point is WiFi Money (Online Business).

Once you’re making money from the internet, you can quit and most of the other things in the “good life” list come pretty much automatically.

WiFi Money is the starting point to freedom.

All I can say is, I’ve worked for others and I’ve worked for myself, and I like working for myself far more."

https://lifemathmoney.com/how-do-people-live-like-this/

27. "But, failure to recognize that we are already in a worldwide war and that we can resolve it with innovation and generosity of spirit are equally serious problems. All this is a reminder of Winston Churchill’s book While England Slept and John F Kennedy’s take on the same period called Why England Slept. Amazon ought to get both up on Kindle asap! Both leaders warned us.

But, we sleepwalked into WWI and WWII and further conflicts from the 1960s. Are we sleepwalking into another such situation? Are we asleep when we should be awakened to technological possibilities (something Marc Andreessen calls “Techno-Optimism”)? We exited WWII through technology. The atomic bomb unleashed destructive power so great it ended war. Could we release a constructive power so great that it begins a new era that would be post-geopolitics? I want everyone not just to wake up, but to start dreaming about what the future could and should look like before it is too late. The task is hard."

https://drpippa.substack.com/p/wwiii-winning-the-peace

28. "A year ago, Netflix was losing 1 million subscribers per quarter and had shed 75% of its market cap. It was the worst performing stock in the S&P 500. Fast-forward one circumnavigation of the Sun, and Wall Street is “gushing” over its “beautiful” results while the rest of the industry flounders."

https://www.profgalloway.com/the-netflix-effect/

29. "The sweet spot is to find a strategy that works, which suits your temperament, and which interests you because…

Good investing is mostly ‘boring’ working with brief moments of excitement. I say ‘boring’ because the research process is boring to most people, but not to everyone. It is an endless loop of keeping up with the world and trying to understand things — a company, an industry, a trend, a technology, an event — by reading, crunching data, and talking to people. 

Every once in a while, things get exciting. Like when you find a great idea or when the market punches you in the face. And in exactly those moments, you have to resist and remain calm. It’s the inverse of how most people go through life: they run from the grind of mundane work and throw themselves into thrills.

If the process of learning about companies and markets feels like keeping up with your favorite sport or celebrities, you’re ahead of the game."

https://alchemy.substack.com/p/11-things-i-learned-about-investing

30. "One thing should be clear: allowing price fixing to occur through shared software rather than an explicit agreement is not just a technological change — it’s a legal change. Indeed, judges are simply rewriting the law to legalize price-fixing.

When it’s extremely hard to bring a complaint because the burden is just too high for plaintiffs - as is happening in the Rainmaker case and potentially the RealPage litigation - judges have created a liability shield for corporations to collude. “Nobody thought you could win” is a devastating and avoidable sentiment in the face of clear and pervasive harm."

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/the-banality-of-price-fixing

31. "Every founder tells themselves a story about why they’re heading to the gold rush, but the executive coach I would eventually hire says there are really only two. Do you want to be rich, generating wealth in service of some further end? Or do you want to be king, with money a mere byproduct of trying to make the world the way you feel it should be?

At the time, I told myself I wanted the freedom of being rich. I thought I’d be able to recognize a winning hand fast or fold. Now, several years later, I’m still waiting for the river card that determines my fate. You could call me a middle-class founder: proprietor of a business you may or may not have heard of, tenuously wealthy on paper, by no means a failure but not yet a success, chugging along in the twilight of an era that minted more giants and more waste than any other in history, with no exit in sight.

Today, the market has turned for everyone. We’re growing slower than I want, but other start-ups, even the hot companies that dominated fundraising in past years, are showing far more signs of strain. Some have already flamed out spectacularly, and for those that survive, the gobs of money raised from megafunds come with a catch: It needs to be paid back first, which means that employees and early investors who expected millions won’t make any money unless they deliver on their tall tales.

The culprit is technically rising interest rates, but you could argue it began when founders and investors started to see the downside of swinging for the power law. The first venture funds formed as a way for savvy investors to help innovators create fundamental technologies like transistors, which required huge outlays of time and treasure before they could produce value. But in the past few years, causality inverted: Start-ups and entire markets were manufactured from whole cloth to meet the demand of overcapitalized venture funds searching for a home run.

At work, there’s some sense that we’ve missed the windfall, the easy IPO, the fairy godmother of acquisition that taps some lucky people and makes them rich. You’d think that would suck for morale. But from what I can tell, our team seems happy. What venture capitalists are now telling startups to do — forget “growth at all costs”, be profitable — is what we, partly by accident, have been doing all along. With the exception of the new wave of AI companies, the skies are full of Icaruses crashing to earth, but we’ve been here the whole time."

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/venture-capital-backed-startup-founder-confessions.html

32. "Taking all these factors together, one must wonder about the efficiency gains for a software company. Will it be 20% cheaper or even 50% less costly to run a software company? This will undoubtedly impact the costs, scalability, and efficiency of running a business. Will it lead to the creation of more software companies or result in more mergers and acquisitions? Will the market competition offset these efficiency gains?

The exciting aspect of technology and considering the future is that these advancements are inevitable. From the perspective of software companies, using AI to enhance business operations, not just the products they offer, will be an intriguing area of innovation over the next decade."

https://davidcummings.org/2023/10/28/ais-efficiency-role-in-running-software-companies/

33. This is such an important discussion. The West is our own worst enemy due to our luxury beliefs/bad thinking and being afraid of exercising power.

It's worth listening to. (skip the part on language and transgender/gender stuff, which was incoherent). Rest is excellent.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H10fH6Zy-ew&t=1594s

34. Learning from Founder Led Funds. Always stuff to learn.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTaOfh1_N8s&t=2027s

35. "Venture capital is an existentially flawed, yet powerful, economic system that could kill the thing most VCs purport to love: startups. Just like the person who doesn't want to take a life on the boat — you're staring at a deadly thing. The deadly outcome isn't something you want. But the failure of that outcome threatens your own life. The dissolution or rapid revolution of the venture capital industry threatens to kill a generation of tried-and-true VCs. So what's to be done?

That's the key to survival. Adapt. Venture capital is dying because it has adapted to focus on returns. The model has crafted an engine that generates returns, not necessarily enduring, generational companies. The same is true of things like the oil industry. Eventually, companies will be forced to bear the brunt of their own externalities. Venture capital is no different."

https://investing1012dot0.substack.com/p/surviving-the-death-of-venture-capital

36. "Expect this consolidation to continue, especially where platforms are emerging, and complementary products integrate well. Over time, we’re going to see more consolidation, but not as much as some might think.

The nature of SaaS, with its predictable cash flow, recurring revenue, and great gross margins, means that companies can remain in a “zombie state”—not growing rapidly but not dying off either. They don’t have to transact, and they don’t have to be acquired. So, the majority will not consolidate, but for those that align well with a larger platform, look for more M&A activity, especially over the next two to three years, as larger, well-funded platforms look to expand their total addressable markets more aggressively."

https://davidcummings.org/2023/11/04/saas-unicorns-expanding-their-tam-through-acquisition/

37. "You aren’t successful because you say you want to help others, but you won’t learn the skills that allow you to help others.

You aren’t successful because you focus too much on art, and then blame the market when they don’t see the value in what you have to offer (because you couldn’t articulate it with marketing and sales).

You aren’t successful because you “focus on your craft” rather than getting your craft in front of potential customers. Your websites, designs, writing, and other projects do not count until other people see them. You are delaying the time to feedback. Without feedback, you can’t make it valuable. Your first iteration will not be valuable.

You aren’t successful because you have an incomplete perspective on what business is. It is how you participate in the advancement of humanity by creating a product that raises the collective consciousness.

You aren’t successful because you took these points as personal attacks, closed your mind to your potential, and allowed your conditioning to rule you.

You aren’t successful because you don’t create something valuable that the market wants to pay for. People don’t want what your ego wants, they want what Mother Nature wants, and who are you to act like you know what that should be?"

https://thedankoe.com/letters/making-money-is-spiritual-if-you-learn-these-unethical-skills/

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Marvin Liao Marvin Liao

Kazakhstan & Central Asia is Hot: The Re-Emerging Silk Road

When you hear about Kazakhstan everyone’s thoughts go to Borat, the fictional character who completely mischaracterized this country and region. But the joke is on all of us. Kazakhstan is one of the most interesting and important places in the world. Centered between the voracious giants of Russia and China it plays an important role in the world. 

For anyone who studies history, or has any curiosity about geopolitics, Kazakhstan is one of the countries at the center of Eurasia along with Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan & Tajikistan. The old Silk Road connecting Asia with Europe. 

It’s not a big country by population with only 19 million people but it is large by mass, just like Canada. And like Canada it has a tremendous amount of valuable natural resources like oil, natural gas and minerals like chromium, lead, zinc, manganese, copper, gold, iron and coal. Maybe more importantly they provide 22% of the world supply of uranium. Which is absolutely critical in the age of nuclear energy. 

But what is probably more interesting is the growing tech scene that has been encouraged by the technocratic government that has been investing in infrastructure, education and policy. As the theme of a recent Strategeast conference there said: “knowledge as a new energy.”

I have not been back to Kazakhstan since 2018 and after an almost 6 year hiatus, it’s been really interesting watching the growth of the startup ecosystem. You have the giants of Kaspi and Freedom Securities dominating the Fintech world. These are the serial acquirers and possible exit strategy of many local startups. And we see an emerging venture and startup community. 

There is also a generation's strong experience in aerospace and space. Remember that most of the space launches outside the USA are done in Kazakhstan by international private companies and even other countries like Russia.

It has a growing young population just like in their larger neighbor Uzbekistan, but many more resources to educate and invest in their populace. 

Thanks to a decades-long program established in 1993 called the Bolashaq program, promising young graduates have their education in top western universities paid for by the government in return for 3-5 years of service in government agencies or ministries. There have been almost 15,000 young Kazakhs who have gone through the program and it’s a cadre of trained and smart people who end up in the private sector after. 

Kazakhstan is an exciting place and unique in the world. I heard a great saying while there. Kazakhstan is WARM. Western oriented, Asia centered & Asian-looking, Russian speaking but Multicultural, Multi-ethnic and Multi religious. Having been there I would say it’s not just warm, but it’s HOT. (If you include the even more populous neighbor Uzbekistan at 35 million people, this region is becoming even more interesting.)

It’s fast becoming a critical geopolitical player as it balances its own interests with those of its big closest neighbors of China, Russia and its far neighbor of the USA. Watch this ecosystem and country. I look forward to returning soon. 

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Marvin Liao Marvin Liao

Prague Flashback: Reliving The Past

I had a chance to visit Prague this year, after getting invited to do the keynote speech at the Engaged Investments Conference, a new event specific for Venture Capitalists in Central & Eastern Europe. Of course. I jumped at the opportunity to visit one of my most favorite places. A place of fond memories and of my personal growth. 

Back in 1996, I had just graduated from university in Canada and could not wait to leave. I had gotten into a summer studies program 8! Medieval Warfare actually at Cambridge University and the original plan was to come back to Canada and look for work or start studies again. Or at least that was the plan or what my parents expected. 

I decided to buy a one way ticket to Prague after Cambridge. And my life was never the same again. Yes, I've done travels to the USA, the UK, Taiwan and Japan. But they were either with family, school or orchestra. 

So this was the first trip at that time in my life where I was truly alone and independent. Bear in mind, I had never cooked or cleaned or done laundry at that time because my job was just work and school. The trip was a crash course in life. Finding a place to live, managing money as I had very little of it and finding my way around. 

When I landed in Prague it was like a fairytale. Beautiful architecture as it had never been affected by war for 500 years at least. It was so physically beautiful to me that I literally could not speak for a day. I was in literal awe. The place was magical, and even now I feel the same way. I spent almost 2 months here, exploring Prague and taking day trips by train all around the country like Cesky Krumlov, Karlovy Vary, Kutna Hora, Telc,  Marianske Lazny & Ceske Budejovice among many other beautiful places. 

