My First Million - How To Turn $100K into $4,000,000 with Distressed Investing

Episode Date: September 19, 2025

Want the 9 investment principles guide? Get it here: https://clickhubspot.com/rhs Episode 747: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) talk to Thomas Braziel ...( https://x.com/thomasbraziel ) about distress investing. — Show Notes: (0:00) Distressed investing 101 (6:06) FTX deal details (25:59) First, Best, Worst, Weirdest (33:27) Shop Madison not Canal (34:27) Your first decade is tuition (38:25) Where Tom puts his cash (41:46) A position well bought is already half sold (43:35) The ugly side (46:24) How to handle public controversy (55:42) Recommended reading (59:33) E.P. Taylor — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: • Shaan's weekly email - https://www.shaanpuri.com • Visit https://www.somewhere.com/mfm to hire worldwide talent like Shaan and get $500 off for being an MFM listener. Hire developers, assistants, marketing pros, sales teams and more for 80% less than US equivalents. • Mercury - Need a bank for your company? Go check out Mercury (mercury.com). Shaan uses it for all of his companies! Mercury is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group, Column, N.A., and Evolve Bank & Trust, Members FDIC — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by HubSpot Media // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 So after Scott came on the pod and was like, I have my distressed guy in Europe. I'm like, Ben, find me the distressed guy in Europe. I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like no days off. On a road, let's travel. Never look. All right. So Scott Gallo is on our podcast.
Starting point is 00:00:18 And we ask him, we say, you know, we heard the story that you were buying distressed FTX claims. After FTC went into bankruptcy and everybody hated it, it was like, It was a disgrace. It was the symbol of a bad, bad business, a bad investment. I heard that you were buying up claims on the cheap and that those claims are now being paid out, you know, in full or even more than full because Sam Bankman-Fried, whatever, he was doing his thing. He had owned enough assets that would make all the creditors whole. And so he tells the story about how he's got this guy who's brought him into a couple deals and he was talking about distressed investing. And when he told the story, he like, he kind of dismissed it. He was like, I bought $10 million of FTC shares or something. like that. Or two million, two million, I think.
Starting point is 00:01:01 Sorry, whatever it was, it was like a seven figure bet. And he sort of just said like, yeah, I just did this one thing. And Sean and I were like, rewind, what? And that's what he told the story. Also, it was a moment where it's like, hold up. Put some respect on the podcaster's name. I mean, I think a lot of people make fun of Scott.
Starting point is 00:01:16 There's like the inverse Scott Galloway index and stuff like that. Basically about his bad calls he's made in his life. And I think in general, people don't really realize. And Sam, you do a good job of this. You're like, actually, you were an entrepreneur who sold a company for $100 million. He never really talks about it. that much. And then he's done some interesting investing stuff. And I just feel like because almost he's so good at the gift of gab, I think people sort of bucketed him as all talk, no walk. So it was
Starting point is 00:01:40 interesting to hear one of his interesting walk stories. So then I got in touch with Tommy and we, I say, tell me about this. I'm interested. What are you doing? What are what's going on? And he had some interesting stories. So I wanted to invite him on the podcast to do two things. Teach us about this category of distressed with both me and Sam are pretty much novices in this. Like we are we're missionary guys. We like vanilla. Like we do we do very basic stuff, you know, when it comes to business and investing. This is more exotic and it's got me interested. I want you to start with a little crispy description of like, what's the big idea with distressed investing? What are you trying to do? How do we wrap our minds around this? And then
Starting point is 00:02:20 I want to play a game called first, best, worst, weirdest, which is where we go through maybe the first play you did, the best play that ever worked out for you, the worst deal that went sideways, and then just something where shit got weird while you were doing it. But I went first, can you just make us a little smarter? Teach us a distress investing one-on-one. What are we talking about? Oh, man. Okay, so I am the bottom of the food chain of distressed investing. So there is a whole industrial complex of large distressed investing firms out there. You have oak tree and silver point and Fairlawn and you can you guys Apollo everyone's heard these names or maybe if you're foul business and investing I guess so for myself I kind of came up a different way which is my
Starting point is 00:03:06 parents for bankruptcy lawyers and I sort of learned I knew a lot about bankruptcy and generally what you're trying to do is you're almost like value investing in the toolkit is you know a lot about the legal process the trick that I've from studying a lot of distressed investing is you know and there's this famous Michael pricing which you guys have probably heard, but if you haven't, it's sort of, he says, when you're investing, you always want, like, the stake and the sizzle. I think what where the okay investors in distressed do right is they find steak, you know, you find something and maybe it's a double.
Starting point is 00:03:39 But where the guys that really knock the cover off the ball and have outstanding returns, generally are looking for that sizzle as well. The stake is the kind of the known value that's there. It's the substance. It's the thing that will give you a margin of. safety when you buy. The sizzle is the upside of how good this could be if things go right, but you still have the stake even if things don't go great. Exactly. And that's even what the whole pitch on FDX with Scott was, which is you're buying a stake, you're buying 20 cents. You know,
Starting point is 00:04:11 you're going to get 30 cents in cash back. Plus, you have all this crypto sizzle. And unless you're, you know, I don't want to say a Luddite, but unless you're just really, really aggressively against crypto, there was a lot of optionality built into that. And if you look at the history of distress, some of the best ones have been financial service, bankruptcies, Ponzi scheme cases, as well as like the dot-com cases were actually pretty good. You think of things like ComDisco, which was a famous large bankruptcy. And a lot of those actually, they kind of petered out because there wasn't as much debt. It was just equity values went to zero. So if you look at the history, they can be pretty good. And that was kind of the playbook was, as my friend would say,
Starting point is 00:04:50 who's a pretty smart investor, he says, you avail yourself to the option. You know, so because you sort of set yourself up to either buy that for free, you get it for free, or buy it extremely cheaply. So that's what we're doing in FTX, and that's we really try to replicate in almost everything we do, no matter if it's crypto or just general distressed. Is your company just you? Are you just a guy, or do you have a team? I'm just a guy. I mean, I have a small team. I think Scott calls me a lifestyle business guy, but I would describe it as what's nice about what I do is I get to choose when I work, how hard I'm working. If there's no deals, I don't have to work on stuff. and also because I'm at a low-cost jurisdiction, you know, that passed through to my clients. So, you know, is Scott paying the usual fees that you would pay if you went to a big distress firm?
