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Willem
So, Oscar, tell me about the $12 billion buyout of CI Financial.
Oscar
CI Financial. So it was an opportunity in plain view, as we call it. Right. We've been hunting the markets looking for mispriced assets that are kind of hiding in plain view if you wish, on the public markets. CI was listed in Toronto. It was an old mutual fund company. Right. So not very sexy in terms of industry and it was trading as such. But underneath CI there was Coriant. And Quarant was the largest and fastest growing ultra high net worth platform in the United States for wealth management and really sort of a highly attractive and strategic asset when we decided to take CI private. Both businesses are attractive, but for different reasons, but Coriant was really sort of the crown jewel of the company.
Willem
One of the fascinating things when we last chatted about, you talked about there's not much capital competition from capital sources that could write these ten $12 billion checks in this case. Tell me about that.
Oscar
We've been trying to focus on a segment on the market where there is a little bit of complexity and relatively large tickets. And if you do that, we see competition falling away quite fast. Right. There's really only a handful of funds that can write a check of this size. And most of them are not really embracing complexity or hair as part of their investment thesis. They're more focused on stable capital deployment and getting money back fast. We've, we as a firm have developed a bit of a modus operandi where we embrace complexity a little bit as an enabler of alpha for us. And when we do that with big tickets, we find that we usually don't face that much competition.
Willem
What does it mean in the context of Mubadala making an investment into a highly complex deal?
Oscar
We started really embracing complexity in our Brazilian investment business a little over a decade ago and we ended up in a corporate restructuring due to reasons that were not intentional. And when we did that, we learned really sort of how to deal with complexities. It was high level of complexity, debt for equity swaps, Chapter 11 environment, bankruptcy, et cetera. After a while we realized that we were pretty good at it. It had been growing for, I don't know, the better part of two decades at this stage. And most private equity investors were more like growth investors. So we had nearly the only experience from this type of high complexity in the market and we started exploiting it on purpose. So we raised special opportunity funds and started investing in it. And then as we sort of revamped our global private equity franchise a couple of years ago, we kind of honestly assumed that it wouldn't be possible in the US market because it's too efficient. We won't find these types of opportunities. But I think as CI for instance has proven, it's actually not true. We do find the same level of opportunity. So now we purposefully seek out some level of complexity. It doesn't have to be an outright bankruptcy or anything, but something that just makes it a little bit more complicated to execute that allows us then to ultimately find some value on the buy.
Willem
Reminds me of this story. Two economists are walking down the side of the street and there's a hundred dollars bill and they just walk past that and a passerby comes by and says why didn't you pick up the a hundred dollars? And they said it can't exist. Yeah, sometimes this common sense could be over applied and there's opportunities in fair sight that no one's taking because everybody's making the same assumptions.
Oscar
Yeah, I think that's right. After the deal when you explain the entry valuation and how we got in, people are like, but why didn't anyone else do it? And yeah, maybe that's why shouldn't be allowed to exist.
Willem
As CIO of Mabatala Capital, how do you go about deploying this capital?
Oscar
We have a number of products in house that we manage. Obviously we have our private equity franchise which is, you know, basically U.S. and Europe. We have our Brazilian business. We have a solutions business which is more, you know, Evergreen Capital Structures and co investment funds where we also manage some of this money through smas. We have a number of insurance partnerships that we've struck and invested in. What really makes us a little bit different from most of the other funds out there is that we have the ability to write these really large tickets like CI again as an example of that, where we can invest out of a private equity fund. On the COVID of the fund is a $3 billion fund. We'll anchor the deal, but then we'll deploy the rest of the capital alongside the fund vehicle. So we're really sort of doing much larger tickets deal by deal and deploying into them.
Willem
Is that like a 9 billion co invest?
Oscar
Well, the equity check was a little bit smaller than that, but it was, you know, it was like a $5 billion co invest effectively. Right. Which is pretty sizable. So I think we've been able to develop that as a bit of our niche. And I think our investors and LPs and partners, they have the ability to make, you know, what is a relatively modest commitment to a Fund and get access to co investment opportunities that far exceed the entire size of the fund.
Willem
You're obviously not the only fund in the world that could write $12 billion checks. But how big is this universe? Are we talking about dozens? Are we talking about a handful?
