Tremendous

An angel investor's take on life and business

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    Federal agents have raided the offices and homes of prominent short sellers, seizing evidence of possible market manipulation:

    The U.S. Justice Department has seized hardware, trading records and private communications in an effort to prove a wide-ranging conspiracy among investors who bet against corporate shares….

    Agents seized computers from the home of Andrew Left of Citron Research, a prominent GameStop Corp. short seller. Melvin Capital Management LP, another short seller of GameStop and AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc., is also a target of the investigation.

    The Department of Justice is investigating possible collusion between hedge funds and research firms. Short selling hedge funds sometimes write research reports, then hand them to the research firms to publish as their own.

    When the report comes out and the stock tanks, the hedge fund makes a tidy profit while obscuring its connection to the report.

    Another practice in the DOJ’s sights: spoofing. From the WSJ:

    Spoofing is essentially high-speed bluffing, in which one trader dupes others into transacting at artificially high or low prices. A spoofer, for example, might offer to sell a big block of shares at $10 when the last sale was at $10.03. After other sellers rush to match the lower price, the spoofer quickly pivots, canceling his sell order and instead buying at the $10 price he generated with the fake bid. Repeated enough times, spoofing can produce big profits.


    Spoofing and phony research reports go hand in hand. Huge numbers of spoofed sell orders tend to flood markets at the same time these reports are published.

    It’s a one-two punch: fake research and fake sell orders.

    Let’s think of this investigation from a different perspective: that of the investor in hedge funds.

    These investors are usually university endowments, public pension funds, and wealthy individuals. They tend to be fundamentally conservative.

    How does it look when the fund manager’s house is being raided by the FBI? Umm, not great.

    If it’s your job to run the pension fund, and you don’t take your money out now, how will you explain yourself if the fund is prosecuted and goes belly up?

    Any prudent investor is going to pull their money, ASAP. There are plenty of funds not under federal investigation.

    What’s more, some of the funds under investigation also happen to be performing horribly. Melvin has already lost $1 billion in January alone!

    Expect to see big outflows from the troubled funds soon. This, along with volatile markets, could put some out of business.

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    More on markets:

    Melvin Capital Under Federal Investigation

    AMC Fails to Deliver Skyrocket 9X

    Huge Payouts for Hedge Fund Informants as SEC Vice Tightens

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    Fails to deliver in shares of AMC Entertainment Holdings, Inc. skyrocketed more than nine-fold, per data released today by the SEC.

    Shares failing to clear numbered nearly 190,000 at the end of January, the most recent reporting period. Fails to deliver even neared 400,000 at one point in the data set, a staggering number.

    This is a massive increase from 20,000 just two weeks prior.

    Huge fails to deliver are nothing new for AMC. For some mysterious reason, this little stock has huge numbers of failed trades, month after month.

    Here are the fails to deliver from the end of January for some of the largest stocks in the market. All are far below AMC’s, despite being much larger companies:

    Alphabet Inc. Class A Shares: 27,991
    Amazon.com Inc: 0
    Apple Inc: 0
    Microsoft Corp.: 0
    Tesla Inc: 48,826

    Sometimes, fails to deliver don’t point to anything nefarious. They can be the result of clerical errors and other honest mistakes.

    But when a stock has a persistent pattern of huge fails to deliver, it can be a sign of naked short selling. This generally illegal practice involves selling short shares you don’t own.

    Naked shorting is a powerful way to push down a stock’s price. If you don’t even need to own the stock, you can short an unlimited number of shares.

    Indeed, the Department of Justice is currently investigating short sellers for illegal tactics. Federal agents have raided offices and seized hardware and trading records.

    So we have a long term pattern of suspiciously high fails to deliver and a federal investigation. Is it really so hard to believe short sellers are breaking the law?


    What do you think is really going on in shares of AMC? Leave a comment at the bottom and let me know.