Starting point is 00:05:34 Probably not. I mean, maybe because they want Scott as a client. But for the most part, the fee structure would have to be higher. Your cost structure is higher. So can I dumb this down, like in a way, like I'm kind of a caveman. And you can tell me if I'm right. But basically, you find distressed deals. You convince rich people to buy them and you take a small cut.
Starting point is 00:05:52 Is that right? Yes. Or I invest my own capital. Or you invest your own money, and you're so good that people come back over and over again. Well, if you lose money for people, they generally don't return your phone calls. They might call you, but they don't pick up when you call. So let's walk through an example together. And I think we should use FTX because it's a pretty well-known company. It's kind of what we were already talking about.
Starting point is 00:06:15 So walk me through the origin story of the FTX deal so that we can kind of see, like, we can get like a blueprint of the type of thing that you're going to try to do. What is the type of thing that you do? So where does the story start with your FTX interest? Yeah. So we were, I had already been involved in a number of crypto distressed situations. And I should back up to just say, as a backdrop, like having studied so many different investors throughout my life and kind of that's what I was really always interested in is principally just
Starting point is 00:06:46 being an investor. One thing you'll realize is the guys with really good returns also invented a category. So I was very interested in crypto distress as a category, and I thought, hey, crypto's the future. No one's willing to touch crypto. So back in 2014-15, I was already looking at Mount Cox, you know, myself and at the time, my partner, we were the largest buyer of claims in Mount Cox. But before you tell the Mount Gok story, I just want to double click on you said some of the best investors, they ended up like actually now when you look back, they kind of had invented a category.
Starting point is 00:07:17 Can you give a couple of examples of people, of guys who did that? So like Howard Marks is the prototypical example, right? Like he kind of invented the whole idea of like institutional, not just him. There were other people, of course, but he was, you know, a very early and basically him and a group of people invented the idea of institutional asset class to distress investing. So what that does is it compresses, it lowers, you know, cost of capital and really brings a whole pool of capital that we've never invested in this. So a long-term returns might go down, but it's because the actual, the, the actual,
Starting point is 00:07:50 actual cost of capital is coming down. And so your your tailwind returns are just enormous. And what does that mean? Does that mean that like institutional investors, they, they were like normally afraid of this. And Howard was like, no, this actually makes a ton of sense. And it's actually kind of safe. And here's why. And so he convinced large institutions to buy into that. Is that we were saying? To allocate. And the same thing with like early venture guys. I mean, I guess before you have like the 70s and 80s, I mean, Alan Patrickoff and people like that, these were guys that really invented the category. And of course, they have huge firms now. And, and, you know, and and, you know, the valuations for startups.
Starting point is 00:08:23 But it's like, it's this wall of liquidity that creates these kind of tailwind returns, which are fantastic. You want it. I mean, you kind of like, that's the most amazing thing. It's catching one of those ways. YC is a good example of this, where YC basically created the category of the accelerator, right? It created the category of this. Pre-seed, pre-every-product, pre-revenue, pre-traction, investing.
Starting point is 00:08:46 And so that really wasn't a popular category. Now it's a whole industry. There's angels and there's super angels and there's seed funds and pre-seed funds. There's a whole industry now that specializes in that category. But it really started, even Paula said this as an experiment. He was curious, like, how early on could you fund somebody? Could you fund a student? Could you fund a grad student?
Starting point is 00:09:05 And, you know, he sort of thought it might be too early, but he wanted to go see what happens when you do that. Yeah. And even, you know, for me, when I was starting my hedge fund, my right first, when I was really a kid, Some of my early investors were Goldman partners that were partners when it went public, and they were all sort of early LBO guys, like levered buyout guys, before private equity became a institutional asset class. And their returns were just insane. Like insane returns.
Starting point is 00:09:32 Hey, real quick, our sponsor for Today HubSpot actually did something pretty cool. If you like money stuff like this, you like investing wisdom like Warren Buffett or Monish Prabri. Well, they actually put together a nine investment principles document. Just a free document you can have of frameworks that they shared when they came on the podcast. You can get it right now. It's actually just a mental model that separates, I guess, the elite investors from the average investors. So you can get it right now, scan the QR code or click the link of the description. All right, let me get back to the episode.
Starting point is 00:10:02 Okay, so let's go back to your story. So you're saying you got excited about potentially being the first in a category of crypto distressed. Distressed already was a thing, but nobody, most people were afraid of crypto in general, so especially the institutional guys weren't going to go in there. So you're like, okay, maybe I can carve out a niche of distressed crypto. We're all looking for a thing.
Starting point is 00:10:21 This could be my thing. And you're saying that FDX story actually started before that. Before FDX, it was Mount Gox. Sam, are you familiar with Mount Gox? Do you know the rough story here? Yeah, it was sort of Coinbase before Coinbase, but it had some nefarious characters involved.
Starting point is 00:10:35 Yeah, so there was a huge kind of like sort of hack problem with Mount Gawks. So, Tom, what happened with Mount Gok? What did you actually do there? Let's start with that one. Yeah. So Mount Cox was really the first, it was almost 80% of the volume at the time in 2014 when it went under. And it was the largest exchange. I mean, other than going peer to peer and going to a Starbucks and buying Bitcoin, like that was where you traded Bitcoin.
