“WeWork’s business model continues to rely on heavy funding from private investors, namely SoftBank, which has poured over $10 billion into the company, including $2 billion this year. WeWork has to plunge cash into real estate in some of the most expensive markets and makes money back over time as c…”— Lauren Feiner, cnbc.com
“Big wealth doesn’t come in monthly paychecks. It comes when a start-up goes public, transforming hypothetical money into extremely real money. This year — with Uber, Lyft, Slack, Postmates, Pinterest and Airbnb all hoping to enter the public markets — there’s going to be a lot of it in the Bay Area.”— Nellie Bowles, nytimes.com
“I don't think I'm wired to be the CEO of a public company. That doesn't mean I can't, from an entrepreneurial standpoint, come up with an idea that truly was like a horse that wanted to run and I was the guy holding it back. At a certain point, it's not necessarily responsible to remain an emergency…”— Danny Meyer, forbes.com
“Name a bigger act of hubris than turning down $3 billion when you’re a 23-year-old college dropout.”— Kaitlin Menza, vogue.com
“Consider that in 2015, more than 100% of the S&P 500’s gain came from Facebook, Apple, Netflix, and Google”— Morgan Housel, collaborativefund.com
“The math of stock market returns blows people’s minds. According to research from J.P. Morgan Asset Management, the median stock in the Russell 3000 Index underperformed the overall index by almost 100 percentage points from 1980 to 2014. Fully two-thirds of stocks in the index underperformed the ma…”— Morgan Housel, collaborativefund.com
“NYSE measured the distance to the furthest cabinet, which is where people put their servers. It was 185 yards. So they gave every [high-frequency trader] a cable of 185 yards. Then, traders who were previously closer to the [exchange server] asked to move to the farthest end of the building. Why? Be…”— Morgan Housel, collaborativefund.com
“In 1990 there were 610 hedge funds managing $39 billion of assets, according to Hedge Fund Research. Today there are nearly 10,000 hedge funds controlling more than $3 trillion of assets. There are another 9,000 mutual funds in the United States, bringing the number of actively managed fund companie…”— Morgan Housel, collaborativefund.com
“The amount of time the average stock is held for has fallen off a cliff, from more than seven years to less than one.”— Morgan Housel, collaborativefund.com
“The number of publicly traded U.S. companies peaked in 1996 at 7,322. Today there are just over 3,700, according to data from Wilshire Associates. The U.S. population has risen nearly 50% since 1975, and real GDP has tripled. But the number of public companies has declined 21%.”— Morgan Housel, collaborativefund.com