Podcast notes – David Senra on Invest like the Best: “A great biography is like a movie for your mind”

Guest: David Senra, host of Founders podcast
Host: Patrick O’Shaughnessy

Lifelong love of reading, visiting bookstores
Family has a hard history – parents didn’t graduate high school, first male in family not to go to prison in many generations
Married for 15 years

“Great biography is like a movie for your mind”
Warren Buffett – “pick the right heroes”
Charlie Munger also read hundreds of biographies

Most of the heroes he studies are imperfect human beings
But if he had one as a blueprint, it would be Ed Thorp (math prof, blackjack)

James Dyson – 14 year struggle to build the Dyson vacuum, went through 5K prototypes to finally succeed

Sam Zemurray, Fish that ate the whale – banana company founder – poor teenage Russian immigrant in the US, succeeded through his incremental obsession; funded a coup to protect his business

Vanderbilt – at death controlled 1 in 20 dollars in the economy; tried to kill someone who wanted to seize a part of his business

Francis Coppola – dad was a failed musician; fanatical obsession to learn and make films

Sam Walton – long before he started Walmart, landowner screwed him over and copied his first retail business; but he didn’t quit, he went to more towns and replicated the success

Largest predictor of business success is the market you’re in, more than the idea – yet the great Founders all have to relentlessly execute for decades

All Founders had deep historical knowledge of their industry, influences

Steve Jobs – recruiting talent is most important job as a founder
-Steve said “I wanna make insanely great products” not “I wanna build a billion dollar company” – focused on the right things
-“Made and re-made Apple in his own image”
-At NEXT (after he left Apple), it’s like he was Bizarro Steve Jobs and did all the wrong things

Michael Jordan – “I believe in practice”, realized that he practices on different level than others

Richard Branson – business is a product or service that makes someone’s life better

Ed Thorp – every hour in fitness is one less in hospital

Larry Miller – owned Utah Jazz, wrote book on his death bed, regretted his overwork and how unhappy he was through it all

Masters of Doom – John Carmack: “Romero wants an empire, I just wanna make great games”

In N Out founder – only 17 stores when he died, but was obsessed with quality the whole time

“Who are your entrepreneurial heroes? Everyone copies someone”

Tony Xu – Doordash founder – “culture is 80-90% personality of the founder”

Walt Disney – both he and Ferrari’s first companies went bankrupt; most proud of Disneyland; worked til day he died
“Their mediocrity is my opportunity”

Warren Buffett said David Ogilvy is a genius – no business is boring, only boring advertising

David ends up reading each book 5 times through research, recording, editing, and promoting it – also uses Readwise to refresh highlights

“Find your obsession, and make your exit strategy death”

Most highlighted book of his is Ed Catmull’s biography (Pixar)

“Excellence is the capacity to take pain” – Four Seasons founder

“Podcasting is printing press for spoken word”
-Completely permissionless
-His fave podcaster is Dan Carlin (Hardcore History)
-Also likes Bill Burr’s Monday Morning podcast
-Podcast is like choosing a friend

Below is “podcaster reading famous biography books, pixar style, photorealistic” from Simple Diffusion:

Podcast notes – Sam Bankman Fried (FTX and Alameda founder) on Invest like the Best

SBF – founder of Alameda Research, FTX, before that at Jane Street, one of world’s youngest billys

What’s your Truth North?
Day to day – efficient markets, does the risk engine work, does product design make sense (eg, equity markets currently are not 24/7, but it shouldn’t be that way, it’s more a historical artifact)
More generally – philanthropy (effective altruism / utilitarianism), how can I maximize my positive impact on the world

Lots of organizations having lasting impact on long-run future of world, the trillions of people to come after us
What’s become clear is society has no fucking clue what to do about pandemics – not restricted to just one country – even the countries thought to do well initially, economies stalled out, and not clear path forward
What would it have taken for us to be in a much better place?
1. Took a year after covid hit to begin distributing vaccine – could have had it in 2 months
2. Early detection systems, better vaccine production systems, reduced regulatory time for testing / approval

How much is society putting in to prepare better for next pandemic?
“I don’t know…zero?”
Doing things to solve this can save tens of trillions of dollars, and have enormous impact

What’s perfect state of markets?
Start with latency – how low does it need to be to capture most of economic value – as close as possible to release rate of new economic information
Milliseconds is probably enough
NYSE is milliseconds, but then it’s closed overnight, and on weekends and holidays – “which is sort of insane”
Always open is pretty important

Another easy win: Order books should be free and publicly available
That’s whole purpose of exchanges – so why hide it, except for people paying $50M/year – trading firms are paying it
Crypto exchanges – fees come from transactions
Equity exchanges – service is mostly a commodity, so only proprietary stuff is their data
Amount of intermediation is insane – mobile app, clearance custody, prime brokers, equity exchanges – all these intermediaries take fees, slow things down, add tape
Innovation slows down too – if exchange wants to move 24/7, needs everyone else to change too, “weakest link component”

Reasonable trading fee is 1 or a few bps (basis points) – larger fees mean less efficient pricing, less liquidity, less overall economic activity – total net fees not just matching engine fees

Crypto represents a migration to better end state – always on, more transparent, globally accessible