Oscar
I think it's a handful almost. Right. The very, very large funds could do it and there's only a handful of them. And we can write our checks on a case by case basis. If we really like the deal and we have high dedicated, you know, high conviction on an opportunity and we have partners that want to participate, we can go ahead and write the check. And even for a high conviction deal, even if we don't have partners, we have a balance sheet to rely on so we can effectively bridge the deal and then after the fact go and offer it up to our partners and co investors. Which has been again, something that has been very, very popular with the LP community because we don't have to force people to run at the pace that we're running the deal. We can actually do the deal, back it with a balance sheet and then take our time to syndicate it down to the partnership.
Willem
So you go to the larger Mubadala pool of capital, you could essentially warehouse the deal and then you could deploy it alongside your LPs on their timeline.
Oscar
Yeah, that's right, that's right.
Willem
And you guys have really led with this strategic partnership model where you're a strategic partner of choice for gps. What does that mean exactly?
Oscar
It means a number of, number of different things I think. One, we're always, you know, we've been very partnership orientated as a firm. We're trying to find partners, be a good partner over the long run. I think it means that we find like minded GPS that leads to, you know, deal flow. It, it could be us offering up a deal to, to someone else to participate alongside us. It could be the other way around. So it could be a form of sourcing opportunities. A lot of the GP partnerships that we have, we've also found, you know, we might be looking for slightly bigger deals than they do. So when they come across something that is interesting but too big for them, they may pass it along to us. So it's been a good source of, of just getting market intel and, and, and deal flow. But most importantly, it's been a way for us to allow ourselves to scale without sort of becoming victims of becoming too big. What I mean by that is that in today's private equity market, I think as the funds get really, really big, their desire to hunt for alpha sort of goes down, right? Which is not a good thing for the industry in the long run. Right. You want to maintain that ability for everyone to keep hunting for real alpha. And I think by striking GP partnerships and finding firms that we want to be part of but not control, we can give these funds access to our network, to more capital, but allow them to continue to hunt for alpha without us becoming controlling decision makers, which in a, in a very large fund becomes the ultimate bottleneck, right? No one has time to look at a smaller deal, even if it's a great deal. So they focus on larger tickets and miss opportunities. So we're trying to create a model that I think for the industry is better in the long run.
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Willem
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Willem
howiinvest From a bottoms up perspective, you partner with a GP. How does that partnership look like?
Oscar
So typically we, you know, we, we acquire or, or take some form of GP stake in their business so that we are aligned in terms of, of results. We don't want to control their ic, we don't want them to become part of us. We want them to be a partner to us. And then we would typically then also make some kind of capital commitment to them. So invest in their products or deals or funds or help them launch new products or sometimes the hardest capital to come by in the market is for new launches or new funds. We can play that role and allow them to get off the ground, for instance, with a new product. Those are kind of the typical ingredients that we have. And then we work relatively closely with them, seamlessly build a good relationship without sort of meddling with our business or controlling it.
Willem
How is your capital partnership more efficient? More efficient way to grow without becoming what disparagingly is called asset gatherers for the gps.
Oscar
By spreading it out over gps that we find in the market that are all, you know, best at what they do in their niche, we can allow our capital base to scale without sort of sucking them into us and becoming asset gatherers instead. We can, we can give a portion to this GP that is, you know, specialized on whatever it is, direct lending. We can have another one that does secondaries and that allows them to have stable capital base, good partner, but doesn't turn them into a asset gatherer sort of franchise.
Willem
Pretty novel model. What mistakes did you make as CIO as you were building this out?
Oscar
Well, let's see. I'm sure there are more mistakes to come. The key is finding alignment when you do these opportunities to make sure that you really pick good partners and, and partners that are aligned to do what you want them to do. So for instance, if you're partnering up with someone that is good at a certain thing and that's why you're partnering, you don't accidentally want to partner with someone that actually wants to go and build a platform and expand into nine different strategies because then you sort of get back to where you started and what you try to avoid in the first place. So I think finding specialized managers that are really good at what they do and really enjoy your know, the art of investing if you wish, and are, are really seeking alpha, trying to deliver superior returns. That is the focus. Right. And if you're not aligned on that from the beginning, I think you can see some friction.
Willem
You're essentially an LP in this role. How do you suss that out in a meeting? Everybody probably tells you they want to be looking for alpha. They're great investors. How do you find that before you invest?
