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by nostrademons
5022 days ago
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Subprime's risk is also bounded: funds buy the mortgages, they're paying a fixed sum of money in exchange for an uncertain payoff in the future, predicted by models. A large part of what made it blow up is leverage: that fixed sum was often more than the entire capital of the fund. That doesn't apply to YC, I think; to my knowledge, they don't borrow any money to fund the batches. The main investment PG et al makes is in time, energy, networking, and brand name. And that's where it could blow up: fund 10x more startups, most of which fail, and suddenly the YC brand isn't worth anything with investors, PR, employees, etc. Perhaps that's why PG doesn't do it. In this case, his intuition is a perfectly rational response to unintended consequences that are outside the awareness of his conscious thought process. |
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(Looking upthread, I wonder if your objection really is to the idea that more risk automatically means more reward, so therefore YC should fund 10x more. But clearly the argument is more subtle than that – otherwise, they should just fund everyone who asks them.)
Edit: I have another argument, or perhaps just article of faith: I think there's a major pool of unexploited talent out there, basically wasting away (mostly in corporate jobs) at far below its potential. If many more startups get funded, many more creative endeavors will get going. Most won't be black swans but that doesn't mean they won't be side effects of great good.
If I'm wrong about that, then maybe there is an analogy with subprime, where lenders' (investors') zeal caused them to lend to (fund) ever-crappier borrowers (founders). On the other hand, if I'm right, then this is more about correcting an inefficient allocation of talent in our economy.