State of fairness in crypto markets today
-most important thing is transparency about transparency (everyone agrees what market structure looks like)
-having a level playing field to start with (it’s still a total mess, but less so than 3 years ago)
-eg in 2017 lots of Japanese got excited about bitcoin, but bitcoin price in Japan was a lot higher than rest of world (10% arbitrage opportunity) – exact opposite of inefficient market
-today these arbs still exist – eg, Coinbase trading higher than Gemini for weeks at a time due to flows – driven by lack of liquidity, idiosyncrasies with some assets (eg, Tether), lack of integration with fiat / banking

How to solve a lot of this?
“Stablecoins” – useful to move within the crypto system
eg, USDC – can move 24/7, fast and on blockchain, remove reliance on wire transfers

How much fiat inflow has actually gone into space?
Higher bound – Crypto market cap = $2.5 trillion (this was an old podcast)
Lower bound – $100B of stablecoins outstanding
Probably $400-500B in actual fiat has invested (20-25% of total market cap)

What will change the ratio – most financial institutions are PLANNING to buy bitcoin at some point – they now have mandates to get involved, but they all say “they’re not ready yet”
Should materialize in next few years
Probably the ratio will get closer to one (of actual fiat inflow to total market cap)

Huge demand for good infrastructure in crypto – exchanges still crashing during busy times

When SBF first entering crypto, hardest part of the crypto trade was the wire transfer
Lots of inefficiencies in traditional financial infra – wire to Nigeria is 10%, credit card fees are 3%
Crypto rails can help fix this – eg, all social data posted immediately on-chain, means a tweet can immediately be liked on Facebook, or a TikTok video can be instantly published to Instagram

If you’re in crypto and you’re not thinking extremely hard about regulation and compliance – you’re making a huge mistake

Must remain dynamic / flexible in long-term planning, to adapt to constantly changing environment

Crypto trades almost as much as US equity ($200B in global daily volume) – but US itself is far behind
Crypto is totally new asset class, born 5 years ago, and now is almost as large as the largest asset classes

Reasonable to find strategic parts of ecosystem to put bulk of regulations – eg, any centralized exchanges, or fiat-to-crypto conversion points
“Take steps in right direction” to protect consumers, detect financial crimes – will address most of large points of concerns, and help crypto ecosystem to thrive

There will be stable coins in world – if US bans them, then it will go to EUR or CNY

Why are derivatives so important for markets?
-in every asset class, there’s more derivatives trading volume – if you don’t need physical delivery, derivatives are more economically efficient
-average trade doesn’t require to get the actual thing (eg, a stock, or gold, or oil)
-so it requires less assets on balance sheets, more efficient markets, lowers capital requirements and transaction costs

What competitive differentiation among exchanges
-cross-margining (eg, FTX allows collateral to applies across multiple assets / trades)

Thoughts on paid acquisition
-most FTX users came from Twitter, from user memes and endorsements
-don’t buy FB / Google ads
-for hardcore traders, product is what drives it
-for new / casual traders, name recognition matters “and we’re way behind on that” (compared to Binance or Coinbase)
-want not just recognition of FTX the name, but create a powerful association
-only a few endorsements matter – should be extremely choosy

Thoughts on user generated asset era
-are books UGC? Sort of, but historically the gatekeepers are bookstores and publishing houses – it’s author UGC, but with bottlenecks and gate keeping
-before, 7 asset managers drove equity markets, now it’s social media and asking friends – Tesla is great example, people taking choices into their own hands
-NFTs are UGC, direct to consumer
-tokens / token economies are flourishing around the world, but not in the US due to regulations
-ultimately it’s good, more efficient markets, more dis-intermediation, and more curation will emerge naturally

Right now, there should be many Layer 1 blockchains, competition among them, to see what emerges
What’s end game that matters the most? 1 billion users using a chain, trillions of dollars using a chain
To get there, need millions of TPS (transactions per second)
You want to maximize composability, even across shards
If you don’t get there, you won’t be primary player to facilitate all the activity that’s required

5-10 TPS is not enough to be general purpose medium, but it DOES allow you to move bitcoin around – “has potentially a large role in the world” – it’s a different thing from ETH or Solana

Most economically efficient thing is single centralized server
Decentralized blockchains have maybe 10K servers? Will always be less efficient
Blockchains will be connection layers – across more efficient / centralized services

What he thinks he’s good at:
number of concepts he can hold in his head, and reason about
make sure not to lose the important threads
-maybe relatively better RAM (flexibility)
-not so good at long-term storage of info and facts

His wealth / fame has changed how people interact with him, but not huge change in his day-to-day life

All the expected value is in the upside tails not in the median outcomes, and you should take that seriously – often the right path is the one that might fail
As world speeds up and becomes wackier, this becomes more and more important
Acknowledge things that sound crazy and unlikely may not play out that way

When he started FTX, he was most optimistic on his team about success – thought it was 20%, team even more pessimistic
But even he was way under-estimating the upside
Straightforward EV analysis was the correct one

Most kindest thing anyone’s done for him: lot of people in effective altruism community have been dedicated and selfless, making personal sacrifices to seek the altruistic upside