![]() ![]() Vinall points out young people may have a leg up against older investors who are used to a different investment world. Investing, like many professions, is one that requires adaptation to new environments. People dislike uncertainty and we’ll find whatever proxy we want to create faux certainty. ![]() ![]() The running joke against start ups is the hypocrisy of college drop outs looking for 10+ years of work experience when hiring. Looking at most jobs, years of experience is considered the benchmark of competence. One element Vinall questions is whether more experience makes you a better investor. Not disagreeing with some popular belief but helping me see the other side of the coin.Ĭoncepts such as: How can discipline be a bad thing? How can regulation be a great thing? What if two competitors have more in common than different? What if stock picking requires shunning reversion to the mean? These were some of the questions he helped me ponder. One reason is how he questions foundational norms. Rob Vinall’s RV Capital letters are among the few I read as soon as they hit my inbox. ![]()
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