    See you tomorrow, everyone! 🙂

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    More on markets:

    AMC Fails to Deliver Skyrocket 1940% to Start Year

    Melvin Capital Under Federal Investigation

    How Giant Hedge Fund Tiger Global Blows Up

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    Fundrise

    This platform lets me diversify my real estate investments so I’m not too exposed to any one market. I’ve invested since 2018 and returns have been great so far.

    More on Fundrise in this post.

    If you decide to invest in Fundrise, you can use this link to get your management fees waived for 90 days

    Misfits Market

    My wife and I have gotten organic produce shipped to our house by Misfits for over a year. It’s never once disappointed me.

    Every fruit and vegetable is super fresh and packed with flavor.

    I thought radishes were cold, tasteless little lumps at salad bars until I tried theirs! They’re peppery, colorful and crunchy!

    I wrote a detailed review of Misfits here.

    Use this link to sign up and you’ll save $10 on your first order. 

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    Considerate husbands begin planning Valentine’s Day months in advance.

    Flowers are ordered. Reservations made. Wine chilled.

    Yeah, I didn’t do any of that. 🙂

    So I was left scrambling to find a dinner reservation in New York City on what is probably the busiest night of the year!

    The wife and I wound up eating outside in temperatures of 23 degrees. Winter wasn’t going to keep us from the meal of our dreams!

    Fortunately, the food at Bar Boulud made the cold an afterthought. I thought I’d share this amazing experience with you guys so you know where to go next year!

    The appetizers:

    Ora king salmon tarte with avocado, crème fraîche, and caviar. My wife being willing to give me a bite is the definition of true love.

    The caviar was the best I’ve ever tasted, with an earthy quality a little like truffles.

    Lobster Bisque. Unctuous, delicious. The little bits of lobster swimming in the soup were a nice touch.

    The entrees:

    Halibut with farro. When I sampled this, I marveled at the perfect, soft flakiness of the fish.

    I had never had farro, but with this champagne beurre blanc sauce, I shoveled it in eagerly!

    Beef duo. Braised short rib and tenderloin.

    The short rib stole the show. It fell apart in my mouth, full of moist, fatty, umami flavor.

    Dessert:

    An assortment of ice creams for the missus: brown sugar, vanilla, and a pear sorbet.

    Every Boulud restaurant has ridiculously good ice cream, made in house. The depth of cream and vanilla bean flavor made the vanilla my favorite.

    A dark chocolate entremet for me. Don’t ask me what an entremet is.

    All I know is this yummy chocolate mousse, along with hazelnut ice cream and some kind of little chocolate crumbly things, was amazing.

    I’ve never seen hazelnut ice cream anywhere else. This needs to be in stores!

    If you like Nutella, you’ll love this.


    In all, outdoor dining, even in frigid temperatures, was pretty comfortable. A well-built shelter to block the wind plus patio heaters go a long way.

    After a tough two years for our little blue planet, I was grateful just to sit down with someone near and dear and enjoy a good meal, both of us healthy. I hope that once this crisis recedes, I can maintain that gratitude.

    How was your Valentine’s Day? Leave a comment at the bottom and let me know!

    P.S. This place also has the best burger in NYC.

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    More on food:

    The Best Mexican Food Is In…New Jersey?

    The Best Bakery in NYC (It’s Not Levain)

    New Jersey’s Jelly Donut Heaven

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    Fundrise

    This platform lets me diversify my real estate investments so I’m not too exposed to any one market. I’ve invested since 2018 and returns have been great so far.

    More on Fundrise in this post.

    If you decide to invest in Fundrise, you can use this link to get your management fees waived for 90 days

    Misfits Market

    My wife and I have gotten organic produce shipped to our house by Misfits for over a year. It’s never once disappointed me.

    Every fruit and vegetable is super fresh and packed with flavor.

    I thought radishes were cold, tasteless little lumps at salad bars until I tried theirs! They’re peppery, colorful and crunchy!

    I wrote a detailed review of Misfits here.

    Use this link to sign up and you’ll save $10 on your first order. 