Starting point is 00:10:57 And they had a pretty aggressive hack. They tried to cover up the hack, which was the real crime was the cover up. Eventually they filed for insolvency in Japan and what's called a chapter 15 in the States. That's kind of irrelevant. That just recognizes the foreign proceeding as the main proceeding. and you know, you could buy claims. For a while, you could buy them for about a fifth of the market price of Bitcoin. This is when Bitcoin is like $300. And then in 2018, the estate actually sold some Bitcoin to have enough to pay people their cash value, their claim at the petition date.
Starting point is 00:11:30 When I say cash, I mean Fiat, I'll try to use Fiat. And so you could buy below the cash. You could get the Bitcoin for free. Sorry. So just to slow this down for a second. When you say buy the claims, what you're saying is, I was a customer, let's say, of Mount Cox, and boom, I lost my money. It's insolvent. I don't know what's going to happen with this. It's going to go through a bankruptcy process. I'm hoping maybe in a few
Starting point is 00:11:51 years, I'll be able to get something out of this. And guys like you knock on the door and you say, I'm so sorry for your loss. You know what? I'll offer you something today for the rights to that claim you have as a customer, as a creditor in this bankruptcy thing. It's going to take a long time. It's a little uncertain. You know, so I'll give you. And in that case, like for every kind of dollar worth of claim, what were you buying the claims for at Mount Gox? Yeah, so the original trade, Bitcoin was at about $300 and we were buying the claims for about $80 per Bitcoin. Were you a Bitcoin person or were you just a, a distressed person? I would say, yeah, I studied economics. I remember reading about Bitcoin when it was like $10 and
Starting point is 00:12:33 I was like, wow, that's cool if it works. But other than that, I had no, I was like, this is pretty crazy. All right, so dumb question. They get hacked so they don't have the Bitcoin. So What is underneath? I get in the FTX case because he had invested in all these underlying companies and they still had some assets.
Starting point is 00:12:50 What did Mount Gox have that made you think that the claims would be worth anything? So just if you want to do it in Bitcoin terms, there's about 800,000 Bitcoin that was supposed to be there. Within a first like month or two,
Starting point is 00:13:03 they basically found 200 Bitcoin. Found 200 or 200,000? 200,000. Okay. So they found 200,000 of the 800, that's supposed to be there. Yeah. Right. So now you know, you know, this is, this is, you know, distressed actually the math, even though I studied math, math industry is always super simple. Like 200 over 800. Okay, you got 25 cents. So guys are going to get back 25 cents. We're basically
Starting point is 00:13:28 offering them five cents. This is on the Bitcoin dollar. You bought the assets after you learned that he magically discovered. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So you're like minimal downside, potentially high upside. That was, so the stake there was, they got 200,000 Bitcoin sitting there today, and it's $300 a Bitcoin. I can buy it at 25, you know, for 25% of that value. So that's your stake. And your sizzle was maybe they'll find more, maybe Bitcoin price will go up. Is that right?
Starting point is 00:13:56 Is that the right way to think about that? Basically. Yep. Maybe they'll find more. And, uh, and you get a 5x return on Bitcoin. That was the original pitch. Right. And I remember the first hedge fund I pitched it to, the guy literally laughed at,
Starting point is 00:14:09 me out of his conference room. And whenever I saw him around town, he would just be like, Bitcoin. I mean, it was like 2015, to be fair. He's like, it's the Bitcoin loser. I'm imagining like the big short here, because I don't know anything about this world, so my only reference point is movies.
Starting point is 00:14:26 So I'm imagining you're Michael Burry, you're sitting in your room by yourself, you're pouring through the papers, and you're like, you're like pen and you're like, you know, doing the math, you're like, 200,000, 800,000, $8,000, 25 cents, but we get to five cents.
Starting point is 00:14:38 the equations are popping out of your head and then you go to the hedge fund and then they sort of laugh you out of the room and they're like, listen, do you want to just get lunch because we're not doing this? Do you want to make something out of this hour? Were you just getting laughed out of the room in that way?
Starting point is 00:14:52 Well, I remember the name of the fund. I won't mention them. They're out of business now. If that's any... Name names. Name names. Yeah, they're... Dance on the graves.
Starting point is 00:15:02 The guy won't remember, but the firm was Southpaw. I don't know what happened to the guys at Southpaw. It was like a $2 billion hedge fund Anyway, it doesn't really matter It was forever ago And to be fair to the guy
Starting point is 00:15:14 I said oh there's crypto exchange My claims for a fifth of the market value He's like, crypto, you mean like Bitcoin? And I said, yeah, yeah, Bitcoin He was like, you want me to buy Bitcoin? And I was like, well, you know, the claims Get five times your money And he just like, he started slapping his knee
Starting point is 00:15:30 He was like, Tom, that is the funniest shit I've heard all week He was like He was like, what else are you working on? And I was like, Wait, were you, were you,
Starting point is 00:15:40 were you an employee somewhere? No. Were you on your own? No, no, I had a small hedge fund. Okay, so I had a small hedge fund. So I bought about $200,000 worth,
Starting point is 00:15:49 like literally nothing. But for my small hedge fund, that was like, I was like, I was like, well, this is like 10% of my money. I got to like, you know, it was only,
Starting point is 00:15:55 I only had so much, I mean, it was a really small hedge fund I was running. I said, okay, I can't. This is like, you know, I could get in trouble. I can't, like,
Starting point is 00:16:02 make this too big. So I'll, like, call some of these guys i know and when you're when you have a small hedge fund the nice thing you can do is you kind of have a symbiotic relationship like you can do a million out like if you find a million dollar deal you can get i don't know i'm just making up a name oak tree you call oak tree i mean they won't do 10 million deals but you say hey you want nine of this i want one million of it you don't even pay me anything i just need you because i need the money so you make friends and you kind of figure out ways to get symbiotic relationships with some of these cats i mean similar to
Starting point is 00:16:28 probably any industry is like the co-opetition you know if you want to dress it up and make it sound fancy. But I mean, that's how I spent my whole career is like co-opititioning with like all the big distress firms. So they call me with tiny stuff that they can't do. And I call them with big stuff that I can't do. And I asked for either allocation or a fee or something. But generally I'm asking for allocation because I'm not like a registered dealer broker. What did you end up making on the Mount Gock trade? How much did you end up getting in and what was the, what was the end, what was the out? Yeah, there were across a number of different SPVs. And we had a later like, I'm going to get to the answer. We had a later hedge fund that like was buying all.
