| He definitely invests in what he’s familiar with. Which is why it perplexes me when tech people are so diversified with their holdings, there’s little opinion built in. You have a competitive advantage. You see the tech tools that are utilized every day in your offices. You can understand neural networks and whether Tesla’s auto pilot OS technically reasonable. You have the knowledge and skills to properly assess tech companies and their products. You’re an insider in some respects. Make an assessment, place your bets. |
At the stage where tech companies aren't behemoths like that, they're waiting longer and longer to go public. Uber, the poster child for this generation of startup investing, waited until it was a $60B company before it went public. Maybe it's easy as a company to get private investment in the cases where my insider's expertise would help me.
My ability to see that full self driving wouldn't be here by 2020 and that Musk's timelines were hype-fueling B.S. doesn't help me with tesla stock, which went way up regardless.
I think netflix, as it currently exists, is on the way out. But that's a long term bet. Not only can the market stay irrational longer than I can stay solvent, netflix can make changes and turn shit around on that time scale. My informed opinions about the macbook don't help me predict the invention and success of the iphone.
Maybe I could use my expertise for investing if I made investing my full time job, but I have one already, and it probably pays better than whatever I'd earn gambling. What's a reasonably reliable amount to beat the market by in your mind? A few percent? Is a few percent worth giving up a $50k-200k/yr promotion by devoting those same efforts to getting better at my day job? Is a few percent worth investing in my industry so that my portfolio losing value becomes even more correlated to my home losing value and more correlated with losing my job?
Hell, when I vest stock at work, where I'm literally an insider, I immediately sell during open trading windows. It has exactly zero to do with how I feel about my company and everything to do with wanting to hedge my wealth and my employment against each other. A.k.a. diversification.