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    Are we about to see a wave of informants expose wrongdoing at hedge funds?

    Just yesterday, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced two major changes to its whistleblower program. They should significantly increase the rewards that whistleblowers receive, which already totaled a staggering $564 million last year.

    Here’s what the SEC announced:

    On February 10, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) proposed two amendments to the rules governing its highly successful whistleblower program. Both amendments seek to ensure that whistleblowers are properly rewarded for exposing securities law violations. One proposed amendment allows the SEC to pay related action awards for enforcement actions taken by other entities even when those agencies have their own whistleblower reward programs. The second proposed amendment clarifies that the SEC can only consider the dollar amount of an award as a factor when choosing to increase an award, not lower it.

    The changes, like many government actions, are rather arcane. But their effect should be a substantial increase in the cash available to hedge fund insiders who rat out their bosses.

    Attorneys who represent whistleblowers lauded the changes:

    “The proposed amendments are an excellent step in the right direction,” said leading whistleblower attorney Stephen M. Kohn of Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto. Kohn, who has previously worked closely with SEC Commissioners on whistleblower program rules added that “this initiates a process that should ensure that the SEC complies with the law, and pays rewards when a whistleblower’s information triggers multiple fines under various laws, including those administered by the SEC.”

    Is it a coincidence that the SEC made this announcement shortly after beginning a probe of short sellers including GameStop short Melvin Capital LP?

    Maybe. Maybe not.

    In addition to offering millions in compensation, the SEC whistleblower program keeps the informant’s identity hidden.

    The Witness Protection Program was instrumental in taking down the American mafia. But it didn’t offer millions in rewards!

    This SEC program could provide an even more powerful inducement.

    People who work at hedge funds are motivated by money, by and large. If the SEC dangles ever larger checks in front of them, while at the same time tightening the investigative noose, I think they’ll gladly expose any wrongdoing.

    I’m excited to see what this investigation, along with bigger financial incentives, uncovers.

    What do you think hedge fund informants might expose? Let me know in the comments at the bottom.

    There will be no blog on Monday. I have jury duty.

    See you on Tuesday. Have a great weekend everybody! 🙂

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    More on markets:

    Melvin Capital Under Federal Investigation

    $1 Billion Still Missing from Bitfinex Hack

    Hedge Funds Pull Back from Tech Amid Big Losses

    “CMI 101: Demystifying Derivatives with CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler” by Third Way is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

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    Fundrise

    This platform lets me diversify my real estate investments so I’m not too exposed to any one market. I’ve invested since 2018 and returns have been great so far.

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    If you decide to invest in Fundrise, you can use this link to get your management fees waived for 90 days

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    My wife and I have gotten organic produce shipped to our house by Misfits for over a year. It’s never once disappointed me.

    Every fruit and vegetable is super fresh and packed with flavor.

    I thought radishes were cold, tasteless little lumps at salad bars until I tried theirs! They’re peppery, colorful and crunchy!

    I wrote a detailed review of Misfits here.

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    Last week, the U.S. government made its largest asset seizure ever: $3.6 billion worth of bitcoin.

    The money came from the 2016 hack of the Bitfinex exchange. The culprits: Ilya Lichtenstein and Heather Morgan, a young couple from New York City.

    Perhaps the most interesting detail in this story is that approximately 24,000 bitcoins are still missing from this hack. They would be worth over $1.1 billion at current prices.

    So where are they? Perhaps percolating around the same places where Lichtenstein and Morgan laundered theirs.

    The criminal complaint alleges that the couple laundered some of their stolen coins using non-fungible tokens (NFT’s). This could explain why people will pay hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars for an image of an ape.

    If two criminals work together, trading the NFT between various accounts they control at ever-increasing prices, all they need is one bagholder to come in and make the illusion real. They take his money, give him the little jpeg, and laugh all the way to the bank.

