Let's look at two investors, Adam and Beth. Both are 25 years old, both make $200k/year (lump sum) and expect to keep doing so for their careers (not realistic, but let's just use that for now). Adam invests it all in a 5%/year fund, Beth's fund is 50/50 to make +30% and -10%.
By age 60, Adam will always have around $20m put away (ignoring taxes and expenses or whatever, but this is just a comparative exercise so it's OK to ignore thise) -- there's no uncertainty here.
What about Beth? Her EV on earnings each year is higher than Adam's, of course, but let's dig deeper. Let's look at her distribution of outcomes by age 60.

One natural question: what are the chances she has more money than Adam does?
I ran a simulation to answer that (screenshot attached). She has more money than him 83% of the time -- but look at that EV! Nearly 3 times as high as Adam's (that's actually possible to get without the simulation because of linearity of expectation, but 100k runs is enough).
So trading off a decent chance per year at loss for 2x the annual EV will be worse 1/6 of the time, but WAY better a ton of the time, too. Seems like a pretty good investment to me! And her probability to end with less than $10m is just 3%.
(Note this all assumes non-adapting strategy and non-diversification, both of which Beth can and probably will do -- adapting lets her do better stuff as it comes up, diversifying makes risk of ruin way lower).
Let's look at something more extreme -- each year Beth has a 50/50 chance to double up or lose 50%.

Now she's a multi-billionaire a lot of the time, but also ends up with less money than Adam more than half the time! In EV, this is great.
And I think it's hard to argue that she should not do it for at least a lot of her life. Til 60 is maybe extreme, but note she can always just allocate 1/10 of her portfolio to it, or find 10 unrelated things like it and do them all.

(Or she can spin up a 2/20 fund to do it :P)
Overall, I think it's easy to write off a risky bet because sometimes you lose a lot of money and people are naturally loss-averse. But you get to make more than one bet in your life, and if your bets are good on average, even if just barely, you'll *usually* win long-term.
"BTC is risky -> no one should hold BTC until we somehow regulate it and ... make it less risky" is an infuriating narrative to me not because it's anti-BTC but because it ignores what makes an investment good.

Everyone, please: make your investments good!

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More from @AlamedaTrabucco

7 Jun
I'll be honest -- I was dreading this conference. I'm not great at meeting strangers, I dislike much of networking, I was vaguely concerned that crypto culture might be toxic in person, and I'm not wild about public speaking. Also, Miami is so hot.
How wrong I was! I enjoyed basically the entire trip -- it managed to be productive, invigorating, sentimental, and super fun all at once.
I was pretty sure the perfect timing + chance to speak meant this was the only conference I'd ever attend, but now I doubt it.

A thread about being wrong and not really making money but "generating personal value" or something.
Read 25 tweets
4 Jun
Let’s just say @SBF_Alameda was lied to about what “Tradjng Day” was gonna be Image
“We host the world’s best athletes and the world’s best entertainers, and we’re thrilled to welcome FTX” Image
“I may be the shortest one here” Image
Read 7 tweets
3 Jun
On a plane to Miami, thinking about the topic of the panel i’m on: Is it possible to time the market? It’s a great question, and one my priors were REALLY wrong about.

A thread about being wrong and making money.
My initial training in quant trading came at SIG, trading more traditional assets than crypto (let’s hear it for fixed income ETFs). These are markets that have existed forever, and many large, skilled firms have traded them forever.
In these markets, it’s really hard for there to be large, fairly obvious, predictable moves — if those existed, these big quant firms would have figured them out too and arbed them out (or similar).
Read 14 tweets
23 May
BTW not to be a downer but the stablecoin supply being up is less obviously +++ than a lot of people have claimed.

There are plenty of reasons why it could be good -- more USD flowing into the ecosystem could of course be used for buying crypto ...

... but, it could also be used to be parked in a yield farm, or as collateral for someone trying to get super short, or whatever.

Also, consider a common trade -- USDT gets really rich, MMs (such as Alameda) create USDT to sell it >1. This increases stablecoin supply!
Why does USDT (or any stablecoin) get rich? Various reasons -- maybe people really need something USD-like and so bid it up (because they're not creating for whatever reason). But maybe the BTC/USDT market has significant activity.
Read 6 tweets
23 May
FWIW this is the sort of move which hasn't happened in quite some time:
- big moves have basically all been driven by liquidations lately
- ESPECIALLY "low-liquidity" ones such as on weekends
So I think looking to data for the answer about what to expect as the weekend wraps up and liquidity increases is misguided -- intuition is likely gonna beat it.

What does intuition say?
Let's think about the features which distinguish this move / set of market conditions from other ones.

First: low liquidity and low volume.
Read 16 tweets
20 May
Well. Crypto's crashed quite a bit in the past few days, leading up to a GIANT crash (BTC touched sub-$30k!) a few hours ago. It's ticked back up somewhat since, and started bouncing around a bit. What happened?

A thread about lemons and lemonade.
The narrative in the winter was clear: institutions were getting into crypto and that's why crypto rallied so much. This mostly happened in BTC, but the other coins mostly had a beta to BTC so they all rallied some, too.

Simple enough.
More recently, the rumors turned to ETH. Now, institutions were getting into ETH, too! And some other coins, but at least for the past couple weeks, the ETH rally was The Big Thing happening (ignoring DOGE). Look at that ETH/BTC over-performance! BTC dominance was at a local min.
Read 23 tweets

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