| > Where are the weeds? I've been describing them? "number of shares owned x current market price on an actively traded public corporation" doesn't mean that you can execute it. So it's not perfectly valid, to the point where you need specialist knowledge to even know at what rate you can expect to get that turned into liquid cash, or convince the seller to accept shares at their market value, which not all sellers will be willing to do. I'm sort of confused why you don't see any issues with that definition of wealth, when the simple act of attempting to exercise that wealth suddenly means you have less of it? The same is not true of cash for example... A more accurate measure might be, "number of shares owned x current market price on an actively traded public corporation with a rate of loss over a specified time period, where if you wish to access the money faster, the rate of loss will increase based on this model" or something to that effect. I'm sure someone who actually knows the intricacies of this will be able to chime in with the expected amount of money you will end up with given that size of equity stake to some specified error margin. > I asked before why anybody would want to spend $180 billion in a single day. Well if you take spend as a transfer of wealth, then I mentioned a divorce which would fit as a significant wealth transfer that happens the instant the document is signed, Inheritance would be another. > Bill Gates is in the slow process The fact that you are describing it as slow is an impediment it may not be much of one, but it is an impediment. These are those weeds. |
I really dont think you have. You've been describing a hypothetical weed that doesnt manifest IRL.
>doesn't mean that you can execute it.
Coz you defined "execute it" in such a wildly unrealistic way that in no way resembles how any person actually or would want to "execute" that level of wealth.
>I'm sort of confused why you don't see any issues with that definition of wealth
Coz I'd never want to spend $180 billion of wealth in a single day either. The more wealth I have the more I'd want to draw out spending it.
>the simple act of attempting to exercise that wealth suddenly means you have less of it?
That is the point of liquidating your wealth and spending is it not?
>Well if you take spend as a transfer of wealth
They aren't the same. "Spending" wealth typically requires liquidation.
>divorce which would fit as a significant wealth transfer that happens the instant the document is signed
You are confusing liquidity and wealth again, I think. Bezos's wife wasnt given ~40bn in cash. No monetary transaction took place.
>The fact that you are describing it as slow is an impediment
It's slow because Bill Gates wants to spend the rest of his life spending his fortune. Your presupposition is seemingly that although he is doing this the wealth he is and will spend "isnt quite real" or "should be discounted" because he can't squeeze all that spending into one day.
Is that correct? Please, indulge me by answering this question directly.