Starting point is 00:17:02 the way up. So they probably made like two, three times their money because they were literally buying all the way up through the distribution. Like, they'll still buy claims to this day. But our original investor made about 38 times as money. Actually, it's more than that now. It's over 40 times of money. Over what period of time? Oh yeah, like seven years. Wow. And is that because Bitcoin price appreciated basically? Yeah, so some of it is about five X of it is the discount. And then the rest is their appreciation. Right. But he put it on in 2000. The big, the guy I'm describing was our real first outside LP outside of the fund, which liquidated and we sold the claim. And I think that claim we bought, the original claim we bought from a
Starting point is 00:17:41 Googler, actually, that was pretty funny. And I always joke because I was a kid. And, you know, I had my standard documents, but I didn't have documents for like a Japanese court. And he was like, so how do we do this, Tom? And I was like, you know, I don't know. And he said, well, why don't I ask. So I always joke that Google wrote my original purchase documents for, for the purchase of, You know, like, I don't know the name of the firm, Stepshoe and something, or some firm that worked for Google because this guy was like a big up at Google.
Starting point is 00:18:10 But yeah, about 40 plus times, but a lot of it is appreciation. But the really interesting thing about that guy that originally did the deal with us, this family office guy, is we were buying the Bitcoin for free because he put that trade on in 2018. That was the big short moment, because you were getting it for free.
Starting point is 00:18:27 Explain that. Why did you get it for free? Okay, because the rough math at the time, in 2018, Bitcoin is like 10 grand, 12 grandish, and the trustee sold a fifth of the Bitcoin. So, we sold about 40,000 Bitcoin and brought in about $600 million of cash. And so there was $600 million dollars of cash, and there was about $3 billion of crypto or $2.5 billion of crypto. We were buying the claims for below the cash value, the clash, look-through value on the claims. So we were buying for about a $400 million valuation.
Starting point is 00:18:54 There was $600 million of cash, and there was about $2 billion of crypto. So that was the time when I was like really banging the table. Because before that, there was, all Bitcoin, and it was, it was cheap, but it was quite directional. Why do they sell it for below the cash value at that point? Is it because there still a time delays or an uncertainty? Yes. And there was uncertainty around whether who got the uplift and value. So in 2018, there was a big argument.
Starting point is 00:19:19 Who gets the uplift and value? Does it go back to Marka Pellas? Like, the guy that kind of didn't do us right? Or does the uplift and value go to the customer account claim? It's the same thing happened in FTC. The same thing happens in all the crypto bankruptcies. who gets appreciation and value post-petition. Petition meaning the date the company files for insolvency.
Starting point is 00:19:38 As, you know, I'm an absolute outsider. I'm learning all about this right now, but like Mountain Gocks and particularly FTX, those were pretty big news headlines. And as an outsider, when I see this, I just think, oh, I'm sure, like, there is no opportunity because everything is being taken care of, like they're going to catch the bad guy,
Starting point is 00:19:59 but then also all the big dogs are already after this. Like there's no way to make it money. There's no opportunity. Not me. Someone else is probably like on top of this. But the way that you're describing yourself, maybe this is like you're underselling yourself. But you're kind of describing yourself as like just a smart guy who just like kind of gets in
Starting point is 00:20:14 the mix and figures it out. Take out the smart part. Well, you're doing it again. You just did it again. But you like how many like literally how many human beings like how many human beings are actually getting after this? like for the Mount Gocks. And like, who do you, who do you phone?
Starting point is 00:20:32 Yeah, a lot of questions in there. Okay, so, uh, you're right in some sense. All the big firms have a corner on the, like the bond. If you want to try to play the bonds and stuff like that, you can't open up a fidelity account and trade distress bonds. You call them and you say, oh, can I get a quote on this bond? And they're like, well, that's in default. You're like, I know it's in default. I'm asking what the quote is.
Starting point is 00:20:52 And they're like, oh, we don't trade in defaulted bonds. They're way too risky for you to be looking at. So there, you'd have to have like real prime bro. And you know, you have to have serious money to play that game. Also, you have to worry about getting run over by big distress firms. Sort of actually just like in the big short were the two guys who had the garage hedge fund, which was big. I mean, big for a regular guy. It was $20 million of their own money they were playing with. They were like laughed out of Chase or something like that. Yeah. Yeah. The same thing with the Rode's markets. I mean, you have to have serious setups
Starting point is 00:21:21 and serious, well, I call them lines. You have to have lines with your with your PVs to be able to do this stuff. And so I knew the other side of the market are kind of the, that's why I said on the lowest rung of the totem pole, which is the claims market. So there are probably like 10 firms out there that really do trade claims. And, you know, I say this lovingly because I'm one. Most people in space are not super smart. It's kind of like the, I don't know, in 19, maybe it's where like the, oh gosh, I'm going to offend somebody, like the network administrator. I don't know, like the kind of like the lowest level of IT person. This is like the lowest level. level of the stress person.