    Another fascinating aspect of this story is how they were caught:

    The authorities said they traced the flow of funds through the unhosted wallets and across exchanges, according to the complaint, finding transactions that landed in accounts on exchanges that the two alleged launderers had in their real names. In one instance, according to the complaint, two of these accounts shared a login from the same location in New York.

    This is a common mistake: mixing anonymous and real identities. Ross Ulbricht, creator of the Silk Road, did this by logging into his private VPN and his personal Gmail account from the same cafe in San Francisco.

    If authorities find a pattern that when an anonymous account is used, your account also tends to be used from the same IP address, you’re going down.

    In all, I think this case is good for the crypto industry. The less it seems like a free-for-all, the more legitimate it becomes.

    The more legitimate it becomes, the broader adoption will be.

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    More on tech:

    Tech Plunge Hits Early Stage Startups

    How Solana Could Wipe Out Visa and MasterCard

    Hedge Funds Pull Back from Tech Amid Big Losses

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    Best of all: No fee!

    Fundrise

    This platform lets me diversify my real estate investments so I’m not too exposed to any one market. I’ve invested since 2018 and returns have been great so far.

    More on Fundrise in this post.

    If you decide to invest in Fundrise, you can use this link to get your management fees waived for 90 days

    Misfits Market

    My wife and I have gotten organic produce shipped to our house by Misfits for over a year. It’s never once disappointed me.

    Every fruit and vegetable is super fresh and packed with flavor.

    I thought radishes were cold, tasteless little lumps at salad bars until I tried theirs! They’re peppery, colorful and crunchy!

    I wrote a detailed review of Misfits here.

    Use this link to sign up and you’ll save $10 on your first order. 

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    Melvin Capital Management LP is under investigation by the federal Department of Justice for possible abuses related to short selling. From Bloomberg:

    The Justice Department is collecting a trove of information on dozens of investment firms and researchers engaged in short selling as part of a sweeping U.S. hunt for potential trading abuses, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

    Prominent firms and their leaders mentioned in the Justice Department’s requests to some market participants include Melvin Capital Management and founder Gabe Plotkin; Orso Partners and Nate Koppikar; Sophos Capital Management and Jim Carruthers; as well as Kerrisdale Capital Management. 

    In all, the DOJ is investigating nearly 30 different firms. They’re looking for illegal moves by short sellers to damage stock prices.

    Those could include insider trading or colluding with research firms, as was alleged by Institutional Investor:

    Institutional Investor published a piece last year detailing the “balance sheet” relationship between hedge funds and short-selling firms that publish research reports. As part of this relationship, the former pays the latter to publish a report (authored by the fund itself) that is critical of the company’s business. The report’s publication is timed to coincide with a significant company-related market event, such as an options expiry or earnings report, to induce further volatility and maximize profits. Many short sellers act in concert and pile onto the short trade, magnifying its effect and crashing the company’s stock price. The research firm that published the original report gets a cut of the overall profits or a fee.

    Where does this leave Melvin Capital?

    The hedge fund lost 39% last year on disastrous bets in shares of GameStop Corp. and AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. And they’ve racked up another 17% loss to start 2022, taking their fund down by about half in total.

    When investors see you drop by half, they figure you can go down all the way. Add a DOJ probe, and Melvin looks like the most toxic hedge fund on the planet.

    I would expect to see investors pull out. When that happens, Melvin will sell whatever it can in order to meet those calls for redemptions.

    In today’s volatile market, it may be selling at fire sale prices. This could put the fund into a death spiral.

    As an investor, this information also makes me highly skeptical of research reports. You never know what agenda is behind them.

    I’m fascinated to see where this probe goes!

    What do you think of this investigation and Melvin’s future? Leave a comment at the bottom of the page and let me know!

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    More on markets:

    Melvin Capital Loses $1 Billion in 3 Weeks to Start 2022

    Hedge Funds Pull Back from Tech Amid Big Losses

    AMC Fails to Deliver Skyrocket 1940% to Start Year

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    Best of all: No fee!