I learned about my personal finance. I was able to stretch my 1 month budget to 6 months, although I admit I had to call home in early December to ask for money so I could eventually get back home. My mom was mad. But it was worth it. My bubble of naive suburban Canadian innocence was bursted quite violently. I ran into racist a—holes, almost pick pocketed by gypsies and was even attacked a few times by neo nazi skinheads. Interestingly, looking back, this rough and tumble crash course mentally prepared me well for my life in America. 

Most importantly, I met so many interesting & nice people as well who showed me immense kindness. Business people of all types, retirees, students, fellow backpackers and travelers from everywhere in the world. I really grew up fast. 

I’d been back to Prague over the years but always under a tight schedule for work or business. This was the first time in 27 years that I  had time to wonder and explore. And it brought back wonderful memories. In the end that’s all we have. It’s also a great reminder of how far I’ve come and how much my life has changed. Overall for the better I think. It’s so easy to forget sometimes when you are so caught up in everyday life. 

So here is to travel, to personal growth and to having great memories. And also to Prague. I really need to spend more time here in the future as it holds such a special place in my heart just like Japan does. 

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Marvin Liao Marvin Liao

Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads November 5th, 2023

“The smallest deed is better than the greatest intention.”--John Burroughs

  1. I'm enjoying this series of interviews with Tai Lopez. Excellent life and business insights.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zzwj2CrRuY0&t=2548s

2. Building Audiences and Holding Cos. Excellent conversation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGX30whbJ1s

3. "In most industries, competition is a knife fight—it’s fast and dirty. In contrast, B2B SaaS is a chess match, cerebral and drawn out. And it’s because rather than merely guessing about what their foes will do, founders can forecast with a spooky level of certainty what is going to happen.

 At its core, the software universe is paradoxical: common playbooks that should herald predictable commoditization instead yield unpredictable successes. This might be unsettling for the traditional economist, but it's a fascinating phenomenon for the astute founder.

Where does this leave us? First, it's essential to recognize that the uniqueness of software strategy isn't rooted in what companies do but in how they do it. In a world where everyone has access to the same roadmap, the differentiator becomes the vision, culture, and adaptability of the company itself. It's not just about selling a software solution; it's about selling a belief, a future perspective that entices and resonates."

https://every.to/napkin-math/every-software-business-has-the-same-playbook

4. "If we were to write Triangle Investing again the entire cover of the book would be changed. For the majority it would say: 1) Corporate bonds, 2) Crypto and 3) Emerging Companies/Tech. The entire idea of buying stuff like dividend aristocrats, the S&P 500 etc would be thrown out the window. It just doesn’t make sense today and until the government decides to either go back to ZIRP or print tons of money, you can’t justify holding them.

Hopefully we can all agree that the government really only has three options: 1) wealth tax, 2) print and 3) cut rates to zero. Crypto is the lotto ticket for Gen Z, Gen Y and perhaps a good chunk of Gen X as well. All three of these long-term conclusions benefit crypto. 

If they try to use a wealth tax, people will self custody. If they print, money will flow into crypto due to inflation (we saw this in covid). If they cut rates suddenly to zero, unemployment will be high… desperation sets in and people turn to crypto as their “last shot” at making it."

https://bowtiedbull.io/p/rewriting-triangle-investing-in-2023

5. "At a time like this, some people might see it as dismissive or callous to talk about the long-term economic future of Gaza. Perhaps it takes a terminal case of Economist Brain to look at a land in the grip of endless war and say “You know what this place needs? Some GDP!”. But I think it’s an important exercise, because economic development provides a nation with a purpose other than the catharsis of violence. 

Finance is another industry where Gaza could conceivably shine. Arab countries are a big market, with about $3.5 trillion in GDP. Currently, the Gulf Countries and Israel are the main financial hubs for the Middle East, but Gaza could ultimately challenge their dominance. It could be a gateway for investment in countries like Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan, using its cultural affinity to cut Israel out of the loop. 

Software and finance take a lot of skills, and Gaza will need a big increase in education to master these complex, high-value industries. But Gazans overseas can take advantage of already-existing education systems in rich countries, and learn practical business skills from working at foreign companies. These skills could then be transferred back to Gaza, along with investment capital, to create software and finance industries in the territory. 

In any case, it’s a bit of a pipe dream to look at the devastation and dysfunction of today’s Gaza and imagine that one day the strip could be a wealthy hub of software and finance. But it’s exactly that sort of pipe dream that makes stability, peace, and good government worth fighting for in the present."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/economic-possibilities-for-gaza

6. "I’m repeating myself, because I want to stress this: on a long enough timeline, everyone (individuals & brands) will learn trust is only real currency of the internet, and so the world. It has to be this way as there's essentially infinite content, people and brands online and we need a filter. These aren’t human-created rules, they’re immutable, universal laws.

A thing too many haven’t realized yet is the internet isn’t some magical, distinct place separate from the real world, it is the real world (as mirror reflection). Where do you guess people and brands who run around screaming fire in crowded theaters end up? There’s a children’s story about all of this if you need a hint (for what happens to them, and also those who endorse them).

So I ask very seriously, why anyone would want to be left holding the bag of the subprime attention bubble online? You’re basically actively working to kill your credibility and any future chances to compound (productive) attention, reputation and trust — the things you actually need to survive. It all will come crashing down and end poorly for many. And it’s even worse than an investment bubble, because there was never actual liquidity potential for participants, it was always worthless."

https://www.hottakes.space/p/the-subprime-attention-bubble

7. "Today, the Department of Defense released its annual report to Congress on Chinese military power. This report has been around for more than two decades and is always an interesting read, but I don’t think I’m alone when I say this year’s report was more detailed and more responsive to evolving threats than in previous years."

https://www.breakingbeijing.com/p/10-takeaways-from-the-pentagons-2023

8. Sober perspective on Gaza and Israel. Thankfully not WW3......yet......

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OagYlYna75Y

9. I hate Orban but love Hungary and Hungarians. I'm hopeful for this country and market. 

"In the 1990s, Hungary was one of the most open economies in Eastern and Central Europe and widely regarded as a benchmark for the changes that took place across the region.

Right now, its reputation is mixed, at best. The country is admired by some, and despised by others. It has had real economic issues to deal with, and being known as the country with the highest inflation rate in Europe is not conducive to attract investors.

Equally, within the region, Hungary is cheaper even than its peers. All the bad factors that the country is known for should already be priced in – and then some. In addition, according to Raiffeisen Bank's analysts, inflation is seemingly on the way down."

https://www.undervalued-shares.com/weekly-dispatches/hungary-investor-trip-what-we-learned/

10. Some more on Hungary as an investment. Worth watching the video included.

https://mailchi.mp/d05326ad2e05/field-trip-to-one-of-europes-most-undervalued-stock-markets?e=123a1c25c4

11. "Rather than hiring as a first resort, you should focus instead on building the systems and processes that will enable your team, existing and new, to operate more efficiently and effectively. These will scale and are easier to build when the team is small and agile than when it has ballooned and established biases and habits.

These systems and processes are one of the core things to do after raising your Seed round in order to be able to raise a Series A. You probably haven’t done this before, but your investors, fellow cofounders, mentors or advisors should be able to help you with this.

So, as that dust settles and you smile at your bank balance with more zeros (good ones!) than you have ever seen, take a moment before you hit the big red hiring button. What made you successful till now was your ability to do more with less, and that shouldn't change just because you have money in the bank.

As a seed-stage company, you do not have a scalable growth engine into which you can pour the fuel of VC capital. That is what you need to figure out now so that you can raise a Series A and realise the full potential of your startup."

https://sturgeoncapital.substack.com/p/processes-before-people

12. "When people seek advice, it often isn’t advice they want, but someone to listen. A good listener — someone who is present, who asks probing questions, who doesn’t use the person’s pain as a starting gun for them to speak — is a balm for anxiety. That’s why a good listener makes a useful partner in problem-solving. Some of the best mentorship moments I’ve experienced, on both sides, have been when the mentor doesn’t offer advice, but expresses affection by focusing solely on you and what you are saying.

The best advice you can give is to listen, which is to tell that person that they matter. The most effective treatment for anybody’s grief or anxiety is time and care. The former takes care of itself, and the latter can be achieved when we tell someone we love them, without words. By listening."

https://www.profgalloway.com/listen/

13. "The enemy of techno-optimism isn’t sustainability; it’s short-termism. Humanity should not build new things to pump up quarterly earnings; we should build them so that our descendants, in whatever form they come, will own the worlds and the stars. And if we are to own the worlds and the stars in perpetuity, we must take care not to despoil them, starting with the one we now sit upon. 

Techno-optimism is thus much more than an argument about the institutions of today or the resource allocations of today. It’s a faith in humanity — and all sentient beings — propelling ourselves forward into the infinite tomorrow."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/thoughts-on-techno-optimism

14. "In San Francisco, techies have been pumping their chest about AI, spending days attending “Cerebral Valley” events and nights partying at AI hacker houses. In Seattle, the vibe is more work, less play. Locals say that’s characteristic of the city’s resident tech workers, who are more pragmatic—a trait often instilled in them navigating bureaucratic Seattle mainstays Microsoft and Amazon—and less interested in showboating, even when they ought to.

“Seattle, to a fault, is OK being underappreciated,” said Matt McIlwain, a managing director at Seattle-based venture firm Madrona Venture Partners, during an interview last week at the firm’s headquarters. “The Seattle story is a great story. And it continues to need to be told better.”

https://www.theinformation.com/articles/seattles-more-pragmatic-and-quieter-ai-boom

15. "Though Convoy had been frequently hailed as the “Uber for trucking,” it turns out that the $800 billion U.S. market is incredibly difficult to disrupt. Building a profitable business involves navigating volatile trucking prices while inking both short-term spot deals for customers and longer-term contracts—dynamics that leave little margin for error. And Convoy, led by co-founder and CEO Dan Lewis, a leader with an Amazon pedigree but no experience as a trucking executive, couldn’t figure out how to play the game.

Convoy’s shutdown, which wiped out the equity investors that poured $900 million into the company, marks the most extreme downfall of a once-high flying startup in recent years, amid a contraction of venture funding that has left many money-losing startups struggling to survive. It also puts the spotlight on investors’ past willingness to pump money into companies despite management's lack of experience in the industry and questions about their business model."

https://www.theinformation.com/articles/how-trucking-startup-convoy-drove-itself-into-the-ground

16. "One question for entrepreneurs to ask prospects and customers: does this solution solve your most pressing issue? They might see this as a nice-to-have while a must-have is on the tip of their tongue. Prospects and customers are always the best source of ideas.

Many talented entrepreneurs work on startups that will never succeed, no matter the circumstances. If we can guide them toward more opportunity-oriented thinking and encourage ways to find even better needs in the market, everyone will benefit. Entrepreneurship isn’t a zero sum game and we need to move the world forward, faster."

https://davidcummings.org/2023/10/21/talented-entrepreneurs-working-on-the-wrong-idea/

17. "Was I getting pushed out? Was I running away from something I didn’t like?

And while it was a demanding job, that wasn’t really my motivation to leave.

Instead, I was feeling the pull. The pull towards something new. Something exciting. Something different."

https://radreads.co/david-solomon/

18. "When you step outside the city, you realize you’re in a rat race with no end and that you need very little to be happy.

Don’t get me wrong. You should not become lazy and complacent. We are men and we should strive for more.

But it needs to be done in a sustainable tempo. You don’t want to become a high stress type A person who dies of a burst artery at 32.

Build. But enjoy the process of building. 

Don’t burn yourself out. 

If you do get burned out, step outside of the city to get some fresh air and climb some mountains."

https://lifemathmoney.com/appreciate-the-simple-things-in-life/

19. "And once you realize you can stay for a month you realize it’s even cheaper to stay for three months, so why not? While these kinds of possibilities can become overwhelming it’s also freeing in that I know I’m not living my life downstream from my relationship to work anymore.

In fact, it is flipped. Where I live dictates how much I have to work. If I was living in a place like New York, I’d need to worry a lot more about money and I’d have to constrain the things I’d think about and work on to make sure that I can actually make money. And I might actually opt into a place like that if I was feeling that it might be fun to tap into the raw ambition of the city.

