Transcript
Shield (0:00)
I could only lose 3 million bucks. I could gain 300 million bucks.
Luis (0:03)
I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it. Like, no days off on a road. Let's travel. Never, right?
Fonzie (0:13)
Chill. What's up, dude?
Shield (0:14)
Not much, man.
Fonzie (0:15)
Doing well, dude. Always good having you on. You are, as always, I give you this title, the most interesting man in tech.
Shield (0:21)
You're.
Fonzie (0:22)
You're a great investor. You're a tech investor. How big is the fund or how much total have you. You invested now?
Shield (0:27)
At this point, about 450 million total.
Fonzie (0:29)
Okay, $450 million. So, like, you know, I've learned a lot from poker, right? And in poker, that you learn all these lessons that actually, like, cross apply totally outside the domain of poker. What would you say are the lessons from investing that apply to life?
Shield (0:41)
I think, you know, one is just, like, upside can be greater than downside. Like, so if I invest in a company, let's say I put $3 million into a company, there's a possibility of it being $300 million, but the downside is capped at 3 million. I could only lose 3 million bucks. I could gain 300 million bucks.
Fonzie (1:05)
Yeah, because if you don't work in investing or anywhere where you have that sort of asymmetric risk versus return, let's just say you have an hourly wage job, right? Like, you're sort of. Your mind gets trained into this linear. I put one in, I get one out, right? Like, I can't put one in and get 50 hours of pay out of this next hour. That doesn't really ever happen in a normal job. But if your job is investing, you're like, of course that happens all the time. I lose one times my money, but sometimes I gain 100 or a thousand times my money back. And that kind of breaks the brain, and you sort of, like, start to see, you know, other opportunities. Similarly, they have that, as the kids say, the asymmetry of risk return. All right, so that's one. There was something around this portfolio theory. Like, you know, out of the 450 million you deploy, right? Like, what is. What does winning look like? You probably need to return some multiple of that 450 million. So what does winning look like for you? You put in 450. What do you need to get out for this to be a success?