    Fundrise

    This platform lets me diversify my real estate investments so I’m not too exposed to any one market. I’ve invested since 2018 and returns have been great so far.

    More on Fundrise in this post.

    If you decide to invest in Fundrise, you can use this link to get your management fees waived for 90 days

    Misfits Market

    My wife and I have gotten organic produce shipped to our house by Misfits for over a year. It’s never once disappointed me.

    Every fruit and vegetable is super fresh and packed with flavor.

    I thought radishes were cold, tasteless little lumps at salad bars until I tried theirs! They’re peppery, colorful and crunchy!

    I wrote a detailed review of Misfits here.

    Use this link to sign up and you’ll save $10 on your first order. 

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    Well, it’s happening.

    Ever since shares of major tech companies like Block Inc., Peloton Interactive Inc., and Robinhood Markets Inc. began to fall off a cliff last fall, investors have wondered when the pain would trickle down to early stage companies. I saw something last week that made it clear to me the market has turned.

    A seed round in a strong company repriced at 15% below the prior valuation…while the deal was still in progress! This despite no new information from the company.

    A year ago, this would never have happened.

    But that’s what it took to bring in the money the company needed. That valuation drop came with another $1 million in capital from a new investor.

    In this more difficult fundraising environment, the companies I see as most at risk aren’t those who accept slightly lower valuations. It’s companies that didn’t take advantage of the hot market to build a war chest.

    Late last year and even into 2022, I’ve seen some startups raise just 8-9 months of runway. The standard is 12-18 months.

    In a hot fundraising environment, I think companies should’ve raised 24 months worth of cash or more. But some startups only wanted to sell a smart part of the business now, confident they could get a higher price in the near future.

    Those rosy predictions are looking less and less likely.

    So where does that leave a company that didn’t raise while the raising was good? Undercapitalized and heading into a harsher fundraising environment where they may not be able to raise at all.

    Throughout the boom, I passed on companies that didn’t raise at least 18 months of runway. And now I’m glad I maintained that discipline.

    Long term, I see a solid outlook for early stage startups with ample warchests. Many companies in my portfolio are growing revenue over 20% a month, regardless of turmoil in public markets.

    But for companies that thought the good times would last forever, the future is hardly as bright.

    More on tech:

    How Giant Hedge Fund Tiger Global Blows Up

    Inside Mark Cuban’s Plan to “F— Up the Drug Industry”

    Why I Just Invested in Deft, the Best Way to Shop Online

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    Best of all: No fee!

    Fundrise

    This platform lets me diversify my real estate investments so I’m not too exposed to any one market. I’ve invested since 2018 and returns have been great so far.

    More on Fundrise in this post.

    If you decide to invest in Fundrise, you can use this link to get your management fees waived for 90 days

    Misfits Market

    My wife and I have gotten organic produce shipped to our house by Misfits for over a year. It’s never once disappointed me.

    Every fruit and vegetable is super fresh and packed with flavor.

    I thought radishes were cold, tasteless little lumps at salad bars until I tried theirs! They’re peppery, colorful and crunchy!

    I wrote a detailed review of Misfits here.

    Use this link to sign up and you’ll save $10 on your first order. 

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    Tiger Global Management LLC is one of the most dominant hedge funds in the world. Its footprint in the venture capital industry is staggering.

    Last year, Tiger did 335 venture deals…almost one every single day. Its check size is colossal, often in the nine figures.

    Those checks come within days with little if any due diligence. This steamroller approach has worked beautifully during the tech bull market of the last few years.

    But now many major tech companies like Block Inc., Peloton Interactive Inc. and Robinhood Markets Inc. are down 50-80%. The broader Nasdaq is down 13% from its highs.

    Here’s how Tiger could blow up:

    1) Valuation multiples in tech compress. This is already happening, big time.

    2) Startups Tiger invested in can’t grow into their valuations.

    Maybe you’re still growing revenue like crazy. But if the valuation multiple is dropping, you may be unable to exceed the valuation of the prior round before that money runs out.

