Covers strategies and trends in public and private market investing, hedge funds, venture capital, and the dynamics of financial markets.
When markets go 'insane'
Windsurf deal in a weekend
Buffett's secret weapon
Garage market makers
Go big or bust?
Public markets are problematic?
Missing out is worse
Musk's blunt transparency demand
Stablecoin Volume Skyrockets
Not a moral issue, a capital issue
Founders just want capital, fast
Burn money, no users?
The ultimate investing regret
Market cap troughed
How Robinhood disrupted trading
Monetizing hobbies
Post-GameStop paradox
Tether's Secret
CEO's surprising venture bet confession.
Why EBITDA isn't enough
Why no stock drop?
Autonomous trading agents
Investor sentiment shift
Early lessons in economic chaos
Capital Boosts Growth
Sorting Machine Speeding Up
No fancy apps, just email?
Beyond party lines
The surprising reality of farm loans
Money at Rest?
No free money? Bold.
“I would say that the opportunity for short selling is better than it's ever been in my career. However, you cannot capitalize on that opportunity.”
“Nobody gives a [ __ ] about on-chain issuance. They just want a button to deliver money so that they can raise for their venture as easy as possible.”
Dan Sundheim, the visionary behind D1 Capital, offers a rare glimpse into the mind of a top-tier hedge fund manager. From his contrarian views on public markets to the strategic shifts born from market chaos, Sundheim's insights challenge conventional wisdom.
In a wide-ranging interview, Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev offered an unvarnished look into the company's past, present, and ambitious future, touching on everything from his formative experiences with hyperinflation to candid discussions with Elon Musk during the GameStop frenzy, and Robinhood's bold moves into banking, tokenization, and even AI-driven mathematical discovery.