Oscar
It's a great question. And I think, you know, at the end of the day, I think we also take our time really getting to know these people. This is not a, this is not a process or one meeting or a competitive, you know, round where someone is looking for, you know, an anchor investor or selling a. It's not a GP stakes business if you wish. We're not buying. No, it's not transactional. It's really finding like minded people that are trying to do something that we think is exciting. The ones we have, we've actually all found more or less by coincidence, if you wish. You just like networks, you meet people, you enjoy what they. We created sort of a mutual respect and partnership and they really want us to be part of their capital structure and go try to, you know, conquer the world together if you wish.
Willem
Is there a best practice for how you go about sourcing new managers? Have there been certain sourcing channels that work better than others?
Oscar
What has worked the worst is competitive situations. So we've never really been successful in that.
Willem
Why?
Oscar
Because I think this is really a chemistry question, right? You need to find a firm that really shares your values and has a vision that sort of makes sense for where we want to go and where they want to go. And anyone that runs a process, usually they're either looking to retire or just maximize price and it's not the right driver. The people that do a deal with us will have to believe that us being part of their equation makes them more valuable too, even if they're giving up a part of their GP as part of that process.
Willem
It's a bit of a paradox because as an investor, you typically want to be investing when you're solving a solution. So if you're a secondary investor, you want to be solving a liquidity need, but in this case, actually solving a solution means that they're not necessarily looking for the partnership angle. You don't truly know whether they care about you as a partner or whether they're trying to solve this. Financial.
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Oscar
The market is, as you know, changing out there, right? It's getting harder and harder for mid sized managers to raise money. LPs are consolidating. They want fewer and fewer relationships. They want more sort of multi product firms if you wish. And I think what people see in us is a stable capital source that also perhaps fluctuates a little bit less than the traditional LPs. We don't tend to have, at least not to the same extent, phases where we are focused on just dpi. Or we can be more of a long term stable partners to our sort of partnership firms.
Willem
Truly evergreen capital.
Oscar
Truly evergreen or as close to it as possible.
Willem
The evergreen nature of it is not just the institution, it's also the stability of the personnel at the institution. It's one thing if you have an endowment that has a perpetual pool, but if they're churning people, it doesn't really help you.
Oscar
It's part of the DNA of both mobile and mobile capital that we want to be good partners and we don't do it for altruistic purposes. We believe that it's actually a very profitable and good business model. Right. If you are a good partner in the long run you will attract the best partners and really make a difference.
Willem
You're obviously quite contrarian thinker with CIA Financial with not being focused on DPI like seemingly every lp. What's your most contrarian take when it comes to which asset class do you think is underrated today on dpi, for instance?
Oscar
Just follow up on that. I think this is like the biggest fallacy of the industry in some ways. Right? Someone at some point convinced long term pension funds that they need to churn their capital every three years. This is not a sensible way of looking at it. A lot more people out there should be a lot more focused on compounding and long term results and less focused on short term dpi, which comes with a lot of friction. There's carry payments, there's tax payments, there's transaction fees, there's whatnot. Whereas long term holds are generally speaking a little bit better, I think for most types of investors, not everyone. But you need to manage your liquidity.
Willem
It's even crazy on a first principles basis. So I had Sam Zell's long term partner, Mark Soder, who continues to run his family office and one of the absurd things that he talked about in private equity specifically is you hold an asset for five years and then you sell it to your main competitor. And even worse than that, where you're constantly churning in all these transaction costs and banker costs and all that, is that the first year is a lost year because you're building up, you're getting up to speed, you're changing management and the last year you're dressing up the asset to go to sell. Both of those are inefficient. So you essentially have only three years of productive growth. And it's even crazier from the LP side because they get a letter in the mail. One says, congratulations, we sold this at a great price. And another one's, congratulations, we bought this at a fair price. And all they have is these fees and these management fees of these two different funds, all because to your point, somebody has dogmatically convinced that having marks and having liquidity, having DPI specifically liquidity is obviously important, but having DPI every five years is this golden rule that you can't question.