Starting point is 00:21:59 Yeah, like the rejects a little bit. Yeah. And so, but I kind of like hanging out with the rejects. What can I say? Right. Anyway, so, so you're, you're kind of like a, what's that, you know, they have a shark and they have a thing that, like, lives on the shark. The food chain. Yeah. Yeah. You're like that little thing that eats the stuff that falls off the shark. And the shark kind of likes you because you keep the barnacles off it or something. And that's you as a trade claim buyer. If you prefer in some of these largest stress firms, the can't, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the cases we're largely talking about when you have cryptocurrency exchanges going under and things like that,
Starting point is 00:22:31 you're talking about customer account claims. And customer account, what's nice about that, like both in FTX and if you go back to Mount Cox, is the docket was largely customer account claims. And so it's all trade claims. There's not a lot of structured debt. And so certain setups are just not appropriate for a small person or home gamer to be trying. But, you know, you can literally buy claims. There's no, nothing that stops you. But do you go, do you put out a press for And you say, hey, all 100,000 FTX or Mount Gox claim holders or, okay, please email me and let's talk. Right. If you've been wronged by this curly-haired man, call me.
Starting point is 00:23:10 I'm here for you. Yeah. So, okay, Mount Gox is a good example. Fortress was my competitor on that docket. And they were buying up claims to. Pete Brigger is a big, uh, Bitcoiner. And he's one of the founders of Fortress. And they were buying up claims.
Starting point is 00:23:25 and they were my competitor on that case. They were the only two people really buying claims. We almost worked together, but we're still friends and everything. And they actually did do, like, press releases and tried to get people that way. For myself, this didn't sound ridiculous, but the entire 14,000 creditors or customers was a leak list. Oh, man.
Starting point is 00:23:53 One of the things about to stress, yeah. So you were able to use. the league list to actually find people. My favorite is when you find somebody and his name's like some random name like spin Erickson, I don't know, make up some and he's in tech and he on LinkedIn he's like, you know, he's part of the Bitcoin group and then you ping him and you're like, hey, do you have a Mount Gawks claim if you do? Like we could buy it from you. And he's like, how did you find me? And you're like, well, let me see, you're under 35, you're into tech and you're part of the Bitcoin group. I just, and they're only three with people with your same name.
Starting point is 00:24:24 So you're hustling. Like this is work. Yeah, you're hustling. There's a lot of work. The work here is you find the person. You contact them. You get them interested. You verify their ownership and that they haven't already sold the claim to somebody else.
Starting point is 00:24:37 There's like a whole bunch of work that you do so that guys like me could just invest in just buy the claim. And we feel like, all right, you've done the diligence on this. You've done the cleanup work on this. That's what we would have to trust you. And that's why you get paid, a carry or a fee from investors. Yeah. And you know, what's interesting is so it is a lot of. of grunt work. That's why I think sometimes it gets like the more like, you know, guys holding
Starting point is 00:24:58 footballs who, you know, played, played hockey or something in college. You know, there's not, it's not like the brainiest side of distress. But actually, there's a lot of intricate, like, I'll call them corner cases, like claim corner cases where you really do need to know a lot about the legal side. I mean, with chat chabot, it helps a lot. But still, it helps have a wonderful experience and, you know, prompting chat is just as important as anything. So the more you know, the more powerful it is. But it seems like a good life. for you. Yeah. You're hanging out in Italy. It seems like you work project to project. And what's the upside here for you? Like, can you make tens of millions of dollars in one year? Yes. I mean,
Starting point is 00:25:35 I don't know. Not, I mean, seven figures, definitely. Eight figures is pretty hard. Uh, what happens is you get people to push back on your fees. They say like, oh, you're not in New York. You're not a real firm. Like, it's just a few guys. Like, you're just a broker. And, um, but you know, you build a reputation over time and then people will pay you more and more. And, but you can definitely make seven, eight figures, especially in a good year, especially if you have something work out and you ever promote on it. So let's, let's walk through that game I talked about. First, last, best, worst, weird, whatever. So what was the first life? Maybe you were a kid. Maybe you were in middle school or something like, you know, Sally didn't want her bike anymore. And you're like, oh, your trash is my treasure. You know, so what was your first foray into buying distressed assets? Okay, so my parents were the more bankruptcy lawyers or lawyers.
Starting point is 00:26:27 My mom specifically was consumer bankruptcy lawyer. So I used to hang out, like, at the courthouse as a kid and, like, hang out with the clerk's office and with, like, U.S. trustees and stuff. So I kind of grew up, like, really... Did you like it or she just, like, didn't have daycare and you had to go? Yeah, basically. She didn't have daycare. A single mom, basically, like, no daycare. Tom's got the clip on tie, and he's in court with me.
Starting point is 00:26:52 So a lot of clip on ties. Yeah, this is my associate. Yeah, so, and this is like paper files everywhere. So, no, so I grew up kind of hanging around it. We'd always hear about stuff from, I remember when I was a kid first hearing about like HUD houses. I was like, what's a HUD house? What's that?
Starting point is 00:27:07 Oh, you can buy these houses. And, you know, they're really beating up, but you can get really good deals. So I remember my brother and I flipped the HUD house. My mom put up the Capitol. I have no idea what the numbers were. We probably bought it for 20 or 30 grand that, you know, my mom put up, but we probably sold it for 60. We did the demo demolition ourselves,
Starting point is 00:27:25 which is a, you know, I have to say, God love my parents. I'm glad I wasn't injured severely. You know, doing demolition when you're 14 is probably bad idea. Listen up. The old playbook is slowing you down. AI broke the funnel.
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Starting point is 00:28:12 more and leave your competition behind. All right. Back to the pod. What was the story of the baseball card shop? Ben told me there was a baseball card shop story. So these are the kind of of things I was talking about when I was a kid, these were, these, these deals would come up. You know, there was a whole thing where they, the baseball card industry went through this, this, they were printing cards. They said they weren't printing. I don't know if you remember
Starting point is 00:28:32 this, Sean. And, and there was a bit of fallout in like the collection market for baseball cards. And I'm sure if you went under, probably like the microbrewery thing, where this people were overmade microbreweries. And then I've seen a bunch of microbrewery bankruptcies. And I remember seeing, the entire shop was $3,000, which is a lot of money when I was a kid. And my mom was like, do you want me to put up the money and you'd buy the whole thing? I was like, we can do that? I was like, well, uh. So I would hear about these things as a kid, and I guess it probably colored my,
Starting point is 00:28:59 my imagination for what was possible. And then I kind of like, between that and, you know, I was really obsessed. So I started, I guess I bought my first stock when I was 11 or 12. I can't remember. But I was sort of obsessed with Warren Buffett as a kid. But I then, and then what happened, guys, over time is I sort of melded the two things together. It's like, what would Buffett do if he had the specific knowledge?