But I’ve also lived in places that cost 10% of what it would cost me to live in New York and I noticed how much that actually freed me to experiment, not worry as much about money, and do things just for the sake of it. And it has been those kinds of experiments that have actually led to more money in the long-term, which reminds me that I still don’t really know what is best for “work” and that’s okay."

https://boundless.substack.com/p/on-travel-living-abroad-and-losing

20. "Your offer to help is only really warranted if the founder finds you, as a firm, attractive. So that's the very first step. Communicate your vibes. But if you've done your best to articulate to the founder why your offering is attractive? Then all you can do is your best to offer well-intentioned calculated help.

It's up to the founder whether they choose to be transparent and receptive to the value add. Otherwise? Maybe it is just a Jedi mind trick that's stopping them from leaning into the value add."

https://investing1012dot0.substack.com/p/you-dont-want-my-value-add

21. This is an excellent interview with Chris Williamson who is one of the best interviewers around and Codie Sanchez.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cG8ih5DwOlM

22. "When investing, I’ve done my fair share of stupid things. 

And like everyone else, I always found a way to justify those absurdities, especially when it paid off, one out of a dozen times under the fact that Venture Capital is a power law where 95% of the returns are driven by 5% to 10% of the companies we invest in."

https://2lr.substack.com/p/absurdity

23. "This is the evolution of ESG - it is now a social good to invest in domestic energy production, in the raw materials sectors - and I don’t think it’s a stretch, but in defence and security.

Whether bullets or batteries - the lack of supply will continue to trigger rising prices, and a wave of capitalists will rush to finance the gap.

The importance of raw materials, metals and energy has never been more important than it is right now."

https://jaymartin.substack.com/p/pray-for-peace-vote-sensibly-and

24. "Almost everywhere, our taxes continue to rise. But instead of life getting better because of handing over more of our money to the state, life is becoming demonstrably and statistically worse for almost everyone at the bottom levels of the Western world. The cost of living continues to rise, and we’re constantly hearing how the quality of basic services like healthcare, public transport, and utilities are getting worse in most developed countries.

If you’re a part of today’s modern workforce, it’s the first time in generations that you’re statistically likely to be worse off financially and economically than your parents or grandparents were. And good luck attempting to afford a home.

Peasants in 14th century England revolted against their masters based on paying barely above 20% of their total income in estimated taxes. So why do we accept paying 50%, 60%, or 70% of our income like this should be a normal part of everyday life?

Why don’t we protest? Why don’t we revolt? Why don’t we rebel?

Because we’ve been raised to believe since birth that this is normal. Because we’ve been made dormant, fat, and slovenly by entertainment, culture, and an industrial food system that poisons our bodies and numbs our minds."

https://abundantia.substack.com/p/slave-nations

25. What a speech. Choose a life of strength by giving up your life of hate. Worth listening. Conquer your mind!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jsETTn7DehI

26. "Here’s the craziest part: we ironically trust these faceless accounts more than we do personal brands. Without the face, all we know is the intention — get you from point A to point B."

https://latecheckout.substack.com/p/the-guide-to-faceless-brands

27. "Despite Halloween’s ever-increasing popularity, haunted houses are risky endeavors, labor-intensive businesses that must earn a year’s worth of income over a few weekends in September and October.

Only a small number of haunted houses see more than 10k visitors annually and stick around for longer than a few years. Even for the established houses, survival isn’t guaranteed.  

“In a seasonal business,” says Amber Arnett-Bequeaith, VP of Full Moon Productions, which owns three haunted houses in Kansas City, Missouri, “you are gambling your livelihood every single year.”

https://thehustle.co/the-frightening-economics-of-haunted-houses/

28. "Between USV selling 30% of their Twitter stake, Menlo selling half of their Uber, Benchmark only selling 15% of their Uber pre-IPO shares, and Blackbird recently selling 20% of its Canva stake, it feels more like the former than the latter. Then when Howard Marks says selling is all about relative selection and the opportunity cost of not doing so, it seems to reinforce the artistic form of getting “moolah in da coolah” to borrow a Chris Douvos trademark.

Everyone seems to have a financial model for when and how to invest, but part of being a fiduciary of capital is also knowing when to distribute – when to sell. When RVPI turns into DPI. And we haven’t seen many models for selling yet. At least none have surfaced publicly or privately for us.

The best thought piece we’ve seen in the space has been Fred Wilson’s Taking Money “Off the Table”. At USV, they “typically seek to liquidate somewhere between 10% and 30% of our position in these pre-IPO liquidity transactions. Doing so allows us to hold onto the balance while de-risking the entire investment.”

https://cupofzhou.com/the-science-of-selling/

29. "The problem I’m seeing with many managers is that they’re seeking transactional relationships. The urgency to get to their first or final close leads them to optimize for LPs who can close fast. And I get it, that’s been the game historically.

But it’s leaving a massive opportunity in the market for those who have the time and are willing to educate their and prospective LPs. Who are willing to spend time building a relationship through giving first."

https://cupofzhou.com/to-define-or-to-be-defined-by/

30. The great unbundling geopolitically. Or shattering of the world order. General systems collapse. Important discussion.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XkutC3XT6e4&t=1323s

31. "The biggest surprise in modern warfare is that small players with almost no resources can overcome big players with big resources using recycled materials and 3D printers. Ukraine is fending off Russia with 3D printed “Candy Bombs” that cost “$3.85 on a 3D printer that cost about $1,200”. They are also deploying cheap and fast underwater “Sea Baby” drones that inflicted an estimated $1b of damage on The Russian Fleet and forced it to pull back from its Black Sea position.

Technology has completely reversed The Malmgren Ratio and forever changed the nature of war (See our joint piece in UnHerd “Gaza Will Change the Future of War.”) This means the military doctrines we relied upon in past wars simply no longer hold true. (See: Gaza and The Future of War). This means the reporting on this WWIII is way off the mark. 

This means we cannot answer the critical questions: How long will these wars last? Who will win? How many will be hurt or killed? How will these wars be won? Can they be won? What is the definition of “winning”? These questions are relevant whether one is working in financial markets or militaries or a regular person trying to figure out day-to-day living, whether you are far from the conflict or right in the middle of it. Yet, imagination is always lacking.

We revert to known scenarios, even though technology always profoundly changes possibilities. We cannot bring ourselves to believe what always proves to be true. Technology gives the greatest advantage to those with the least money and the greatest imagination. It may seem unimaginable but, when faced with overwhelming technology, the only answer is to embrace our opponents and reconfigure hate into love."

https://drpippa.substack.com/p/a-hot-war-in-hot-places

32. "Despite my seemingly negative bias towards the US (which mostly comes from my view on the desperate fiscal picture and cultural degeneration), I always enjoy my trips to the United States.

The United States remains one of the world’s preeminent industrial powers, and reshoring seems to be a real trend. The current macro environment is interesting, and in many ways resembles the 1970s (rising yields, high inflation, rising energy consumption, and major geopolitical instability). Continued reshoring should only accelerate this trend. I would continue to avoid bonds and favor assets that perform well under inflation, like energy assets.

I think money managers still fail to appreciate the magnitude of this trend. Three money managers (one claimed to manage over twenty billion dollars) I had dinner with in Charleston weren’t even aware of the Treasury maturity schedule. One 30 year RIA was pounding the table on buying bonds. I don’t think people get it yet.

My assessment of the coal mine was mostly favorable, and I have no worries that my subscribers who invested in it will get paid back and make money for a long time. For my personal portfolio, I don’t see the usurious returns I usually seek (like in Petrobras and Ecopetrol) to justify the illiquidity, but I do see a very safe investment that will likely cash flow for decades."

https://calvinfroedge.substack.com/p/coal-and-machining-summary-of-us

33. Have always thought of Ann as being one of the more thoughtful VCs in the industry. This was a great interview.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MNoPlTI5000&t=714s

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The One Person Billion Dollar Company: A Possible Future of Business

This was a concept that I’d been thinking and pondering about for a long time. But was pointed out by Anand Sanwal most recently: 

Anand Sanwal on Twitter: "Bragging about headcount was 1 of the most corrosive trends in startup land over the last many years I was guilty of it too Somehow larger growing headcount became a positive signal of success for companies When in reality, it may more often than not be a negative signal" / Twitter

This absolutely made me think about all the bad ideas that happened in Silicon Valley recently and the counterpoint: what we are overlooking? Technology ultimately is about scaling and leverage. Yet we went the other direction. Adding people instead of technology and outsourcing to scale. This recession is forcing us to rethink “business as usual” here, in a very good way. Auren Hoffman was early to this. 

Auren 𝐇𝐨𝐟𝐟𝐦𝐚𝐧 on Twitter: "The most important business skill in the next hundred years is the ability to select and manage vendors. This is in contrast to the most important business skill from the last 100 years: the ability to recruit, manage, retain, and grow talent." / Twitter


Auren goes on to say correctly: “In the future, those who achieve the greatest results with the least number of employees will be admired above all others; the key statistic to look at is the go-forward net revenues per employee because it best encompasses the company’s leverage. What matters is each employee’s productivity and how the business itself can scale?

“If you start stripping out everything that is not unique to your company, you’re left with just a few people who make the unique parts of the company. And then add a few people who need to explain its unique benefits to the market. Imagine your 100 person company going to 6 people. Imagine your 1000 person company going to 20. How much faster could you move?”
The key question is why haven’t companies adopted this mindset 25 or 50 years ago and how does one start to outsource non-essential tasks?  Primarily, corporations of yesteryear were full-stack – they rarely used vendors and instead opted for adding many heads into the fold, creating a hierarchy and thus a stringent bureaucracy. This is changing: today, vendor selection is becoming a rare and prized skill as it frees up time and money that businesses can invest in higher ROI activities like R&D.”  Source: https://summation.net/2020/02/11/the-new-status-game-for-companies-fewer-employees/

I remember reading this book by Elaine Pofeldt, called “The Million Dollar, One Person Business” a few years ago. It was eye-opening. It almost broke my brain but it showed me what is possible.

As entrepreneurial Naval said once 10 years ago: “the actual efficient size of a company is shrinking very rapidly. So the future of the world will be almost all startups. Like I think most of the world, most businesses will adopt a startup mentality. In the sense that, there will be small companies, loosely coupled  and connected to each other, all through APIs and processes for their needs. I think we will see more billion dollar businesses built by 4 or 5 people and it will stay at that.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rIXx617xVMo


But I’d go even further. So $1M is definitely possible. Why not a one person $1B business? Maybe we are far from that. But there definitely will be a very tiny team company worth a billion dollars. My friend Jeremy talks about this and it’s excellent. This is recapped here:

“PREDICTION: The next billion-dollar startup will have only 3 employees. 

By Ben Parr Chris Saad and myself, Jeremiah Owyang on a recent podcast on #AI for startups. 

The culture within the AI startup market is "AI First" where the first instinct is to use Autonomous AI agents as the first method to get a job done. Automate all the things. Fully remote.

Here are the key duties for each of the three roles:

CEO: 

-Vision, strategy, drive growth

-Lead public-facing marketing 

-Also be involved in engineering, hands on coding

Will occasionally represent the company in public, but most of the digital marketing and sales functions will be handled by AI agents, which may replicate their likeness.

Product Leader:

Will work closely with AI agents to accomplish: 

-Collaborate with customers & team to construct roadmap

-Drive development and delivery or product

-Refine and iterate

Operation Leader: 

-Manage marketing and sales automation, finance, supply chain, and legal functions.

-Responsible for company-wide AI agents and generate single source of reporting.

-Ensure smooth operations across all functional areas of the company.

SUMMARY

-We expect to see this 3-person team form by end now by end of year, with it hitting stride in 3-5 years. 

-This is just the start of the journey, we expect to see fully-autonomous companies that may not even have humans at the helm.”

Source: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7058821822867202048/

It’s an interesting idea and concept whose time has finally arrived. Instagram and Whatsapp are some great examples of these kinds of companies in the last decade, albeit they were in the teens or dozens of employees (Instagram at 18 employees and Whatsapp at 55 employees). But directionally these two companies set the tone for this future. 