Oscar
Yeah, and I think we're actively trying to question. We have obviously traditional products, but we're also taking a little bit more of a bespoke view here and asking our investors and our partners, is this really what you want every three years or four years, or when we have a winner, shouldn't we hang on to it? For instance, do you, you've obviously seen the CV industry grow up as some kind of solution to this problem with its own set of issues, but nevertheless at least trying to address the fact that you shouldn't get rid of all your winners to your worst competitors.
Willem
And continuation vehicles or CVs are these vehicles where a manager can continue owning an asset. Sometimes they cycle some of their LPs out and bring in new LPs. Obviously it's been extremely popular and it's grown to $110 billion in AUM in short order. What are your views on size, where
Oscar
it's done for the right reasons? It's, it's a very sensible product in the sense that if you truly have a winner and you realize that we want to hold this asset for 20 years, we can really deliver outsized returns year on year on year. Let's not get rid of it. I think that makes a lot of sense. And you go out to your LPs and for those that want that long term exposure, you let them in and for those that want to exit, you allow them to, to move on. That's great. If it's used as a way of just extending fees for whatever assets that a manager can convince themselves that they, that someone wants to allow them to hold than for the wrong reason. Right. But I think for the right, in the right situations, it's a great product as long as it's sort of handled ethically, I guess.
Willem
What are some signals of alignment for cvs?
Oscar
The exciting part, at least in theory, Willem, is that if you see the GP willing to roll over their carry into the deal or even invest in it and have a meaningful part of their wealth locked up in an asset that they have owned for five years, then presumably there aren't many surprises left. One of the issues when you buy assets is no matter how much due diligence you do, once you're in, there's always some element of surprise when you own a company. And I think if people don't admit that they're not being honest. Right. There's only so much you can find out during dd. Once you own a company for five years, presumably you know it quite well at that stage and so the risk should be lower. And if they really believe the growth is there and can underwrite it, I think that's a pretty interesting proposition.
Willem
Yeah, that information asymmetry, it's a Stanley Drunkenmiller Invest investigate. So you put, you put in some money and then you learn. I productized it into a diligence question. I used to ask companies, which is what are you not telling me now? That I'll find out at the first board meeting.
Oscar
Yeah.
Willem
And most people laugh and then, you know, most people still don't give you the right answer. But once In a while you'll get some interesting feedback.
Oscar
That's interesting. It is like that, right? And CVs minimize it. So I think it's a good product. I think it's here to stay. It makes sense, I think, you know, we've been participants in it until about
Willem
a couple years ago. Venture capital was probably too niche for you. Now UIE is becoming this force in technology alongside obviously scaling. Is there a place in your portfolio for venture capital?
Oscar
Sure. We have, you know, we have Healthcare Venture, a bio venture fund. We're investing that out of San Francisco, where I have our partners sitting. That's been been very successful for us. We have some tech venture which we're doing more on a deal by deal basis now, which has been interesting. I mean, to your point, ticket sizes have gone up, right. Quite, quite dramatically in the industry.
Willem
OpenAI just raised $120 billion, for example, one round. There used to be this meme that if something lands on your desk in Abu Dhabi, it's gone to New York and London. But that's dramatically changed over the last couple of years.
Oscar
I think that's right.
Willem
What's driving that first look?
Oscar
It's a number of things. I think, you know, I think we've gotten a lot smarter as investors out of the region. There's. There's a lot more activity. We've been a stable source of capital and partnership to a lot of firms over a long period of time. When we started or when the region started investing, then it was perhaps a little bit more new. So I think a lot of things have changed. But. And to your point, if you go to Abu Dhabi, then you walk in at Four Seasons, it feels like you're on Fifth Avenue, right? Yeah, it's all filled with usual sort of familiar faces from New York and
Willem
a lot of that is downstream of Milken. Conferences come there and as more of these conferences go into the region and if you think about what's downstream of adverse selection, it's lack of relationships. So as those relationships and as that capital starts to flow, that start to
Oscar
get that the lifestyle in the region is phenomenal. Right. So you've seen a large inflow of talent people. People really want to live and work in, in Abu Dhabi or Dubai and they enjoy a great lifestyle, stable employment, interesting opportunities. I mean, the region really has a lot going for it in that sense.
Willem
So you're a Swedish national that started in Brazil and then you became the CIO of Mobadala. How did that all happen?