    Tiger overpays more than anyone, so they’re at particular risk here.

    3) Startup has to raise a down round. This is a round at a lower valuation than before.

    4) Tiger may not want to invest since they already lost money on their first investment. Plus, if their whole portfolio is red, they have less cash available.

    5) Huge negative signal from Tiger not re-investing, so the startup struggles to raise money.

    6) There’s no one with a bigger bankroll or more willingness to overpay than Tiger, so the startup has few other places to go for funding.

    7) Even as the company twists in the wind, Tiger’s involvement is minimal. They don’t join boards or advise founders.

    In your toughest moment, your biggest investor is MIA.

    8) Tiger suffers even more because its lack of diligence starts to bite. A hot market is the worst time to do minimal diligence, because frauds proliferate in frothy markets.

    So Tiger loses in the honest companies and loses even more in the dishonest ones. Leading to…

    9) A spiral of big, collapsing startups resulting in catastrophic losses for Tiger.

    Tiger’s playbook seemed innovative in a hot market. But it could quickly turn disastrous.

    Who survives this? Later stage firms that didn’t overpay along with most early stage investors.

    Those of us who come in early are paying very low prices compared to a fund like Tiger. Even if valuations fall, we have a lot more wiggle room than they do.

    Whatever happens, I intend to keep investing early in great companies. Let the chips fall where they may.

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    More on tech:

    Hedge Funds Pull Back from Tech Amid Big Losses

    Inside Mark Cuban’s Plan to “F— Up the Drug Industry”

    Why I Just Invested in Deft, the Best Way to Shop Online

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    Best of all: No fee!

    Fundrise

    This platform lets me diversify my real estate investments so I’m not too exposed to any one market. I’ve invested since 2018 and returns have been great so far.

    More on Fundrise in this post.

    If you decide to invest in Fundrise, you can use this link to get your management fees waived for 90 days

    Misfits Market

    My wife and I have gotten organic produce shipped to our house by Misfits for over a year. It’s never once disappointed me.

    Every fruit and vegetable is super fresh and packed with flavor.

    I thought radishes were cold, tasteless little lumps at salad bars until I tried theirs! They’re peppery, colorful and crunchy!

    I wrote a detailed review of Misfits here.

    Use this link to sign up and you’ll save $10 on your first order. 

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    If you invest in startups, you hear two names all the time: Tiger and Coatue.

    Both are giant hedge funds that have poured money into venture capital in recent years. Oddly enough, they’re based in the same building in midtown Manhattan, a few miles from where I sit.

    Tiger Global Management LLC and Coatue Management LLC collectively run almost $150 billion, dwarfing even the largest venture funds. Through the last few years of the bull market in tech, they’ve pointed a firehose of cash at startups.

    Tiger, Coatue and other hedge funds put eight and nine figure checks into late stage companies at an incredible pace. They generally do little diligence and can close deals in a matter of days.

    When all tech stocks did was climb, this playbook worked great. But now that tech shares are retreating, Tiger, Coatue, and other hedge funds with similar strategies are taking a hit.

    Tiger was down 15% in January alone, a major drop for a single month. It was also down for the full year in 2021. Coatue lost 4% in January.

    Keep in mind that investments in startups are mostly illiquid and usually get repriced only when the company raises more funds. This happens every 12-18 months on average.

    So Tiger and others could be looking at big writedowns in the future on their private portfolios, in addition to the losses they’ve already taken in publicly traded tech stocks.

    This all began in public markets. Big tech companies like Block, Coinbase, Robinhood and others lost half or more of their value.

    The next tech companies to be hit were the late stage startups. Tiger has already begun renegotiating investments in startups to lower valuations.

    This reduction in valuations for late stage companies is beginning to affect the early stage as well.

    Just this morning, I saw a large seed round reprice at about 15% below the valuation just three days ago despite no change in fundamentals. Ouch.