I anticipate that with a large global pool of contractor talent & expertise plus the rise of even more distribution platforms, tools, APIs coupled with the larger trend of generative AI and “Low code and No code” tools, we are closer than ever to this becoming easier and a much more common reality.

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Doing The Hard Thing: Staying Positive & Taking Action When The World Has Gone Mad

It’s been a few weeks since the horrifying Hamas terrorist attacks in Israel. I stress, horrifying,  as we watch the GoPro videos of Hamas terrorists going door to door killing civilians. The interviews of captured terrorists talking about killing children and the rape of women like they are buying groceries. Talk about the banality of evil. I mean these terrorists killed little helpless children and babies. That can never be justified by anyone or any cause. October 7th is Israel’s 9/11 but population wise, it’s proportional to the USA losing 40-50,000 people. 

But what has been extra horrifying is the response by crowds of ignorant college students and people across the West, protesting and justifying these atrocities. Blaming Israel and showing their anti-semitism. As usual the extremists on the brain dead left and right have shown their true colors.

And then we go to social media and the level of insane stupidity is on another level. I think we have our answer on whether social media has been a positive or negative to society. Overall, probably a negative. It’s easy to lose hope in the state of the West and humanity when you wade through the cesspool of commentary here. 

I admit I was in a strange state for 2-3 weeks after, between a funk of depression and pure rage at the senseless attack, the rising anti semitism as well as the pure stupidity and ignorance of the pro-Palestinian students who wander around blaming the victim. 

I don’t not want to see Palestinian civilians killed by the Israel Defense Forces but I certainly think Hamas leadership and militants are fair game. These animals should be hunted to the ends of the earth. Nothing justifies what they have done on October 7th. This is the behavior of rabid beasts, not civilized humans. 

My sense however is that this may be the straw that breaks all of our brains. Our brains were already overwhelmed and this is how the system/elites or matrix or whatever you choose to call it wants it. Confused, angry, divided and feeling helpless. 

Our first instinct is to go tribal, focus on your family, get supplies and arm up. At least this was mine and it’s actually what I did. But since Covid and the Russian invasion of UKraine, I realized the best way to move forward is taking action. 

One: I’ve donated to the International Rescue Committee (https://www.rescue.org/) and World Central Kitchen (https://wck.org/) which are important organizations helping refugees and victims of war and natural disasters. 

Two: I’ve tried to learn more about the background of conflict so I won't be swayed by the mass disinformation out there. 

Three: I think like a good venture capitalist investor and look at the long term possible solution to this crisis. Initiatives like the one Dror Peleg proposes is a good start. The Old New Fellowship, a venture approach to peace: 

https://www.drorpoleg.com/a-venture-approach-to-peace/. As is Noah Smith’s idea here for economic development in Gaza after the conflict: https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/economic-possibilities-for-gaza

Sitting around doing nothing, moping or even worse complaining, helps no one. If we want to make the situation better we have to take real action, even if they are small steps. We are entering a new world of disorder as Pax Americana is ending and we go toward a multipolar world. So every little bit we can do to make things better for our fellow man and woman is needed right now. 

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Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads October 29th, 2023

"If I cannot do great things, I can do small things in a great way." —Martin Luther King, Jr.

  1. "Every time I talk about psychology when it comes to investing, it comes back to incentives. That's not a coincidence. The same is true of most psychology. We often believe what we want to believe because of what we want to come to pass.

Human empathy matters more than human associations. In everything I want to be involved in, my hope is that it leads to less suffering than more. Net positive outcomes. We should want to eliminate suffering, from the slightest tweak in someone's expense management software interface to the alleviation of poverty, starvation, and violence."

https://investing1012dot0.substack.com/p/the-inescapable-debate-of-human-nature

2. "many PLG companies combine bottoms-up & top-down selling motion. Those motions target different buyers. It’s possible to achieve this with the same product.

But, it’s easier to achieve with two different products. Atlassian sells Jira to engineers to help them manage their features & bugs. Confluence, the internal communication tool, targets managers & leaders. To achieve this type of sale requires a long-term view or a willingness to acquire products to bolster a suite."

https://tomtunguz.com/plg-trap/

3. "In any case, the larger message here is that neither the U.S. private sector nor the public as a whole, nor even the government, is properly prepared for the risk of a war with China. That war may never come, and I strongly hope it never comes. But being caught unprepared would be a disaster, not just for the U.S. and its allies and global security and freedom and all that, but for the American people themselves, who would suddenly find themselves without consumer goods, shut out of key global markets, etc.

It’s simply better to prepare, both mentally and with policy. If the wars in Ukraine and Israel have taught us anything, it’s that we live in a much more volatile and dangerous world than we did five or ten years ago."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/were-not-ready-for-the-big-one

4. "The son of an engineer and a government administrator, Cerezo was encouraged to get an economics degree in college. But between his studies, he’d fly to Asia and pay a few bucks to hop on a fishing vessel bound for a remote island.

Islands became his obsession.

He began to develop an extensive knowledge of archipelagos in Indonesia, the Philippines, Polynesia, and Micronesia. After he graduated, he began to wonder if he could make a living out of his hobby.

“I wanted to do this every day of my life,” he said. “I had no idea if there were others out there who wanted to travel to these remote islands, but I decided to see.”

In 2010, Cerezo launched Docastaway (a combination of “do” and “castaway”) and billed his service as an escape from the clutter and digital chaos of the modern world. Travelers would pay Cerezo to dump them alone on an island, where they could spend time in complete and utter isolation.

The timing for this service was fortuitous.

Interest in extreme wilderness tourism had taken off, thanks to TV shows like Man vs. Wild and Survivorman, and a growing number of YouTube channels dedicated to “bushcraft” — wilderness survival skills like foraging, building natural shelters, and starting fires.

People wanted to test themselves — and there was no better test than being marooned on an island without food, water, or shelter."

https://thehustle.co/the-wild-business-of-desert-island-tourism/

5. "My life, until now, has been the era of globalization. Trust existed, fragile as it may have been, for the world to function as one global marketplace. If you had the money (or credit), you could buy whatever commodities your country needed.

But on the back of currency wars, trade wars and now hot wars, that era is over. 

I don’t think the transition to whatever comes next will be simple, quick or predictable. But I do think that our supply of commodities will become more vulnerable than it has been in my lifetime.

Understanding the world of commodities gives you a unique lens through which you can view global events - because the distribution of these raw materials is what leads to the distribution of power.

If you understand which commodities are most important - who has them and who needs them, then you understand a lot about the world.

Predicting geopolitics is harder than we think. I usually find truth by following the money - but in the case of global power, the money follows commodities."

https://jaymartin.substack.com/p/if-the-king-looks-weak-every-pawn

6. "The past few years were fun, people were raising and spending without even thinking how efficiently they would invest that money. The party is over, and regardless if you are in the hype of artificial intelligence, building the next boring SaaS an industry needs, or trying to crack the next social consumer cool thing, your job is to build intentionally with financial independence in sight, whether it’s going to take 1 million or 1 billion.

Higher Goals x Positive Yields on Actions, the rest doesn’t matter if you’re not intentional about that equation."

https://2lr.substack.com/p/new-normal

7. Part 1 of the interview series with Sahil Bloom. It is so good. How to make your life better and happier. Worth listening to as well.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqIL0VgFqOc

8. Love this important conversation. Learned a lot on how to live better and more productively and happier.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdxFctWShtc&t=1s

9. "The sudden emergence of fictive kinship didn’t just increase sympathy and support for Israel; it turned millions of unrelated people outside of the Jewish community (both in Israel and the diaspora) into active partisans engaged in moral warfare with an existential enemy.

Weak nation-states and non-state actors will find ways to manipulate this tribal dynamic to amplify their ability to wage war. Ukraine is an excellent early example of success in this area, and Israel is catching up fast.

Israel is also pioneering ways to blunt fictive kinship formation. They cut off Gaza’s power and telecommunications capacity when they began bombing to prevent the upload of empathy triggers. So far, this has been successful in slowing the global spread of fictive kinship production. However, it’s unlikely to last if the campaign stretches on for long."

https://johnrobb.substack.com/p/fictive-kinship

10. "As the nation-state becomes weaker, alternatives arise to exploit the opportunity. These corporations, wealthy individuals, criminal groups, NGOs, rogue institutions, and tribal political networks find ways to exacerbate crisis events and loot and coerce the system as it becomes vulnerable.

The capitalist Western nation-state, the victor of a five-hundred-year battle for supremacy between alternative systems, has become a victim of its success. The globalization and networking it used to cement its victory at the end of the 20th Century is hollowing with each successive crisis.

The migrant crisis, like earlier similar events, will eventually fade, but the damage it did to the nation-state and its decision-making capacity will not. It will accumulate (from financial losses/budget overruns to increasing network tribalization to unaddressed criminality/corporate looting), setting the stage for the next event in the permacrisis."

https://johnrobb.substack.com/p/onward-to-the-hollow-state

11. "To make 10X possible, you must focus on expanding what Dan defines as your four most important freedoms — time, money, relationship, and purpose. As your time becomes 10X more valuable, you increasingly multiply the money you earn both in terms of amount and profitable satisfaction. As money becomes a tool you can increasingly access with greater ease, you will engage with a growing number of other freedom-motivated individuals."

https://medium.com/@benjaminhardy/10x-is-easier-than-2x-how-world-class-entrepreneurs-achieve-more-by-doing-less-7887303f52e9

12. "Because the traditional vehicle of the last few decades — the startup company — assumes a stable political environment that is no longer in evidence. For example, our literature on competition assumes founders are facing corporate rivals, not captured regulators.

Our models of investment assume that some companies may die over time from bankruptcy, not that many companies might die at once from a failed banking system. And our theory around international expansion assumes that countries actually want economic growth, not that they’ll fight it with trade barriers, product bans, and regulations.

Even more fundamentally, if you’re in the West, you can no longer assume the power will be on, the roads will be open, the fires will be put out, or the crime will be put down. You can no longer assume your bank account will be there tomorrow, your passport will remain valid tomorrow, or that your speech will remain free tomorrow. You can’t just start a space company, or even a taxi company, without worrying about the politics of it all.

At a fundamental level, the political environment we grew up with is transforming from constant to variable. So the model of ignoring politics to focus on technology is no longer applicable. That model worked in its day, but today innovating in tech requires somehow gaining the ability to innovate in politics, without getting entangled with DC. We can’t assume Western institutions are going to keep basic infrastructure — like banking, law enforcement, or even electricity — working anymore. So what do we do next?"

https://balajis.com/p/network-state-conference

13. "In the pursuit of greater intelligence and understanding, Jevon’s Paradox reminds us that complexity is an ever-present companion to most things in the world. You for sure have opportunities to simplify ornate processes and rules in your own organizations. We get more software and tech tools that are supposed to make things faster, but they can easily add more busywork that makes us less efficient and simply creates more red tape or boxes to check, applied incorrectly.

We create onboarding processes for new team members that are overwhelming during a time they are already emotionally overwhelmed. We make it impossibly difficult for customers to get the service they need or even figure out how to contact you. You can think of more examples here, I’m sure.

To overcome these challenges, we must harness the power of simplicity and think through issues from first principles, as well as be unafraid of tearing something up because it’s become unwieldy or makes no sense. Respecting your users and teams also involves not frustrating them with unnecessary complexity for complexity’s sake."

https://www.hottakes.space/p/jevons-paradox-and-a-world-of-spiraling

14. Another masterpiece by Andressen. A long one but worth a read and good call to action. Be a Techno Optimist.

"Our enemies are not bad people – but rather bad ideas.

Our present society has been subjected to a mass demoralization campaign for six decades – against technology and against life – under varying names like “existential risk”, “sustainability”, “ESG”, “Sustainable Development Goals”, “social responsibility”, “stakeholder capitalism”, “Precautionary Principle”, “trust and safety”, “tech ethics”, “risk management”, “de-growth”, “the limits of growth”.

This demoralization campaign is based on bad ideas of the past – zombie ideas, many derived from Communism, disastrous then and now – that have refused to die.