Oscar
So in 2010, I moved to Abu Dhabi from London, where I was doing private equity. And then this Brazilian opportunity came along for Mobadla. We didn't have any Portuguese speakers internally. We didn't have anyone with experience from Brazil. A few weeks later I was on a plane in Rio de Janeiro and that's how it all started. And then a few years later we had this restructuring on our hands and we ended up opening an office. And at that stage we had something as strange as mobile investment company had headquartered in Abu Dhabi was the only office. And then the second office we ever opened was Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, which is not the most obvious sort of second location for a sovereign wealth fund out of Abu Dhabi.
Willem
Arguably today is one of the most difficult markets to predict because it's so driven by AI. If you knew the answer to AI, you'd probably know the answer to most markets. If you had to predict five, 10 years from now, what's the future for mobile cap?
Oscar
I mean, listen, I think we're just getting started from our point of view, right? We have gone from effectively only captive money and no AUM 10 years ago or a little bit less than 10 years ago to where we are today, which arguably was the hardest part. From this point onwards, it's. We are super excited about the growth, where we're headed and where we find opportunities. I think that role that we're playing, kind of the intersection between an asset manager and a sovereign and really a new version of asset management to some extent, really has some competitive advantages over the traditional fund model and obviously over the pure sovereign model too. So I think we'll continue to see new opportunities that we can capitalize on. And I think in particular there's obviously, I think there's a ton to do with AI and I think largely we'll leave it to other people to decide which AI company is going to be the winner. Where we're excited is how can we deploy AI in traditional industries in order to accelerate growth, in order to reduce cost and really sort of focus on the AI use case? That's where we can add more value as a firm consistently across the portfolio. And I think it is an area where today there's a little bit of naivete in the investment community in that sense that everyone has an AI guy and then all of a sudden they're AI enabled. And I think in reality it's a bit more complicated than that. When you want to roll it out in an industrial company and get rid of a whole layer of the organization, you really need implementation people that can go and do this together with the tech people, that's a focus area for us. I think that's going to be quite big going forward. We can continue to be a very good partner to the insurance universe and grow that practice. I think on ultra high net worth private wealth with Coriant and we did two add ons in Europe, they're about to close in Stanhope Capital and Stonehenge Fleming, both very, very large, which allowed a couple hundred billion dollars to that platform. We really have a shot at creating the world leader here and continue to grow that business. So that's quite exciting. So I think in terms of growth areas, I would say we're obviously going to keep expanding our product footprint primarily probably through GP partnerships to have access to products that can be suitable for whether it's our insurance capital or private wealth capital or our own capital. But I think particularly growing the insurance platform, focusing on this sort of AI use case and growing the private wealth footprint of mobile capital. Three areas where you're going to see us really outgrow competition over the next two years.
Willem
I think one of the most underrated aspects of Mobato Capital is par, paradoxically that you do have outside investors. I was speaking to the CIO of spider and management, Karen Welch and she's formerly from Stanford Endowment. One of the things she talked about because they do University of Richmond's endowment, but they also have other endowments. One of the things she has to constantly be in ICs with her counterparties and get really hard questions about why they're doing things this way and that way. And it's constantly sharpening their arrow, constantly improving their thinking.
Oscar
Right.
Willem
So you get almost best of both worlds where you have hundreds of billions of dollars of your own capital. So you have this capital as a moat. But also you're constantly being challenged, so you're never resting on your laurels. You're never thinking, I'm the smartest person in the world because I have hundreds of billions of dollars. Nobody's confronting me. But you're able to get LP feedback.
Oscar
In a weird way, we're kind of the underdog in the, in the third party capital management business in that sense, right? That people look at us and go like, are you really as good as the others out there? We've proven to all our LPs that we are. But I think to your point, that's what keeps us on our edge.
Willem
Right.
Oscar
We get pushed now. Our parent is very demanding too. But, but having that, that third party having to be responsible for every decision, every single Time where people can vote with their feet. If you're not doing well, that is critical for being best at what we do.
Willem
And there's also this aspect of deployment I just came from interviewing CIO of Mark Andreessen's family office. Michelle we were talking about this and typical endowments, you deploy your capital and then you're just thinking about follow ons and things like that. So it's hard to retain your top talent because they want to be learning, they want to be doing deals, they want to be making mistakes, they want to look at other asset classes. But there's no net new capital.
Oscar
Right.
Willem
So being able to onboard capital is a huge recruiting advantage.