Starting point is 00:29:22 the Deval term, like specific knowledge of bankruptcy, plus what he knows well, which is like, you know, valuation and sort of like deep value investing or value investing. So I kind of melded those two things together. Yeah, it's almost, I actually think there's three. There's, you have knowledge of the law and not a, not a, not as fearful. It's like I speak the native tongue of bankruptcy court, right? So it's like, okay, I feel I can get more certainty than the people who hold the claims, right? Like, I have a better idea of where, how this will play out and how long it'll take to play out and where the puck will land. So it's like knowledge of the legal code,
Starting point is 00:29:58 knowledge about deep, knowledge and interest in deep value investing, which I like admiring Buffett and Howard Marks and a bunch of these guys and really learning from their playbook. And then the third is just the entrepreneurial hustle to go cold call, knock on doors, raise the capital, get the claims, do the verifications, go travel to,
Starting point is 00:30:16 you know, wherever and make it happen. So you kind of needed that Venn diagram to be able to do what you do. That's what I'm hearing. And I think for me, like, I got kind of obsessed with the adventure of investing. Like, for me, you know, like, my very first, like, real distressed investment was this thing called Ethenex Energy where people had all these restricted physical shares. And so, like, I literally drove around, like, the Northeast and bought shares off of people. And, like, we'd go into the local bank and get things medallion signature guaranteed.
Starting point is 00:30:45 And I was like, oh, I'm just like Buffett and Snowball where he's, like, going around and buying shares of the hunting lots. He's like knocking on the door of Geico. Like, can you give me a tour of the office? And like, like, trying to like figure it out, yeah. If somebody hasn't read Snowball, can you tell us a sort of a Buffett hustle story or a buffet, devalue distress story? Gosh, I mean, I must have read at least 10 years ago. So, yeah, I mean, he was famous for, there was some security.
Starting point is 00:31:09 I can't think it was a hunting club that he joined just so he could buy stock in this. I mean, maybe you guys heard the story. But there was like a hunting club that also had oil on its land. And so it's probably a apocryphal story. where he like, you know, gets all the hunting gear and, like, joins the hunting club. You know, Buffett doesn't give a shit about hunting. Hello, fellow hunters.
Starting point is 00:31:29 Hello, there. He's got his rifle on his, you know. You don't suppose you want to sell some of your shares, do you? So I can't remember exactly what the story was, but it was something in those lines. And I think it was like, you know, you could, you know, now, you know, one of the things I took away from Buffett is you're always using your unique competitive advantages,
Starting point is 00:31:48 just like in any business, right? And all the lessons from business kind of applied to just pure investing. And, you know, using those in a new competitive van, to the time, there's all this informational arbitrage. That's probably less and less now. There's still scuttle but, meaning like making phone calls and channel checking and like getting out in the field and hustling. And hustling goes a really long way. But, you know, now you have other advantages, like you can invest in Japanese insolvencies. Buffa couldn't invest in Japanese insolvencies because you didn't have Google Translate. So, you know, you just have to keep pushing the boat out.
Starting point is 00:32:18 to me, that's the real lesson of Joel Greenblatt or Warren Buffett. Joel Greenblatt was like a famous special set investor, which is, you know, you play the field and you use everything. We just talked to Howard Marks, and both Sean and I have read a bunch of Buffett stuff. You're doing something. I have, you know, I don't want to, I don't know how great a investor you are other than like this one topic is really fascinating to us and you seem wonderful. But you're doing something that they do, which is you use really great language.
Starting point is 00:32:44 So you've used a few phrases. you've used a few really good phrases that helped me understand things a little bit more effectively. So you're like, you just gotta keep pushing the boat out. Or you're talking about like scuttlebutt. Like you've used these words that I've done a really good job
Starting point is 00:32:57 of explaining what you do, which in my head means you have done a very good job of creating a framework on how to think about this type of stuff. For me, I think it's all about valuation. Just how you manufacture the valuation is like the sauce
Starting point is 00:33:11 and like how you, you know, you're making your sauce. Like you guys are doing venture deals. Like so much of it is probably, access and connections and reputation and being able to get allocation, but also being able to vet founders or vet VC firms and also knowing what the docs look like, like, all that kind of like, not a Vennigran, but that whole like soup that makes it work, that's that we have the same thing and what we're doing. I mean, Howard Marks is an absolute legend. And, you know, he has a very
Starting point is 00:33:42 famous. I mean, I'm sure he talked about Bruce Karsh, who did, you know, a lot of the investing. And Howard Marks is, like, the great communicator. I mean, the guy, I mean, that's one of the things I think people don't appreciate is you can still work in investments make really good returns, but those guys are like monster communicators. Like, they are great of fundraising, and they're great at what they do. So it's just, it's, they have like multiple skill sets or, you know, or they have partners to back them up. You, you sent us a lot. You sent us a a list of your, like, core philosophies. And you've told us the first one, the steak and sizzle philosophy that you live by. Tell us about some of these other ones. So one is shop Madison, not canal. What does that
Starting point is 00:34:23 mean? Okay, I stole that one. I like it because what deep value and distress, the mistakes they make is they sometimes buy, like, value traps. They buy real crap. The idea is you want to buy real stuff that is cheap that could be good. So, like, the phrase is, you know, you don't buy, you know, handbags on Canal Street, because those are all fake, you buy them, you try to get a good price on the Madison Avenue when they're discounted,
Starting point is 00:34:48 not, you know, because, you know, fool's goal is a real problem in distress. You just, oh, well, the guy put $200 million in it. It's only 10. It's like, yeah, but it's worth zero. So you got to be careful of, of this kind of bias that runs into like,
Starting point is 00:35:01 oh, it's such a good deal. You're like, is it? So, I mean, you know, assets become liabilities and liabilities can become assets when you get in a restructuring situation. All right, let's do the next one. He said, start young. The first decade is tuition.