Our enemy is stagnation."

https://pmarca.substack.com/p/the-techno-optimist-manifesto

15. This is always good. Jason Lemkin is a sharp dude and glad he is my friend.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i_xu9NK53E0

16. Part 2 of this. So much wisdom. Saastr AMA: so awesome. Net net: You will never fail if you don't quit.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iMxDzn-1Wdw&t=425s

17. Always enjoy Zeihan's takes on the world. He has been more right than wrong.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=klzJyO2cXas

18. "But, these two sparse data points do suggest that the acquisition market is moving in synchrony with the public valuation environment. Benjamin Graham said over the long term, the market is a weighing machine, even if in the short term it’s a voting machine."

https://tomtunguz.com/initial-exits-2023/

19. Learning from the greats: Elad Gil. You have to have a great product and also a commercial mindset. And be capital efficient.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JT9Q1KY-D5Y

20. "In other words, we should recognize that these two hot wars (the Israel-Hamas war and the Russia-Ukraine war) are not just between the parties directly involved in them—these wars are part of the bigger great power conflicts to shape the new world order—and they will have big effects on the countries who are allies and enemies of the four sides in these two seemingly irreconcilable wars.

These two wars will cost the allies of these countries a lot. For example, the US is now fighting proxy wars in Europe and the Middle East while preparing for war in East Asia. As these wars spread, they will cost more. 

Fortunately, the progression toward a world war between the biggest powers (the US and China) has not yet crossed the irreversible line from being containable (which it is now) to becoming a brutal war between the biggest powers and their allies."

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/another-step-toward-international-war-ray-dalio

21. "Liscovich is a strange, liminal figure produced by a novel sort of conflict. He is a civilian neck-deep in military work, a Silicon Valley emissary to battlefields beset by electronic warfare, a Thomas Friedman character cast into a Joseph Heller world. Having grown up in Zaporizhzhia, in eastern Ukraine, Liscovich went on to a PhD at Harvard and then a career in the San Francisco Bay Area.

For a while, he was the CEO of Uber Works, an Uber offshoot that helped companies find on-demand staffing. When Russia invaded Ukraine, he moved back to Zaporizhzhia and, through circumstance more than intent, became a personal shopper for the Ukrainian army. He deals only in nonlethal equipment—merchandise that’s available off the shelf to everyone, or at most classified as “dual use,” suitable for both military and civilian applications.

Generals and brigade commanders tell him what they need, and he roves the global tech souk, meeting manufacturers and inspecting their products. Then he cajoles wealthy friends or friendly nations to foot the bill and arranges for the matériel to be fetched to the front. In the year and a half since Russia invaded, he has wrangled everything from socks to sensors to Starlink terminals. The two downed Vectors were among his earliest acquisitions, paid for by a Ukrainian benefactor at more than $200,000 a pop.

Loosely speaking, Liscovich is an adviser to the general staff of the army, although the most he gets out of that is a military email ID. The army doesn’t compensate him for his service. Instead, Liscovich said, he cuts himself a paycheck out of donations from an American billionaire. (He wouldn’t say which one, but he assured me it was a household name.) He is one of at least 100 civilians who act as buying agents for Ukraine, an official in the general staff of the army told me.

His is the kind of role that aristocrats played back in the 1800s, when their unelected influence extended to statecraft. Over the past century, as war became a nationalized state function, that species died out. Liscovich is a throwback: a Victorian with an iPhone.”

https://www.wired.com/story/ukraine-russia-war-military-retail/

22. I think this is many of us this last week and half especially. It's been a rough year & many of us feel like crap.

"Make yourself sweat. 

Your body is meant to be in motion. It didn’t evolve to sit all day under artificial light.

Exercise, sweating, and sunlight release endorphins in the brain which will make you feel “good”.

You will feel happier, more energized, and it will also reduce the feelings of stress/anxiety if you were going through them."

https://lifemathmoney.com/what-to-do-when-you-feel-like-shit/

23. More of the implications of India assassinating Sikh on Canadian soil. Multipolar world and great power politics now.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwpn7EwNmcs&t=360s

24. "War is unpredictable and devastating, making wealth preservation during such times a secondary concern at best. However, if you’re looking for ways to safeguard your financial future in the face of conflict, remember—asset portability and geographic diversity are key. You want to move a portion of your assets before conflict erupts or be able to move them if it ever does.

For those not directly facing conflict, you should focus your investments on those assets that do well during periods of higher inflation since inflation tends to be higher during wartime. Historically this meant investing in global equities, real estate, and short-term bonds, however, the future may not necessarily be like the past.

While no one can guarantee the safety of your wealth during wartime, the principles above can help guide you in making hard choices during extremely difficult circumstances. Let us just hope that you never have to use them."

https://ofdollarsanddata.com/how-to-invest-during-times-of-war/

25. "Quick Summary: 1) the *highest probability* way to make it into the $10M+ camp is by starting a small business, 2) the *highest probability* suggests that if someone is obsessed with their 401K or personal home that they are in the $1M or lower net worth range. They are emotionally attached to those two items due to the weight in their net worth, 3) the *probability* of bonds being this low in the future in terms of asset allocation is low given the rate change from 0% to over 5%+ and 4) stocks or real estate should be your preferred *next* step after your first business.

Read that again if you have to! Until you have a small business (even $20K a year is a fine start), you should not bother with investing. You should be investing in yourself to learn the skills needed to grow your biz.

The USA remains as the greatest country on earth to get ahead by practically every metric. **IF** you’re willing to self inflict massive amounts of pain and suffering while everyone else lazily goes through life doing the minimum since the quality of life is so high."

https://bowtiedbull.io/p/talking-about-true-wealth-and-entrenchment

26. "But the livestream e-commerce bubble has begun to deflate this year, with the saturated industry facing an economic downturn. Sick of dwindling salaries, longer working hours, and increasing competition to win over frugal Chinese consumers, livestream sellers are beginning to question their job prospects in the industry."

https://restofworld.org/2023/chinas-livestream-shopping-bubble-is-popping/

27. "That's what the Society of the Spectacle is kind of about, when everything becomes entirely predicated on the appearance of appearances. And we're seeing the response to that now, just based on how often we have to interact with social media, how often we have to interact with each other online, which the pandemic exacerbated.

Media headlines driven by monetizing and Twitter driven by monetizing false information, everything driven by making people feel insecure on social media, all selling you some image of what it is based on what it isn’t.

When we talk about the Society of the Spectacle and talk about the information that we're consuming, especially in a time of intense geopolitical conflict like we're in now, it's really important to check who we are getting information from."

https://kyla.substack.com/p/how-mrbeast-broke-the-economy

28. Learning from Founders Fund. The most iconoclastic & interesting VC fund on the planet.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0L4CrAb73G0&t=82s

29. "It is time for a Marshall Plan-scale effort to rehabilitate the Palestinians, ensure their and their neighbors’ safety, and set a clear roadmap toward a Palestinian state. It should also dismantle Iran’s proxy militias — including Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis — on the Israeli and Saudi borders. Such an effort should be secured and funded by all interested parties, in particular the US, EU, Saudi Arabia, and UAE.

For Israel, the price would likely be a commitment to relinquish control over Gaza and over most of the West Bank. For the Palestinians, it would mean relinquishing the dream of eliminating Israel and settling for a smaller but stable and, ultimately, prosperous country of their own. This effort should encompass Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and Jordan and help stabilize these troubled countries.

Is it too ambitious a plan? It certainly isn't modest. But this is the type of effort the world is now required to make. It would take years, and it would cost billions. But it would be a better investment than never-ending wars and instability."

https://www.drorpoleg.com/its-time-for-a-palestinian-marshall-plan/

30. Every fund manager should listen so they can learn how LPs think.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gwq16XuyVtg

31. "Have you ever looked at the U.S. and thought, ‘man, this looks a lot like the late stage Roman Empire’?

Powerful but divided. Rich but corrupt. Glamorous but dysfunctional.

A source of marvelous technological achievements but unable to build things as it used to.

Ruled by incompetent politicians, owned by a small elite, its masses trapped by unsustainable debt and distracting themselves with endless mind-numbing entertainment.

A nation struggling to meet the many challenges it faces. A people in deep spiritual crisis. In other words a vast empire about to tumble?

Of course you have. You, me, and everybody else.

To assess an empire’s age, Glubb focused on the changes in the minds and hearts of its citizens. He pointed out a shift in attitude “from service to selfishness” due to the “spiritual disease” of decadence. Empires ended with a mood of “cynicism, pessimism and frivolity.”

https://alchemy.substack.com/p/the-roman-empire-fallacy

32. This is the next geopolitical flashpoint sadly.......

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-hoyeJvge3A

33. "Most nontraditional LPs a.k.a. family offices have not been inclined to invest in venture funds, on the basis that they could do no wrong directly investing into companies themselves. Now that this has changed, we have a new challenge in the form of the current market environment. However, it is common knowledge that great companies are founded during challenging economic times. What this means is that well-managed venture funds of the 22'/23' vintage (incl. 24') are said to perform well — as valuations continue to fall.

“But remember, anybody can get it. The hard part is keepin’ it” — Dr Dre

The difficulty for family offices is not only PTSD from the performance of their direct investments, but more so the lack of access to high-potential venture funds.

According to data from a recent FO conference I attended, if they were to go it alone they would need at least $250M to properly source, evaluate and make direct venture investments - with due diligence requiring not just expertise but an expansive network and perspective.

All things considered, investing in a venture fund would make more sense, right? However, it is no longer a game of ‘the most established player wins’ which adds a new paradigm as emerging GPs come to the fore. This brings additional complexity through the challenges of fund diligence, relationship building and post-investment relationship management."

https://medium.com/ltv-capital/the-great-reset-why-family-offices-should-embrace-vc-in-2023-d14f31cbd5e5

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Train Ride Into A War Zone: Returning to Kyiv (Warning: A Political Rant)

One of the best memories I’ve had in my half year backpacking trip in Europe in 1996 was the wonderful train rides. The beautiful forest landscapes blurring in motion, the relaxing rhythmic clanking of the rails. Lots of time to think, relax and process your day. The communal feeling you get meeting random interesting people, either locals or fellow travelers. So much fun.  It’s been decades since a train ride as my business schedule never allowed for this. 

But I’m taking the train from Lviv to Kyiv in October 2023 as there are no flights now and I’m excited. Kyiv is a place I’ve come to love, full of great memories and lots of friends. It was my home for the latter part of 2020 and most of 2021. But now it’s also a war zone experiencing concerted drone and rocket attacks by barbaric Russians in a senseless war now going on for one and half years. This is how long it’s been since I’ve last gone there. 

I’ve so many thoughts going through my head. At the Lviv train station, I saw so many young and old Ukrainian soldiers in uniform coming and going. Many of them being welcomed joyfully by family or being seen off to the front and the war. The faces of worry and sadness are hard to forget. I’m so heartbroken seeing this.  

But as a Canadian Ukrainian friend told me, she recently had dinner with some childhood friends who recently came back from the front. 3 guy friends who grew up together and who had not seen each other since the war began. She showed me the picture and described the incredible joy they had meeting each other after so long. Knowing their friends were alive after the uncertainty of being at war. How can one not be affected by this? 

It’s infuriating when I see blatant evil ignorance & lack of compassion from soulless people like Elon Musk, David Sacks, Tucker Carlson, Vivek Ramaswamy, the hard right and left of America and their efforts to mock the Ukrainians and withdraw support for this country.

 It’s infuriating to see US & Western Europe slow drip advanced weapons in, giving UKraine enough not to lose but not enough weapons to win. All the while as the war grinds down the flower of the Ukrainian populace. If they had spent any time in this country they would know the Ukrainians will fight on with or without us.

Why? Because of the consequent genocide that would happen in Russian victory. If you want to know the evil things that would happen should Russia win just ask Poles, Estonians, Latvians, Lithuanians, Hungarians, Romanians, Czechs and Slovaks. Or even Germany. There is a reason statues of the Red Army “unknown soldier” are also called the “Unknown Rapist.” And ask Ukrainians who experienced Holodomor, a man made famine that killed and estimated 3-5M Ukrainians.  

