30-Year Wall Street Veteran: What Horse Racing, Poker, and Investment Legends Taught Me About Bitcoin
Based on his father's lessons from horse racing, a 30-year Wall Street veteran applies a probabilistic, Bayesian thinking framework to investing. The core principles are: do your own research to set independent odds, focus on where capital is actually flowing (not just narratives), and bet significantly only when you identify a major mispricing between your assessment and the market's.
Applying this to Bitcoin, he sees a fundamental case for 3:1 or 5:1 odds, while observing that most wealthy, institutional investors price it at 100:1 or zero, with minimal allocation. This creates a rare asymmetric opportunity, reminiscent of the "smart money" principles of investors like Stan Druckenmiller and Paul Tudor Jones, where low positioning is often a key signal as strong fundamentals.
He advises a position size based on individual age, time horizon, and risk tolerance, noting that AI's deflationary yet disruptive force may accelerate the need for a digital, belief-based monetary asset like Bitcoin. The key is to separate the decision-making process from the outcome and act decisively only when research, odds, and positioning align.
深潮12/10 09:18