Oscar
It's a pretty unique mix because we have a stable capital base from our parent and then we're able to attract third party capital as a multiple against that. Right. Which, which continuously allow us to, to grow. And then we have, we have a unique mix of, you know, proprietary capital and external capital that allows us to perhaps do a little bit more innovative partnerships with, you know, insurance companies or you know, indeed buying a large private wealth platform and making that part of the firm. So we're pretty excited with our setup. We jokingly refer to it as our unfair competitive advantage sometimes.
Willem
If you go back to 2003, you had just graduated master of law from Uppsala University in Sweden. What is one piece of timeless advice you could give a younger Oscar that would have either accelerated your career or helped you avoid cost mistakes?
Oscar
I think one of the biggest piece of advice I would give myself like one, don't be too impatient. It's fine. Like when you're young, everyone thinks if you get passed on for a promotion or if you lose one year, then it's like the end of the world. At the end of the day it doesn't matter. It's much better to focus on rounding your experience and becoming as broad as an investor as possible in terms of what you have experiences from than it is to hurry to the next level. I think most of the people that I've seen failed have failed because they were effectively over promoted. Right. You, you become too senior too fast and, and that just makes you like very prone to blow up. Right. So it's, it's counterintuitive when you're in it because everyone wants to run as fast as possible. And when you're young, you're incredibly, you know, you have a strong view that you know the answer to everything in reality. Taking your time a little bit, pausing and making sure that you know what you're doing before you have to do it on your own is probably the best piece of advice that I could have given to myself or that someone else could have given me.
Willem
You have a similar thing in podcasting. Everyone always asks me, who do you want to interview? Of course, I always say Elon because that's my dream guest. But I'm not really pushing for him, frankly, because I want to get better. Because you also want to be in a position where you're your best self when you have that opportunity. So that's something. Also, 20 years ago I would just been like, how do I get that mark? How do I get that great guest? But I think also I'm not yet ready for that person. I need to improve these three things in order to make that a good interview. So something that gets maturity. Oscar, when your team reached out asking if they could jump on a podcast, first ever podcast from Ubladala, I was honored. So thanks so much for sitting down and having conversations.
Oscar
Thank you. It's been great. Thanks for having me.
Episode E368: Sovereign 2.0 – How Mubadala Capital Is Reinventing the $430B Playbook
Guest: Oscar Fahlgren, CIO, Mubadala Capital
Release Date: May 13, 2026
This episode features an in-depth conversation with Oscar Fahlgren, Chief Investment Officer of Mubadala Capital, as he discusses the evolving playbook and unique model of one of the world’s largest and most innovative sovereign investment funds. The conversation, hosted by Willem (guest host for David Weisburd), covers Mubadala Capital’s approach to complex dealmaking, partnership-driven growth, long-term capital deployment, contrarian views on liquidity, and the future of asset management in an AI-driven era.
[00:00–03:20]
"We've developed a modus operandi where we embrace complexity a little bit as an enabler of alpha for us."
— Oscar Fahlgren [00:53]
[03:20–05:27]
[05:37–07:17, 09:03–10:33]
"We want them to be a partner to us. And then we would typically also make some kind of capital commitment to them...sometimes the hardest capital to come by in the market is for new launches. We can play that role."
— Oscar Fahlgren [09:10]
[10:33–12:21]
"What has worked the worst is competitive situations...this is really a chemistry question."
— Oscar Fahlgren [12:27]
[16:38–20:04]
"Someone at some point convinced long term pension funds that they need to churn their capital every three years. This is not a sensible way of looking at it."
— Oscar Fahlgren [17:59]
[20:04–22:06]
"Once you own a company for five years, presumably you know it quite well at that stage and so the risk should be lower."
— Oscar Fahlgren [21:03]
[22:17–24:03]
[24:03–27:37]
"We're just getting started from our point of view...we really have a shot at creating the world leader here and continue to grow that business."
— Oscar Fahlgren [25:06]
[27:37–29:47]
"Having that third party, having to be responsible for every decision...is critical for being best at what we do."
— Oscar Fahlgren [28:35]
[29:47–31:34]
"Taking your time a little bit, pausing and making sure that you know what you're doing before you have to do it on your own is probably the best piece of advice."
— Oscar Fahlgren [30:00]