I hope this war ends soon. But in the meantime, I’ll be doing everything I can to help UKraine. And we in the western world need to continue supporting this amazing country with everything they need. 


Remember Ukrainians are the ones being attacked and invaded (Just like in Israel by the Hamas terrorists for the record). They are the victims. This is about right versus wrong. If we fail Ukraine, then we have failed the free world we supposedly represent. But sadly as  we’ve learned especially in this decade, the Kissinger saying seems to be true: “To be an enemy of America can be dangerous, but to be a friend is fatal.”

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Feeling Like Crap: Surviving Personal Down Cycles

There are days and sometimes even full weeks or months where you just feel like crap. Low energy. Sad. Maybe even depressed. This is normal when you lose your job, facing economic issues or even socially isolated like many of us were in the cursed 2020 covid lockdowns. 

But what is really strange is when you feel like crap with no real reason for it. I found myself feeling down earlier this year. And there really was no real reason for it. No clear direct cause for it. Business and finances were pretty good. My family situation overall at the time was good too. Directionally, things were good overall. Yes, admittedly we are in a financial downturn and more so here in Silicon Valley. But for the most part, was not directly impacted. 

I’ve realized that it’s normal. And probably expected at some point in our lives. All of us have our own cycles, up cycles and down cycles. Our own sometimes unrealistic expectations cause us to naturally feel bad when we don’t meet them. Or sometimes you just feel like crap for no real reason. Life is not one unending party and newer constant levels of happiness as we see on social media. There is no light without dark. 

When these moments of sadness or low energy happen, it’s okay to wallow. Or even take a short break to get your energy back. Stress on “short break.” Thankfully, I run my own show so I can control my schedule and use my time in whatever way I feel like. 

I take some time off. I go to do my meditation, reviewing my mission statement and Vision board and increase my gratitude practice. I also try to exercise more: weights and cardio. No one ever regrets going to the gym. I know how deeply affected I am by the weather so getting more sun is important, which can be tough in San Francisco. That and getting my sleep in order and taking naps. In these times, I also watch standup comedy or watch some motivational talks from Jocko Willick or David Goggins. 

I find this process absolutely key to my mental recovery. As they say, it’s mind over matter. And in the end, it’s fixing your mindset and morale that allows you to stay in the fight. You just have to last and get through it. Good times eventually follow bad times.

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Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads October 22nd, 2023

“To err is human; to forgive, divine”–Alexander Pope

  1. Hard to argue against any of these points. Only people who can reverse Russia's losses are the idiots in US Govt like Matt Gaetz and other appeasers.

https://timothyash.substack.com/p/so-much-winning-by-putin

2. This was an extremely valuable discussion on careers and having goals.(Systems are better). Recommend listening.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FP8AlPI4gaY

3. Such a great show. Also worth watching if you want to know what's up in tech.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHlsBBrV94U

4. These are important discussions as seed VCs try to figure out whether their model and product to founders is useful or not.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZxT-23r5Yag&t=839s

5. "With no need for public-market financing, and more options for finding liquidity, private investors will continue to fund a company until the firm arrives at one of two stations: The company is strong but mature and the returns from its growth phase are fully harvested, or its model is suspect and existing shareholders need to deploy a series of false signals to greater fools so they can fling feces at tourists to the unicorn zoo.

And while private capital investors (aka the very rich) reap the gains, public investors (aka everyone else) have scant access to the markets where real wealth is created. As capital concentrates, so does power. The “shareholder class” has always been elite. But, at one time, it reached down to the merely affluent and then, through pension and retirement funds, to the masses — diffusing influence, and strengthening democracy. Public ownership’s transparency requirements are preventive against collusion, graft, and a steady march toward a dynastic society.

Instead we have bailouts of the rich, tech firms who capture trillions building a thick layer of innovation on top of public investments while decreasing R&D and paying less taxes, and an idolatry of innovators who, despite being absent fathers or just shitty investors, continue to capture our affection and capital."

https://www.profgalloway.com/private/

6. "People are alone, angry, and depressed. Something has to change. The world we're living in is simply unsustainable. The world that millennials were promised no longer exists. It is a lie to pretend otherwise. Millennials were raised to dream big, to believe that we could change the world. Now we are told that we are entitled for desiring more from this life, for asking for the things that we were promised growing up. We’re harangued that we should know our place before seeking to change things. 

Yet, all the while, our elders, the Silent Generation and Baby Boomers, continue to cling onto power while keeping one foot in the grave. How else should one interpret the aging Senators who prefer to die in office of old age and terminal illness rather than relinquish their grip on power? Raised on the importance of competence and promoting the best-qualified people for the job, we watch as our President struggles to climb stairs and our Senate Majority Leader nearly has a stroke on live tv. 

The abandonment of classical American civic virtues didn’t start with millennials, we merely mimicked what we saw in our elders. A few fall days, 9/11, 9/15, and 11/8, totally reshaped millennials’ perception of reality. The intervening years only solidified our cynicism."

https://www.shatterpointsgeopolitics.com/p/a-few-fall-days

7. "This notion of “right-to-left” thinking aligns with other ambitious growth strategies, like the “triple, triple, double, double, double” approach championed by Neeraj Agrawal. The underlying message is clear: set ambitious goals, understand what’s needed to achieve them, and then work backwards to make them a reality.

Adopting this right-to-left methodology where you work backwards from exponential growth is an invaluable approach for entrepreneurs. It emphasizes expansive, long-term vision over incremental, short-term gains. The most significant accomplishments stem from the boldest ambitions."

https://davidcummings.org/2023/10/07/think-about-the-growth-curve-from-right-to-left/

8. Lots of global implications for the barbaric Hamas attacks on Israel.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I7TGj7iLpoA

9. "Like tigers eyeing their prey. The world is starting to revert into a jungle, where the strong prey upon the weak, and where there is a concomitant requirement that every country build up its own strength; if your neighbor is a tiger, you should probably grow some claws of your own. Old scores that had to wait can now be settled. Disputed bits of territory can now be retaken. Natural resources can now be seized. There are many reasons for countries to fight each other, and now one of the biggest reasons not to fight has been removed. 

Anyway, Pax Americana always had an expiration date. If the U.S. had avoided the Iraq War and maintained its defense-industrial base, it could have prolonged its hegemony by about a decade, but ultimately the rising power of China would have ensured the return of the multipolarity that existed before World War 2. In any case, it’s over now, and until and unless a new dominant global coalition of nation-states can be forged — either a Chinese-led global order or some kind of expanded democratic hegemony that includes India and large other developing nations — we’re going to have to re-learn how to live in the jungle.

Over the past two decades it had become fashionable to lambast American hegemony, to speak derisively of “American exceptionalism”, to ridicule America’s self-arrogated function of “world police”, and to yearn for a multipolar world. Well, congratulations, now we have that world. See if you like it better."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/youre-not-going-to-like-what-comes

10. "Although the people who spanned the Inca empire once boasted a range of varied opinions, ideas, expressions, customs, and even gods, Pachacuti ended that within just a few generations. All he left the people with were the ideas, beliefs, and expressions he mandated were acceptable.

I fear if we allow the laws I’ve outlined here to propagate and be further accepted into society, we’ll be faced with the same thing in only a generation or two. We’ll be living in a world of state-sanctioned ideas. A world that our children, or grandchildren will believe is normal, because that will be the world they were born into, and the world that has shaped their ideas and beliefs. The only world they have ever known.

Do you want that world to come to pass? I don’t."

https://abundantia.substack.com/p/you-will-obey

11. Hamas are pawns of Iran (and the axis of Russia/China) and not just terrorists.

"The theory is, Hamas would do do whatever it takes to instigate Israel into doing warcrimes in an attempt to sour their relationship with the Arab world. This would also be great for Iran geopolitically because it could potentially puts the Saudis in a dilemma. It could diminish the Saudi’s influence in the middle east for being friendly and not calling out Israel, or ruin their relationship progress if they do call them out.

Iran is still in the game to be top dog in the middle east."

https://bowtiedhitman.substack.com/p/wtf-happened-in-israel

12. That was a good trip and glad to see the Ukrainian startup scene thriving.

https://ain.capital/2023/10/10/how-to-pitch-the-startup-properly-marvin-liao/

13. "Coming at a time when foreign policy debate in Washington is consumed with the question of whether the United States should focus on the Indo-Pacific or continue its support for Ukraine, the Hamas attack should perhaps also have been expected. The deepening conflict between the world’s democracies, led by the United States, and the de facto Russian-Chinese-Iranian alliance made what is now happening in the Middle East not only possible, but likely."

https://www.city-journal.org/article/a-wake-up-call-for-america-too

14. This was surprisingly interesting and really educational from the controversial Tai Lopez. Be a prince, king or emperor. Most billionaires are warlords.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8tVACv4w1I&t=435s

15. This is worth listening to for startup founders. Angellist has built something very special there culture and organization wise.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Q6a0Smrots

16. I find this therapeutic somehow these days.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RFbWXP-zAQQ

17. "Carey Smith, the founding “contrarian” at Unorthodox Capital has explained how VC is built on bubbles. I’m not suggesting that any of the recent raises are ill-deserved. I wish each company the greatest of success; I know that the DoD needs these products. I do worry, however, that we’re seeing a shift from the deployment of purely “patriotic capital” to the deployment of “momentum capital.”

https://andrewglenn.substack.com/p/hot-in-herre

18. Every creator entrepreneur should watch this. It’s such a master class on building online.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVnAsulQAl4

19. Mexico will be the place to be it seems.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hYSwKaGWZKU

20. What an interesting and impressive dude. Great interview with doctor and businessman.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3K43YBxUp0I&t=307s

21. "So Hamas it seems was the dog that caught the car. We have reports coming in they wanted to do just another attack on Israel. However, they caught what is now seeming to be the perfect storm with: Israel having less military assets due to supporting the front lines in Ukraine, some reservists not showing up due to political rhetoric, bureaucratic red tape with Israeli Intelligence and perhaps some construction corruption.

This resulted in them in just inciting chaos and destruction rather than any informed or coordinated strike on any high value targets within Israel. Because they had no strategy beyond the wall.

The balance of Power within the Middle East has shifted.

These attacks and retaliations underscore the idea that no one can live in harmony with the enemy on their doorstep. Ukraine is perhaps another example of this… We are now entering an era where hard power is returning, the era of Globalization and Peace is ending, where old wounds will be exposed, and borders redrawn.

We are living through History."

https://mercurial.substack.com/p/holy-war

22. "Thanks in part to a massive, well funded influence operation in the West, the Qatari regime has succeeded in branding itself in western circles as an intermediary force that can help to negotiate between jihadists and western governments. Of course, that couldn’t be further from the truth.

Qatar is not only protected by its army of lobbyists, which include former U.S. military officials who have sold their soul for jihadi blood money, Doha is geopolitically protected by the Al Udeid Air Base southwest of Doha, which hosts the U.S. Air Force and other foreign air forces.

What often remains unspoken, through the fog of Qatar’s well-funded influence campaign, is the reality that these jihadist forces are protected, celebrated, and advanced by Doha. It’s not difficult to discover Qatar’s longtime funding and arming of several internationally recognized terrorist organizations."

https://www.dossier.today/p/the-qatari-elephant-in-the-room

23. What an interesting perspective on the global economy. From an Irish hedge funder based in London.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HdKCC31nOI

24. "what remains of the civilized world can. It can arm, it can stand together, and it can steel itself to inflict violence differently than the barbarians do, but to far greater effect. The civilized nations are enormously wealthy, have large and capable armed forces and behind them vast reserves of talented men and women. They have the capacity, should they care to exercise it, to contain and push back the barbarians—who, let us remember, will never entirely go away, and who will always haunt our nightmares."

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/10/barbarism-israel-gaza-hamas-russia-war/675613/

25. "To placate its proletariat — who just wanted their good-paying manufacturing jobs back — former US President Trump started a trade war with China. Current US President Biden has continued the onslaught by signing into law the CHIPS Act and Inflation Reduction Act. These acts give generous government subsidies and outright payments to companies for building domestic semiconductor facilities and clean energy infrastructure. These outlays will be paid for by issuing more debt in the form of bonds, which in turn are purchased by the US’ trading partners.