    So what should early stage investors like me do? Keep investing in great companies and smile when the valuation is less than it would’ve been 6 months ago. 🙂

    Tech companies are still rapidly innovating and growing. Regardless of market turmoil, you want to be a part of that.

    It’s still the hottest game in town.

    Have a great weekend everybody! 🥳

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    More on tech:

    Inside Mark Cuban’s Plan to “F— Up the Drug Industry”

    Why I Just Invested in Deft, the Best Way to Shop Online

    Cana: The Star Trek Replicator for Beverages

    Photo: “New York Skyline” by CJ Isherwood is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

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    Amazon Business American Express Card

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    No one wants to get old. But how can we stop and even reverse aging?

    Perhaps a Dream Team of the world’s greatest scientists. And a whole lot of money.

    Well, that just became a reality.

    For those of us who follow venture capital, the news hit like a bomb. Previously unknown Altos Labs burst onto the scene with a $3 billion seed round, likely the largest early stage fundraise in history.

    To put that in perspective, a typical seed round is more like $1-3 million.

    Altos will be putting that money in the hands of some of the world’s top scientists.

    Noted antiaging researchers like Izpisúa Belmonte and Alejandro Ocampo are on board. Nobel Laureates Shinya Yamanaka and Jennifer Doudna have also joined as advisers.

    Altos has promised salaries over $1 million, generous research budgets, and autonomy. Plus, no more constant grant writing.

    So can aging be reversed? New findings suggest it may be possible.

    Just last September, researchers succeeded in reversing aging in mouse hearts using Shinya Yamanaka’s Yamanaka Factors:

    …after two and a half decades of fitful starts and abandoned leads, Braun and a team of researchers at the Max Planck Institute showed that they could reprogram heart cells in mice and get the animals to regenerate cardiac tissue after a heart attack. The breakthrough, published in Science, adds new evidence that it will eventually be possible to help patients recover muscle lost in heart attacks and gives another boon to anti-aging researchers who want to one day apply these rejuvenation techniques across much of the body.

    Heart cells are some of the hardest to reprogram. If scientists can do this, what else can they accomplish?

    David Sinclair at Harvard reversed aging in mouse eyes the year before. The pace of these breakthroughs seems to be increasing.

    Any investor in startups always asks the founder “why now?” Why is now the right time to raise this money and build this business?

    Altos has a very compelling “why now.”

    The foundation for reversing aging has been laid by Yamanaka and others. Scientists worldwide are building on it rapidly, coming up with cure after cure for previously untreatable diseases.

    I’m itching to see what Altos can accomplish. Best of luck to their incredible team!

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    More on tech:

    Reversing the Aging Process in Mouse Eyes… and Maybe Someday, Us?

    3D Printing a Human Ear

    The Lost Planet of Vulcan

    Photo: “Shinya Yamanaka” by Rubenstein is licensed under CC BY 2.0

    If you found this post interesting, please share it on Twitter/Facebook/etc. using the buttons at the bottom of the page. This helps more people find the blog! 

    Save Money on Stuff I Use:

    Amazon Business American Express Card

    You already shop on Amazon. Why not save $100?

    If you’re approved for this card, you get a $100 Amazon gift card. You also get up to 5% back on Amazon and Whole Foods purchases, 2% on restaurants/gas stations/cell phone bills, and 1% everywhere else.

    Best of all: No fee!

    Fundrise

    This platform lets me diversify my real estate investments so I’m not too exposed to any one market. I’ve invested since 2018 and returns have been great so far.

    More on Fundrise in this post.

    If you decide to invest in Fundrise, you can use this link to get your management fees waived for 90 days

    Misfits Market

    My wife and I have gotten organic produce shipped to our house by Misfits for over a year. It’s never once disappointed me.

    Every fruit and vegetable is super fresh and packed with flavor.

    I thought radishes were cold, tasteless little lumps at salad bars until I tried theirs! They’re peppery, colorful and crunchy!

    I wrote a detailed review of Misfits here.

    Use this link to sign up and you’ll save $10 on your first order.