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IGNORE NARRATIVES

All podcast episode summaries matching IGNORE NARRATIVES β€” aggregated across every podcast we track.

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Quotes & Clips tagged IGNORE NARRATIVES

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Mainstream media fundamentally fails to understand crypto

β€œIt depresses me how much of the mainstream media still don't understand it to any degree. And even the Financial Times, the Financial Times in the UK, supposedly one of the top publications for finance is still empty crypto. It's been doing 150 percent care go for the last 15 years. It's rubbish, it's a ponzi. It will never last. Oh, please just try study it a little bit.”

β€” Marc Walton

Technical feasibility should dictate all risk calculations

β€œThe common perception is that Elon is a reckless gambler, but he actually manages risk through a lens of technical feasibility rather than market sentiment. He is willing to take massive financial risks on things that are physically possible, even if they are historically unprecedented. He looks at the probability of success based on engineering constraints, and if the math works, he’s willing to bet everything on it because he trusts the physics over the finance.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Strategic profit-taking is essential for surviving volatility

β€œSo with crypto, I was very much with my clients. Look, when it doubles or trebles, we take the stake out. If it quadruples, we take profit, et cetera, et cetera. Bitcoin was actually easy. 2020, 2021, until it tanked, it went up. If you're a technical trader, it went up, it pulled back. But it was a case of being in the right time, the right place at the right time, for sure.”

β€” Marc Walton

First principles thinking removes unnecessary legacy constraints

β€œMusk's approach is to strip everything down to the laws of physics and then build back up from there. Most people reason by analogy, which is basically copying what's been done before with slight variations. By using first principles, he asks what the absolute physical limits are for a material or a process. If the cost of the raw materials is $2 and the finished product costs $200, there’s a huge opportunity for optimization that everyone else is missing.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Retail investors struggle with discipline and execution

β€œI just literally spoke to him an hour ago and I said, how did you get on? He said, oh, well, I sold the Mercedes, Benz and the Porsche, but I didn't get around to buying the other stuff. And it's like, you can do so much in the interim. Some of the mining stocks are up 70%, silver's up to another 25% in the last month or two. People are lazy.”

β€” Marc Walton

Constant feedback loops drive rapid product improvement

β€œElon has this obsession with a constant feedback loop, where you are always looking for what is wrong with the product. He encourages his engineers to be their own harshest critics and to never settle for a 'good enough' solution. This culture of rigorous, painful honesty about the flaws in a system is what allows for the rapid improvements seen between one iteration of a rocket or a car and the next.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Mission-driven focus enables extreme long-term resilience

β€œWhat keeps people at SpaceX or Tesla working 100-hour weeks isn't just the stock options; it's the belief that they are part of something that matters for the future of humanity. This mission-driven focus creates a level of resilience that other companies simply can't match. When things go wrong, which they frequently do, the team doesn't just see a business failure; they see a hurdle in a multi-decade quest that they are fundamentally committed to solving.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Elon Musk views speed as a moral imperative

β€œIf you have a certain number of tasks to complete in a day, then completing them twice as fast is effectively living twice as long. Speed is the fundamental currency of competition, and Elon views it almost as a moral obligation to the mission. If the mission is to make humanity multi-planetary or to transition to sustainable energy, every day saved is a day closer to ensuring the survival of the species, which makes speed a moral imperative.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Vertical integration ensures total supply chain control

β€œOne of the key Musk methods is the radical pursuit of vertical integration to control the entire supply chain. When a supplier says a part will take six months and cost ten times the estimate, Elon decides to build it in-house. This allows for tighter feedback loops and prevents the company from being held hostage by the pace or the profit margins of external vendors, allowing them to iterate on designs much faster than their competitors.”

β€” Eric Jorgenson

Wall Street manipulates narratives to facilitate entry

β€œJP Morgan, BlackRock, all of them like, oh, it's terrible, it's awful, it doesn't make any money, it's a Ponzi scheme. And then they all do it because they see, well, we can make a lot of money in it, so who cares? You don't have any moral high ground. You never have, so stop trying to find it.”

β€” Kirk Chisholm

Institutional ETFs allow for manipulative price suppression

β€œBut within the iBit ETF, they can be long and short. So, hey, if you've got that much clout, shove the price of Bitcoin down, scare off the balance of the retail, and then mop it all up, is my thinking anyway. They've been trying to push MicroStrategy to liquidate, because it's so blatant the way that they've been doing it.”

β€” Marc Walton

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