America is cheating by using the savings of China, Japan, and Germany to rebuild domestic industry so that American firms can make goods for America. Obviously, that diminishes the market for Chinese, Japanese, and German goods. As expected, many export-focused nations have cried “protectionism” (as if American politicians give a fuck when faced with losing at the ballot box).

Predictably, US Treasuries have lost value in energy terms, as the amount of debt in circulation has grown exponentially. If I were a large holder of these pieces of trash, I would be fucking pissed. China, Japan, and Germany obviously see the writing on the wall, which is why they have ceased re-investing their export earnings into these bonds. That is cheating as well.

Errbody’s cheating, and for valid reasons. It is obvious that a new global economic system will eventually be created, whether the elites like it or not. The imbalances cannot continue. But as long as those in charge refuse to acknowledge reality, money will be printed in hopes that “growth” is just around the corner — and we can thus Make America, China, Japan, and Germany Great Again!"

https://medium.com/@cryptohayes/double-happiness-18c6533c22ca

26. Older podcast (2 months old) but still very relevant. End of VC Epoch.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybMPkzKVKEk

27. This seems sadly descriptive of the West, especially America. 

https://twitter.com/NeckarValue/status/1712563533341462965

28. Tai Lopez is back. It's a really fascinating conversation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Qn07rX79pU

29. "In addition to outmaneuvering the Biden administration, MBS restored ties with Qatar, made moves to end a war he had started in Yemen, and, most unbelievably of all, patched up his relationship with Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the president of Turkey. It was Erdoğan who had released secret recordings that exposed MBS’s involvement in the Khashoggi murder in 2018, and photos of the two men shaking hands last year proved that the crown prince was willing to put political considerations above personal grudges.

The secret to MBS’s power is his ability to spend lavishly, without checks and balances. It makes Saudi Arabia and its powerful sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund, one of the world’s most sought-after financial institutions. On top of remaking the country’s economy, Saudi Arabia is plowing billions of dollars into sports, entertainment, and gaming, all areas that improve the country’s standing with young people around the globe.

It may be that, by simply appearing open to the deal, MBS has been able to put Jamal Khashoggi’s murder behind him in the eyes of the diplomatic community and recast himself as the Middle East’s most consequential figure."

https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2023/10/saudi-israeli-deal-likely-off-mbs

30. Both experts in Personal Holding Companies. Build or Buy. Do both.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9g6ErC0O9g0&t=819s

31. "My point is that a lot of complexity is required just to meet today’s baseline expectations. When you meet them, a user doesn’t scream out in joy—they just use it. Maybe that’s one reason why software development has become slower."

https://every.to/p/why-we-don-t-ship-software-as-fast-as-we-used-to

32. "If you scroll back through previous issues of this newsletter, you’ll find a recurring theme: societal ills resulting from cravings. From meme stocks and Robinhood to TikTok addiction and Twitter enragement, to obesity itself, human weakness subjugated to our brain’s reward circuitry is no less a threat to our well-being than climate change, authoritarianism, or cancer. According to Harvard’s Grant Study on happiness, the factor most commonly present in the least-happy cohort was alcohol. It’s that fundamental.

A drug that rewires these reward circuits could be an epochal step in human evolution. And why not? We’ve compensated for evolution in many other ways, from the protection of clothing to the assistance of eyeglasses to the power of wheeled transport. Perhaps we’ve reached the point where a salt/fat/dopa drive, evolved on the savannah of scarcity, can give way to a motivational superstructure suited for our era of superabundance. GLP-1 innovation may be scaffolding for instincts in need of updating."

https://www.profgalloway.com/seconds/

33. "The Israeli demand for Palestinians in north Gaza to move south in 24H surely is inhumane, infeasible and worrying when combined with suggestions from some in Israel that Palestinians from Gaza should be relocated to Sinai in Egypt.

This smacks of ethnic cleansing which I would have thought the West understood from its experience from the wars for Yugoslav succession. Our governments seem to learn nothing from history.

Surely no civilised country can punish a whole nation for the actions of a minority. The language being used by many and, indeed actions on the battlefield would suggest otherwise now.

It is sad to see the lack of humanity from the extremes on both sides.

Our leaders fail to learn that much from history - sad, and worrying."

https://timothyash.substack.com/p/reflections-on-developments-in-the

34. "From an entrepreneur’s standpoint, it’s easy to become engrossed in the thrill of securing funding, expanding the team, and growing the business. Yet, more growth doesn’t always equal a better business. Some markets just aren’t that big. Some markets take longer to develop. Furthermore, personal priorities evolve, and one’s perspective on opportunities can shift over time. And, every round of funding shifts the goal posts further out. 

Entrepreneurs shouldn’t keep raising money just because they can, especially after a $100M valuation. Instead, entrepreneurs should continually evaluate what they’re signing up for and what outcomes are required to be successful."

https://davidcummings.org/2023/10/14/100m-valuation-and-no-more-funding/

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Becoming a Complete And Better You: The New Modern Renaissance Man

Aubrey Marcus’ “Own your Day, Own Your Life” was one of the most important books I read. 

A great book that showed you how to have command of every aspect of your life if you want to have a true life. Your diet, exercise, physical health, family & relationships, mental health, business and financial and romantic life. If you aren’t working on these all the time it will come back to haunt you. 

This is exactly what happened to me. I focused too much on my career and let myself and my family life decay. It took a lot of personal work to fix it over the last few years. And a lot of it was because I lost the respect of my wife due to me losing respect for myself due to issues at work. Indignity after indignity at work eventually bleeds into your home life. 

There is a funny scene in the excellent movie “Crazy Stupid Love” where a family man finds himself mentored by a playboy Jacob after getting cheated on by his wife. Jacob tells him: “Your wife cheated on you because you lost sight of who you are as a man, a husband and probably a lover.”

Now I’m lucky, I did not have infidelity issues with my wife but we were separated & apart for a while. It wasn’t good for a few years. But it was a wake up call for me to sort myself out. 

So many men let themselves go. They say they did everything right, by society’s standards. And they probably have. But they stopped developing and growing personally. They stopped investing in themselves and improving on every level that matters. No surprise, their wives begin to look down on them or disrespect them. 

The reality is they only respect you if you are strong and have your Sh-t together. No one respects the weak or stupid. There is no excuse to have a dad bod or be out of shape. Go do more sit ups and push ups! Learn a martial art or do some hard physical training. 

Jack D Coulson tweeted: “Don’t be rich and fat. Don’t be fit and poor. Have both.”

Have big massive goals and figure out your personally inspiring life mission. Be interesting and aspire to become greater.

There is no excuse to be financially unstable. Read a book, learn business and Go Do the work. 

You have to be both tender and capable of hard physical activity. Justin Waller said that: “you have to be able to slit throats and also hold a baby.”

Honestly, there is no point having great wealth without the corresponding health & vigor. There is no point having a powerful body without financial resources and a powerful intellect. It’s about becoming a full & complete man. Jordan Peterson adds: “Become a Controlled Monster.”  

Why? Quoting Peterson again: “It’s Better to be a warrior in a garden than a Gardener in a War.” 

And make no mistake, war is coming. It is always coming. Mark my words, life is going to become much tougher for everyone. It might not be imminent but it’s inevitable. So all men have a duty to prepare and toughen up. And while doing so, maybe their lives will get better at the same time. 

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Life Without Constraints Leads to Crazy: Love the Process

I’ve tracked Tony Hsieh’s career and life and reading about him again in the new book “Wonder Boy” helps me recall his greatness but also his tragic last few years. 

It’s a reminder of how easy it is to destroy yourself. Especially when you are massively rich. Living life without any checks and balances. Surrounded by cloying yes men. They have almost infinite resources to satisfy any of their whims or desires. 

This is why overnight wealth and success is usually highly destructive. They did not develop the mindset nor the discipline to manage it properly. The best example are big lottery prize winners. They almost always end up poor despite winning a massive cash prize. 

I used to wonder why I wasn’t successful earlier in life. Curse why I did not have the courage or brains or luck to get there faster. Now I feel I am fortunate that it’s taken decades. For me and my personality, especially in my younger days, having this wealth and success early would have been a fast lane to tremendous personal and professional mistakes.  In my youth and arrogance, I would have made too many bad decisions and probably wasted it. 

The great philosopher Naval said: "Making money through an early lucky trade is the worst way to win. The bad habits that it reinforces will lead to a lifetime of losses."

Or worse, indulged my darker instincts. My anger management issues would have certainly become far worse. At minimum, I would have become complacent and stopped learning and evolving. This is a form of death in itself. 

The point is always be patient and do the work. Learn to be grateful for what you have and for where you are. At every point in your life. Embrace the struggle and lessons along the way. Don’t stop being so goal driven, as that’s the key to success and excellence. But also make sure that you enjoy the process along the way. It will provide you peace, and dare I say, some grace in your life. It certainly does make life more enjoyable. 

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Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads October 15th, 2023

“Don’t fear failure. Not failure, but low aim, is the crime. In great attempts it is glorious to even fail.” – Bruce Lee

  1. This is enlightening. Syed has built an online empire at a very young age.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzHdrQ5pDFo

2. Unbelievable fund and impressive performance. Semil and Haystack Ventures.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxmSyVVhazg

3. "Wifi money by definition is location-independent income. 

You have no boss and no financial reason to stay in the U.S.A. if you don’t want to.

So if you want to relocate to a lower-cost of living location with a more traditional culture then an online business is really the only way to do it.

The problem?

You have to go through years of pain to get to that point.

I’ve talked over and over again about the years of struggle you’ll have to go through to get to the point where you have complete wifi money freedom."

https://www.tetramarketing.io/p/online-businesses-and-passport-bros

4. "The net effect of these developments has been a major Ukrainian advantage in the artillery war.

Massive losses have forced a change in how Russia uses its artillery guns. Whereas pre-war doctrine placed brigade artillery assets 4km from the front, Russian artillery units now hide 15-20km behind the frontlines, advancing only for brief periods to conduct fire missions.

While this may improved the survivability of those Russian guns, their continued communication problems mean that Russian units on the contact line suffer from poorly timed and coordinated fire support. 

It is now Ukrainian artillery that operate close to the frontlines with impunity, and Russian batteries that have largely been forced back to a safer distance."

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2023/9/23/2194180/-Ukraine-Update-Russia-was-unprepared-for-a-modern-artillery-war

5. This was a great interview, some valuable frameworks for looking at startup investing. Especially for AI.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZZgerlKINHA

6. Volatile future seems to be an understatement.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ddWh5rI7Mw8

7. "If one thing is never happening, it’s “dedollarization” in Argentina. No one has ever seen a Yuan bill in their life, and they would never swap their Benjies for Mao. 

Everyone with half a brain here understands that a currency with capital controls like the Yuan could never be a store of value versus a currency that can be used without any of those restrictions. 

Libertarian economist and presidential candidate Javier Milei is proposing a full dollarization by shutting down the BCRA and adopting the dollar."

https://bowtiedbull.io/p/watching-a-country-fail-in-real-time

8. Long overdue to visit Buenos Aires, one of my favorite cities in the world.

"Buenos Aires is a city that people fall in love with at first sight, or people find “too European”. The great thing about the city is that there’s enough Latam vibes to go around and it is still a place with beautiful architecture and great nightlife & restaurant options. 

For a country with close to 150% real inflation on the ground, restaurants and bars are packed every single day. Those pesos need to be spent at lightning speed."

https://bowtiedbull.io/p/city-guide-buenos-aires-bowtiedmara

9. "If emotion is data, people are as well. People and data are two critical pillars of every single company. If you’re not investing a good chunk of your time on it every single week to become a master in those two domains, you’re screwing up. Whenever you chat with an investor, a partner, or a customer, take it as a chance to test whether you really master what you’re talking about or if you’re still compensating for your lack of depth, clarity, and precision.

You are not an exception.

