TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

He Went From $20K to $70M Using a Strategy Anyone Can Learn

1h 19m 16s13,881 mots1,959 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

You really only need one great trade to

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be a top 1% investor. The most

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inherently ground truth thing of

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investing. The most important thing, the

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thing that matters more than anything

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else is I don't look at valuation. I

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don't look at PE. All I look about is

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there is new information. I've been

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reading Tik Tok comments. That's where I

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get most of my alpha from. You have

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Buffett or Munger and who are like

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reading the Moody's manual cover to

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cover just company financials and you're

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like I scroll the Tik Tok comments

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>> that year I made like 30 million in one

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year and it was a wild ride.

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>> You will try to beat the market. You'll

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trade with leverage. You're moving in

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and out of positions. You're not a buy

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and hold forever kind of guy.

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>> Just before the pandemic I had made the

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worst trade of my life. I lost a third

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of my portfolio on a single trade. Okay,

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so let's break it down

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>> in this is where the biggest mistake I

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ever made [snorts] was

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you break all the rules of investing.

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You know, all what I normally hear is

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you should just index, don't try to beat

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the market, don't take any leverage,

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[laughter] you know, and so but you do

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the exact opposite, right? You will try

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to beat the market. You'll trade with

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leverage. You're moving in and out of

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positions. You're not a buy and hold

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forever kind of guy. According to the

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internet, you've done pretty well. So,

1:24

um, I've seen some different numbers

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that have been floating around. Can you

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set the record straight? What is the

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actual story? Yeah, I I I started with

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20,000 in 2007 to try this new

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methodology,

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which is the way I was investing when I

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was way, way younger that worked for me.

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I I call it social ARB investing today,

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but what it essentially is is

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observational investing. You're you're

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looking for any change that's happening

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in the world, whether it's, you know,

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change in consumer behavior, uh change

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in culture, change in technology, change

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in the weather, politics,

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anything that has the potential to be

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meaningfully impactful to one or more

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publicly traded companies in either a

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positive or negative way. So if you can

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surface that change early and connect

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the dots back to a company that would

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benefit or be harmed by that change,

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that's essentially the entire

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methodology. Uh it doesn't really

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incorporate much fundamental analysis.

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It definitely doesn't incorporate any

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technical analyses

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in in its purest form. You really don't

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even need to know what the stock is

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trading at when you open up a position

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or what it's trading at when you exit.

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So like ideally you'd be completely

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blind to stock price, completely blind

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to everything other than the extent to

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which other investors were aware of that

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one thing that you surfaced that you

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feel would ultimately be impactful to

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that company. And you know, you enter

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your position at the point of

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information asymmetry, right? When when

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you know that thing and very few others

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do and you exit the position at the

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point of information parody when other

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investors start to learn about that

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thing that you uncovered first. And it's

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it sounds so simple and it really is,

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but there are nuances to it. And like

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everything else to do it to be great at

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it, it takes time and a and and a little

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effort and some regimented processes

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that you have to go through like is the

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information that you found actually

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meaningful? Uh is it a needle mover for

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that sector or for that company?

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>> You know, is the information you found

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really off radar? Uh or do institutional

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and retail investors are they already

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accounting for it? And are there any

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other things that are happening at that

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moment of time or within the window of

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that trade that are equal to more

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important than that piece of information

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that you're trading, right? So there is

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a process there

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>> of course. Yes. So and and I want to go

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through a bunch of examples of it. So

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you take this idea of observational

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investing of arbitrageing information

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without being you know a guy who grew up

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on you know you weren't working on Wall

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Street you didn't have an MBA

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you didn't have the what what would be

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like you know some 20 year 20 years of

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experience doing this the story is you

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take 20 grand you start doing this type

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of investing and you run it up it's just

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it's it works pretty well for you it's

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successful I don't know the exact

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numbers but I've seen something like,

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you know, 60 million, 70 million, 80

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million is how you've grown that

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portfolio starting at 20,000. Is that

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right, by the way? Cuz I mean, that

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sounds in some sense too good to be

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true.

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>> Yeah, it it certainly is. It does sound

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too good to be true. It it is accurate.

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It's I don't know the exact number, 70

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or $80 million of returns from the 20k.

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Um, but I've been audited over the past

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17 years. I'll be reodited at the end of

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this year and I'll fall somewhere around

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75%

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annualized returns total portfolio over

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the 17 or I think it might be 18 year

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period now since 2007.

5:31

[music]

5:32

Hey, let's take a quick break because

5:33

the team at HubSpot has put together

5:35

something pretty cool. You know, in this

5:36

episode, Chris is talking about the way

5:38

he knows how to make money, identifying

5:39

these trends, scouting the Tik Tok

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comments, making these big leverage

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bets. That's great for him. It is

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amazing. Some people will like that. I

5:47

personally don't know how to make money

5:48

that way. I wouldn't do it. But I've

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talked before about the way that I know

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how to make money, about how to build a

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money-making skill, about how to

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leverage your time and energy. And the

5:55

team at HubSpot actually went through

5:56

the video where I explained all that and

5:58

turned it into a free downloadable cheat

6:01

sheet on my four rules of how to make

6:03

money. Now, this is not, you know, get

6:05

rich quick advice. It's just core

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principles, foundational principles

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about building wealth, things that I

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wish I knew when I was, you know, just

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getting started. And so if you want to

6:12

download it, it's in the description

6:13

below. It's totally free. You can go get

6:15

it. Thanks to the folks at HubSpot for

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doing the research, making this

6:18

document, and making it available to all

6:19

you guys. All right, back to this

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episode.

6:22

Okay, so let's break it down. So you uh

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you said, "I started doing this as a

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kid." You I felt I went to the type of

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investing I was doing as a kid. I I I I

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had read your book uh laughing at Wall

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Street and you talk about like basically

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kind of like starting with like you know

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garage sailing and uh very simple stuff

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when you were a kid noticing things

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talking to your brother talking to your

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dad hey could this mean this and um and

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taking you know getting learning lessons

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with very small bankroll you know 100

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bucks uh type of deal. So could you just

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take us like early days? What was the

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where did you kind of have this sort of

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aha moment that this style of investing

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can work?

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>> Yeah, you know, I was an entrepreneurial

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kid. Uh I was really interested in

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making money before that was a cool

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thing to do. You know, the the new

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generation now all these all these kids

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are traders. They're trading crypto. I

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mean, it's all it's like every kid now

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is like I was back in the, you know,

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'8s.

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>> And by the way, that makes sense now cuz

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if you're a kid, you're on YouTube,

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you're on TikTok, you'll you'll see

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things. But what why did you have that

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itch? What what made you want to to to

7:31

get on that hustle? What who did you

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