Starting point is 00:35:15 I love this. This could apply to any field, by the way. I think that's a great phrase just in general. Well, you guys, come on, y'all know a lot of this stuff. But for me, I started when I was 12. I was terrible. I think the first, I could tell you the first stocks I bought. I bought Home Depot because Bob Nardelli, who was passed over for whoever, I think maybe Jack
Starting point is 00:35:36 Walsh or maybe Emmett, whoever became the CEO of GE, came over to Home Depot. and he was going to GE Home Depot. Well, that didn't work at all. And, you know, so I wasn't investing at all in valuation. I was based on a story in HBO. There was this huge article in a Harvard Business Review. And I was, like, 12 years old, like reading this being like, oh, yeah, ethos. I don't even know what this word means.
Starting point is 00:35:57 He's going to change the ethos. So that was like the first stock. Yeah, I was like, I was like, ethos. I never heard of this word. Sounds smart. So that was like the first stock. And the other one I bought was Inco, which was, a large nickel producer in Canada.
Starting point is 00:36:12 That actually did work out. It was based on, like, the rising price of nickel I read about in foreign affairs. And the third one was from a Forbes article. It was EMC, which is a chip manufacturer, which I can't remember what happened to that one. I think I, you know, the thing is, you did this thing about stocks, especially when you're young and you're never done anything. You buy them, and you're like, okay, I bought them. All right.
Starting point is 00:36:32 And then day two, you're like, now what do we do? My kids are, I have a one-year-old, a four-year-old, and a five-year-old. And for my four and five-year-old, they were trying to earn something. They wanted, like, ice cream or a treat or a toy or whatever. They're like, if we do this, can we have that? And I was like, here's what I'm going to give you. I'm going to give you $100. They're like, $100.
Starting point is 00:36:54 I was like, I'm going to give you $100 each. But because I was teaching about, like, we were at the group, we were like waiting in the parking lot. And I was explaining what a grocery store is. I was like, yeah, so somebody owns this business. And then they buy the stuff and then they sell it to us. I was trying to explain what a business is. And I was like failing miserably. I was like, oh, my God, why is this so hard to explain what a business is?
Starting point is 00:37:12 But I basically told them, I gave them $100 each. And this weekend, I'm going to present to them five stocks of products that they use and buy. So like, we bought a Nintendo Switch. So it's like, here's Nintendo stock. And I'm going to let them pick and let them invest it in an account where they're going to start to see whether it's going up or down. And I'm going to have them explain whatever their logic is of why they picked, you know, either Nintendo or whatever, you know, Yamaha or whatever, whatever, whatever. whatever stock that they pick and then they're going to get to like
Starting point is 00:37:40 ride the ups and downs of this. So I'm with you on Stardom Young, even younger than you would guess. Well, yeah, I just think that, you know, I don't know, I'm in my own experience, like, you know, you'll meet guys. This is a common thing. I'll meet guys. I don't know when I'm here or on holiday or wherever
Starting point is 00:37:56 and they'll have an exit. Like I met a guy who's like a very early employee at Airbnb. And he had probably $80 million or $100 million but he's never actually invested money. So now he's 45, probably, 50. And now he's like, you know, I'm so good at this. Like, I'm going to buy some duolingo and I'm going to, you know, do this and do that. And I'm like, well, you just need to respect the fact that you actually never invested money.
Starting point is 00:38:22 I mean, you were amazing operator and you got a rocket ship. That's awesome. Well, we say that all the time on here, which is there's a huge difference between investing and earning, like, via a company. Not just a difference. It's almost like the opposite. Yeah. It's like a power lifter that then goes and tries to. to do ballet or something.
Starting point is 00:38:39 It's like, oh, yeah, operator. It's all about action. Action, action. You've got to do stuff, right? You're trying to do as many things as you can be super productive. As an investor, it's like sit on your hands. Inaction is your friend. All the money's made in the holding, the waiting, the observing. And as an entrepreneur who was rewarded for taking action,
Starting point is 00:38:59 you get punished as an investor for taking too much action. Yeah. And I'm, you know, it just, it takes a ton of experience to be good. and well even to be okay a question that Sean has asked people for that I love which is like basically how do you invest your own money and I want to ask you the same do you since you are a professional investor do you have 100% of your portfolio in a variety of deals like this or are you doing any passive stuff or is it all active it's all pretty active yeah I don't I don't you know like you for me it's like tax advisors great
Starting point is 00:39:36 people that like you know state planning advisors great guys I want to manage my money no thank you partially because I enjoy it but also I don't think that I've reached the capacity where I have more money than I know what to do with you know I think that I can still find a lot of deals I mean you know your opportunity set when you have you know a million or 10 million or whatever is just a lot better than if you're you know if you're at a hundred or for it you're you know the optimal the optimal strategy changes
Starting point is 00:40:09 based upon your capital base. So when you say active, do you mean it's all distressed? It's like your specialty. That's where you're putting most of your your network, the majority. Yeah, I put most of my money into our own deals.
Starting point is 00:40:22 Right. When you, you were saying like, you know, early on with your hedge fund, you were putting 5% into that deal. You weren't allowed to because you have as investors to get like, you know, as crazy as maybe to match your own conviction in the deal.