Master to Conquer!"

https://2lr.substack.com/p/master-and-conquer

10. This is absolutely not good news.

"In late 2021, I wrote a post arguing that Xi Jinping simply isn’t that competent of a leader, noting a number of areas in which his initiatives seemed to be failing. The piece drew fire from a lot of “China hands” who felt I was straying outside of my lane (which was true), while a number of other people scoffed at the idea that the absolute ruler of an ascendant superpower could be anything other than a genius. Two years later, after Zero Covid, diplomatic blunders, and a real estate crash, my thesis is close to conventional wisdom.

In recent weeks, a spate of articles has come out in the Western press blaming Xi for failing to adequately stimulate China’s flagging economy. Xi’s personal objections to welfarism — or to any economic policy he didn’t initially plan for — seem to be a stumbling block. 

Xi is also clearly the kind of Boomer conservative whose understanding of economics is heavily tinged with industrial nostalgia and strange notions of masculinity. That’s not a sound basis for making economic policy, and so policy mistakes like fiscal austerity in the middle of a financial crisis are only to be expected."

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/what-if-xi-jinping-isnt-that-competent

11. This is a great summary of good customer acquisition channels for brands. Really really good.

https://bowtiedbull.io/p/uncommon-marketing-strategies-california

12. The end of the industrial model of Venture Capital. Great discussion.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j22TodbqM7s&t=1272s

13. Really depressing but enlightening discussion on geopolitics, the USA and its military. The importance of property rights and the dangers of regulatory capture in the USA.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3x6KDLovJFg

14. The gold standard of seed investing. One of the best but relatively unknown investors in the world. Roger Ehrenberg IA Ventures. So much insight here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAestOS4-OI

15. My favorite new podcast. More or Less: Morins Meet the Lessins. Very timely conversation on the zeitgeist in Silicon Valley.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eF34BGimRaI

16. Zeihan is a bear on China but still....the Chinese real estate bubble is crazy scary.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PVMlEiewyT4

17. Not the nicest man, but brilliant operator and VC investing at the bleeding edge of technology.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EIjxJM_KPsM&t=525s

18. Insightful view on the French and their African colonies. Explains a lot of what’s going on.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKL_TvieqBg&t=334s

19. "These are the three major “trends”. If you are in survival mode the games are played at different levels. If you have some assets, you sell those to pay the mortgage. If you go through that you go into balance transfers and credit. So on and so forth. We just provided the three general things people will do which is: 1) sell liquid stuff, 2) extend and pretend/balance transfer and 3) begin walking away from assets that are lower on the “importance” stack.

The markets are emotional and everyone is making the same bet “they will print and save us”. While it is true that the eventual solution is printing the question is *when*. Remember, they can hold rates as high as they like for at least 2 years due to the unlimited debt ceiling.

Anyone who is close to default will be part of the list of casualties. When the Fed steps in, it will be *after* job loss, foreclosures, bankruptcies and general pain for the public."

https://bowtiedbull.io/p/making-sense-of-the-markets-and-preparing

20. "In essence, young nerds aren't necessarily more innovative because of their age, but rather due to their higher mobility, which allows them the freedom to move to areas where they can connect with fellow nerds. It's still an age-related factor (given that mobility tends to be associated with youth, as I can personally attest), but it's not tied to the biological aspect of age.

A thought-provoking takeaway emerges: by enhancing the mobility of older nerds, it's possible to offset the demographic decline among younger nerds and its negative impact (per Zeihan) on innovation."

https://www.europeanstraits.com/p/who-and-where-are-todays-innovators


21. "For three and a half months, the world’s eyes have been on the handful of villages and the fields surrounding them south of Orikhiv. Of all the areas where Ukrainian forces have advanced, this one is the most consequential, and the best defended.

Since the counteroffensive was launched in June, the story of the Orikhiv axis has been the story of the 47th, with ups and downs, moments of immense pride and inevitable regret."

https://kyivindependent.com/overcoming-setbacks-nato-trained-brigade-breaches-surovikin-line-in-zaporizhzhia-oblast/

22. Lots of good insights. Investor Operator podcast. Learned a bunch here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88g9afUw3dQ&t=15s

23. "However, venture investing is far from “easy”. While it may seem tempting to jump into the start-up world, family offices should not underestimate the complexities and the risk involved. Unlike passive investments, venture capital requires active participation and significant expertise to navigate the unique challenges inherent in this asset class."

https://concentric.vc/news/want-to-try-venture-investing-it-isnt-as-easy-as-you-might-think/

 

24. Love these conversations on what's happening in Silicon Valley.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KkuAjqXfoOw

25. "While SaaS may be ubiquitous in developed markets, helping businesses manage everything from inventory to HR and cashflows, it is still nascent in emerging economies. There are two key challenges for SaaS adoption in these markets.

The first is the willingness and ability of businesses, especially SMEs, to pay for software. Many have become accustomed to using it for free and push back against subscription fees.

The second is the digital literacy of the end user, which can lead to low engagement and churn unless the right education and onboarding is put in place."

https://sturgeoncapital.substack.com/p/100m-arr-club-part-iii

26. Interesting list. I agree with Georgia and Thailand for sure. Montenegro and Malaysia are cool too.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dqaPm5cUzdI

27. "But because the Belt and Road was so ill-conceived, this warm fuzzy feeling always had an expiration date. Now that the Belt and Road has basically failed, and the cash faucet has been shut off, delight at China’s seeming largesse is clearly going to be replaced with resentment and distrust. Acting like a mafia loanshark is not generally a way to win friends and influence people. 

Note that although this is a debt trap, it isn’t really a case of “debt-trap diplomacy”, as some people accuse. Debt-trap diplomacy is where you get a country to owe you money, and you force it to make geopolitical concessions in exchange for loan forbearance. China doesn’t appear to be doing that; instead it appears to simply be walking away with as much of the money as it can, and thumbing its nose as it walks away, and leaving developing countries bitter and resentful. 

That’s just a mind-bogglingly bad long-term strategy for achieving global leadership. China’s leaders tout their country as the leader of the Global South, but they’re raiding developing countries like their own personal piggy bank.

Throughout the whole saga of the Belt and Road, China’s government treated countries like Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Zambia like Chinese provinces — assuming they could and would strongarm their populations into supporting new infrastructure, prioritizing economic throughput over efficiency and profitability, and counting on those other countries to take the hit when the projects went…er…south." 

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/how-chinas-debt-traps-actually-work

28. Optimistic view of SaaS. Mr Lemkin is a smart dude and hope he is right.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4FoMoUzW8w

29. "I wanted to dig into Anduril’s M&A activity specifically because it stands out as a unique company-building strategy for such a young startup. After conversations with the team and dozens of hours of research, Anduril’s acquisitions have illuminated what makes Anduril tick, and why I think it has a real shot at becoming a sixth Defense Prime alongside Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman, and General Dynamics.  

Every successful company has a “thing.” Of all of the many things they do, there’s one that’s the secret sauce, the thing they do better than anyone else. SpaceX can get kilograms to orbit more cheaply than anyone else. Meta connects people. Google dominates search. ByteDance does addictive algorithmic feeds. Amazon is a logistics powerhouse. Microsoft sells software to enterprises. 

Anduril’s “thing” isn’t any of its particular products, or even its Lattice OS; its thing is its ability to sell modern defense capabilities into the DoD."

https://www.notboring.co/p/anduril-acquiring-prime

30. "The attitude in Kyiv is that there is no choice but to find companies to help them do it themselves.

“Priority number one is that Ukraine will be self-reliant because even if the war finishes today, Ukraine will be a shield for Europe against future attempts by Russia,” to grab territory or destabilize Europe, said Verkhniatskyi from COSA Intelligence Solutions. “It’s just going to happen. The Russians are just simply going to be Russians forever.”

https://www.politico.com/news/2023/10/02/ukraine-looks-to-arm-itself-as-western-support-slips-00119528

31. Damn good discussion on AI and VC. Worth listening to.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqfzn53dKhc

32. "My broad thesis on the consumer ecosystem (including both B2C and B2B businesses) is that the consumer experience follows a steady arc toward 1) more convenient, 2) more affordable, and 3) more enjoyable, with technology acting as the force bending the arc. More enjoyable often means more personalized—more customized to our distinct wants and needs.

Hyper-personalization is one of the largest decades-long shifts. We see it appear in culture, where our expectations have become personalization; we’ve gotten spoiled. And we see enabling technologies like AI arising to make new degrees of customization possible. Soon, everyone should get their own personalized healthcare plan; their own personalized learning path; their own personalized shopping recommendations.

 If the 20th Century was about mass consumption, the 21st Century is about “bespoke consumption.” 

https://www.digitalnative.tech/p/the-hyper-personalization-of-everything

33. "And the United States should be prepared to fight for Taiwan. Should the island fall to China, America’s most potent geopolitical rival will have gained the world’s 21st-largest economy, roughly equivalent to Switzerland’s or Poland’s. China would also gain a dense clot of advanced technology, particularly in the area of computer chips. A key piece of the so-called first island chain in the Pacific would be in hostile hands, endangering the sea lanes of our closest Pacific allies, particularly Japan.

American credibility would take a brutal blow, and our allies would have to wonder whether they should accommodate China or resort to the development of their own nuclear arsenals to substitute for the guarantees of an unreliable superpower.

And not least important: Another liberal democratic state would be snuffed out, in a world in which free government, liberty, and rule of law are already under pressure."

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/10/big-lie-about-taiwan/675523/

34. Hmmm......5 for 5 here. ;) No wonder no one likes VCs.

https://sifted.eu/articles/liars-hypocrites-egoists-we-are-vcs


35. "For founders, investors, and others who care about tech, my message is simple: it’s time to pay attention to San Francisco again.

In contrast to the doom-and-gloom of the mainstream media, startup and investor activity is picking up dramatically in both San Francisco and Silicon Valley. While we still haven’t hit the bottom in terms of tech layoffs or startups reaching the end of their runway — and San Francisco itself has an incredibly difficult journey ahead of it — the phoenix is beginning to rise from the ashes.

The city of San Francisco is different from before. SoMa is no longer ground zero for everything in tech. Many startups and VCs have moved to other neighborhoods, like the Mission, Potrero, the Presidio and Hayes Valley (though for the love of god, please stop trying to rename it “Cerebral Valley”).

If you’re a Canadian VC, it’s once again time to get out of Canada. If you’re a Canadian founder, you should probably do the same. Founders and investors alike need to benchmark themselves against the best in the world, and the San Francisco Bay Area is reclaiming its crown."

https://chrisneumann.com/blog/sf-is-back

36. "What stands out when reviewing these three very different regimes is how the US has effectively supported startups and innovation over every period, irrespective of interest rates. The US maximized the potential of multiple productive bubbles since 1995, followed by significant public spending to create a platform for future innovators.

Presently, there are indications of direct government intervention under a new industrial policy, aimed at fostering innovation for long-term objectives such as addressing climate change, reducing trade dependence on China, and transitioning away from fossil fuels. As if the US innovation engine can never be stopped!"

https://www.europeanstraits.com/p/what-high-interest-rates-do-to-startups

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Counter Lesson from the “Summer of 69”: Improving Your Life Every Day & Every Year

One of the songs I used to listen to all the time was Bryan Adams “Summer of 69”, classic rock song that signifies the nostalgia we all feel for our high school years. Especially the lack of any responsibilities and fun filled summers with friends. In the song for those who don’t know it, there is the most famous part: “Those were the best days of my life.” 

I love that song but hate that part. It’s sad to think that your best days are behind you. You are doing something seriously wrong if that is the case. 

In fact, I believe every single year should be the best days of your life. You should be looking forward to even better times. 


I’m 49 and I can genuinely say I’ve enjoyed pretty much every year since. Okay, 2020 sucked pretty badly, 2022 was not great either. But overall, year over year I’ve had a great time. I’m fitter and healthier than I was at 29 years of age, eat amazing foods, read interesting books. I continue to have tremendous adventures all over the world, visiting new cities and countries; meeting and making new friends all the time. I’m learning new things all the time while building & stacking assets. 

You have to actively work on improving yourself and your life. You should be getting better in every single aspect: Your health, your career, business, finances, your relationships. 

You are the literal architect and tradesman of your life. Take it seriously and you will have little to be nostalgic about. That’s a good thing and means you are moving in the right direction in life. 

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