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Quiver Quantitative
JUST IN: Renaissance Technologies just filed a portfolio update.
Here are some of the largest additions: https://t.co/2pzMRFX6JM
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JUST IN: Renaissance Technologies just filed a portfolio update.
Here are some of the largest additions: https://t.co/2pzMRFX6JM
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Stock Analysis Compilation
Baron Health Care Fund on HealthEquity, Inc. $HQY US
Thesis: HealthEquity, Inc. is a leading provider of health savings accounts (HSAs) with significant competitive advantages, growing assets and revenues, and potential for market expansion due to proposed legislation.
(Extract from their Q4 letter)
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Baron Health Care Fund on HealthEquity, Inc. $HQY US
Thesis: HealthEquity, Inc. is a leading provider of health savings accounts (HSAs) with significant competitive advantages, growing assets and revenues, and potential for market expansion due to proposed legislation.
(Extract from their Q4 letter)
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Quiver Quantitative
Incredible.
Last month, we sent out a notification on Pelosi's purchase of Tempus AI call options.
$TEM has now risen 159% since the purchase.
159%.
It's been a month. https://t.co/vUiA41u7s7
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Incredible.
Last month, we sent out a notification on Pelosi's purchase of Tempus AI call options.
$TEM has now risen 159% since the purchase.
159%.
It's been a month. https://t.co/vUiA41u7s7
tweet
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Offshore
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Investing visuals
Applovin $APP is up +31% after a blowout quarter, massively beating on both revenue and raising their outlook.
The stock is now up +1000% in ONE year🤯 https://t.co/Lj1aptwkfo
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Applovin $APP is up +31% after a blowout quarter, massively beating on both revenue and raising their outlook.
The stock is now up +1000% in ONE year🤯 https://t.co/Lj1aptwkfo
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Finding Compounders
Warren Buffett lists the three ways that they can increase the value of the shareholders investment at Berkshire. https://t.co/ezLH3Yzy5B
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Warren Buffett lists the three ways that they can increase the value of the shareholders investment at Berkshire. https://t.co/ezLH3Yzy5B
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Capital Employed
Recently update this list. 130 companies now listed...
https://t.co/MsuSPF4YAg https://t.co/rJd8DZylZB
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Recently update this list. 130 companies now listed...
https://t.co/MsuSPF4YAg https://t.co/rJd8DZylZB
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Offshore
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Investing visuals
2024: the year in which Spotify $SPOT proved the world it’s a cash-printing machine👌 https://t.co/ImG2n2s9AS
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2024: the year in which Spotify $SPOT proved the world it’s a cash-printing machine👌 https://t.co/ImG2n2s9AS
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Offshore
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Startup Archive
Marissa Mayer on scaling Google and the internal black market CEO Eric Schmidt created for new hires
“One of the things that [former Google CEO Eric Schmidt] talked about a lot was that at every order of magnitude, you should expect every process to break—and you should expect to have to completely reinvent it. It’s very different to deal with tens of people versus hundreds of people versus thousands of people”
Marissa shares a story of how one time Eric reinvented Google’s hiring process in a way that initially frustrated everyone:
“We had closed the year at about 200 people, and we had a plan to double the size of the company over the coming year. Eric showed up in March, looked at the plan, and said: ‘there’s just no way you guys are going to be able to double the number of employees and keep the quality and culture the way you want it to be.’”
Eric then told the company that he would let them collectively hire 50 people that year—versus the 200 they were planning on hiring. And to enforce this, he created 50 laminated dollar bills with Larry Page and Sergey Brin’s faces on them and distributed them to Google’s VPs. Every new hire that year would require one “Larry & Sergey” bill.
Naturally, a black market for these “Larrys & Sergeys” developed, and as Marissa describes, it became surprisingly efficient:
“What would happen is the Head of Sales would have one and he would really need a new feature to make a sale. So he would [say to the engineer]: ‘look, I’m going to give you this Larry & Sergey but you have to promise you’re going to use it to hire someone who is going to build this feature to secure this revenue.’”
She continues:
“As painful as it was because there was way too much work to slow down our hiring like this, [the new process] was actually a really good moment for the company because it made us be really thoughtful about how we were scaling and where we were putting our resources. We had to be that much more thoughtful about what to prioritize and where the opportunities were. Yes, hypergrowth is really fun, but you also need to realize that you want that hypergrowth to happen in terms of users and revenue—and not necessarily in terms of the size of the company.”
Video source: @GreylockVC (2015)
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Marissa Mayer on scaling Google and the internal black market CEO Eric Schmidt created for new hires
“One of the things that [former Google CEO Eric Schmidt] talked about a lot was that at every order of magnitude, you should expect every process to break—and you should expect to have to completely reinvent it. It’s very different to deal with tens of people versus hundreds of people versus thousands of people”
Marissa shares a story of how one time Eric reinvented Google’s hiring process in a way that initially frustrated everyone:
“We had closed the year at about 200 people, and we had a plan to double the size of the company over the coming year. Eric showed up in March, looked at the plan, and said: ‘there’s just no way you guys are going to be able to double the number of employees and keep the quality and culture the way you want it to be.’”
Eric then told the company that he would let them collectively hire 50 people that year—versus the 200 they were planning on hiring. And to enforce this, he created 50 laminated dollar bills with Larry Page and Sergey Brin’s faces on them and distributed them to Google’s VPs. Every new hire that year would require one “Larry & Sergey” bill.
Naturally, a black market for these “Larrys & Sergeys” developed, and as Marissa describes, it became surprisingly efficient:
“What would happen is the Head of Sales would have one and he would really need a new feature to make a sale. So he would [say to the engineer]: ‘look, I’m going to give you this Larry & Sergey but you have to promise you’re going to use it to hire someone who is going to build this feature to secure this revenue.’”
She continues:
“As painful as it was because there was way too much work to slow down our hiring like this, [the new process] was actually a really good moment for the company because it made us be really thoughtful about how we were scaling and where we were putting our resources. We had to be that much more thoughtful about what to prioritize and where the opportunities were. Yes, hypergrowth is really fun, but you also need to realize that you want that hypergrowth to happen in terms of users and revenue—and not necessarily in terms of the size of the company.”
Video source: @GreylockVC (2015)
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