Starting point is 00:40:33 Now that that's not the case anymore. Or like, how concentrated have you gotten? Like, do you, have you gotten any, have you ever been at a point where you're just, like, insanely concentrated? I kind of like it when it hurts a little bit because it's so, I'm so concentrated. But maybe that's me.
Starting point is 00:40:48 I don't know. I mean, I feel like it's a little bit like an entrepreneurial bent. Like, you kind of, if you're not pushing yourself, then I wouldn't feel comfortable with it. I mean, I understand if you have a big exit, for me, I'm constantly investing in other deals, friends deals, I feel like I have pretty good deal flow in the distressed area. And then the claims work, I wouldn't say it's free money, but you can almost reliably compound your money on a
Starting point is 00:41:15 small base, you know, like a few million bucks or something, you can reliably compound that at a pretty aggressive rates. What do you mean by pretty progressive rates? What is that? Is that 15%? Is that 25%? Is that 30%? What do you say? Talk about? Just, I don't know, probably 30 to 50, depending on the year. You can, you can probably easily get higher than that. There's these guys, Sean, like in, I used to live in Texas, and they're guys who are like, I didn't know what their job was. I'm like, I don't know what you do, but you're really wealthy. And I just started calling them capital men. They're just capital guys where they just like, buy things. Did they like it when you call them capital men? It's a good phrase, Tom. You're a capital guy. Maybe. I don't know. I guess
Starting point is 00:41:56 for me, I feel like I've spent my entire life studying like the history of sort of like modern investing, like guys that bought banks out of bankruptcy before you, you know, when you could do that, you know, guys that have minted enormous fortunes with, you know, like there's a guy that bought a tobacco company around the time they were doing the
Starting point is 00:42:16 settlements with tobacco companies who made a fort. So I've studied a lot of these things and I've always wanted to be, to do just one deal like that. So I guess I've always aspired to do that. But I mean, if you, there's that phrase, you know, what is it,
Starting point is 00:42:30 a position well bought is already half sold. And I do think when you're doing sort of very special sit, sort of deep value, distressed stuff, if you're selective, the problem with the fund and the big institutional money management firms is they always have to constantly be finding deals. The nice thing about being a little bit of a home gamer is you can kind of select, you can be very selective. You can literally do nothing in a six month period or a year if you just can't find anything. And, you know, there's still do claim work and bring an income, but you don't necessarily have to swing. I mean, we've seen deal over my lifetime, I've seen deals where guys have, you know, turn, you know, it's 20 million into 3 billion and, you know, six million into 80 million in one year.
Starting point is 00:43:09 I mean, you see some incredible deals in the space, and, you know, you're getting high optionality, low risk because of the price you're paying. But it's a ton of work and a lot of brain damage, for sure, and a lot of hustle. And that's not necessarily the claims. All right, let's take a quick break because I've got to tell you a story.
Starting point is 00:43:24 Let me tell me about the first time I tried to run payroll for my team. I was using a traditional bank, and you know the type. It's got a janky interface. It's built like a 2002 tax form and it was open only during business hours. And I hit send and it froze. They flagged the transaction. They locked my account. They put me on hold for 45 minutes. And then they told me, I got to visit my local branch. And that was the day I started looking for a new banking solution.
Starting point is 00:43:45 After asking a few founders what they were using, I found out about Mercury. And so now my payroll is two clicks. I can wire money. I can pay invoices. I can reimburse the team, all from one clean dashboard. That's why I use it for all of my companies. And so do 200,000 other startup founders. And so if you're looking to level up your banking, head to mercury.com and apply in minutes. Mercury is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking services are provided through Choice Financial Group, column N-A, and evolve bank and trust members, FDIC. We've kind of hyped up, you know, what you do, glamorized it a little bit in this episode. We've glamorized you and what you do. Give us a little bit of the ugly. So first on the asset class in general. For example, startup
Starting point is 00:44:23 investing, I could tell you, it's amazing. You meet these entrepreneurs. They're telling you about the future. These are the smartest of the smart. young, ambitious, creative people. And when it works, did you create the next Facebook, next Airbnb? You can get 10,000 X. And then you go and start doing it. And you're like, oh, and also, you know, you're going to be wrong most of the time. You think you're going to learn so much from these people. It's like you hand them the check and then you kind of don't hear from them that much after that. You're not actually going to learn that much, nor do you have any control or say in it at all what's going on in your investment. And by the way, even when it works, it's going to take 10 years for it to get liquid. You might be rich.
Starting point is 00:44:57 otherwise. This is not the way you're going to get rich. It's a hobby for people who are already rich. And that's like, if I was going to say, what's the real talk of angel investing? That's how I would describe it. What would you say is like the ugly side or the bad side of what you do? What's the downsides of this asset class? Well, distressed in general, as a small player, you can get totally hosed. So don't like, every now and then I'll hear someone, even smart friends and say, oh, well, you know, AKR is going to make sure everyone's taking care of because they don't want the bad press. I'm like, what are you talking about? It's not Lake Wobagon.
Starting point is 00:45:34 They are going to walk all over you in bankruptcy court. So I never understand this logic. And it's only from many years of being like, oh, they're going to play nice. No, they're not going to play nice. And don't ever assume that. And sometimes you do get a gift. They'll do things that'll be a little more gift-like to wherever you are if you're in a preferred or if you're an equity. God forbid your inequity, but if you're even
Starting point is 00:45:58 claimant things like that. So that's one of the ugly sides. I think also one of the ugly sides is it's very transactional and financial. So it doesn't exactly, you don't get people who are like giving you the story eyes of the future. A lot of times you're
Starting point is 00:46:14 sitting across people arguing over a pie that ain't growing. In fact, maybe the pie is bad apple pie that's already gone off. So it's like they're really arguing over over, you know, something that could be either dying or shrinking. So I think it has an emotional toll on you being in distressed investing. Also, you are actually hearing people's life stories. Like, you know, I will not mention names, but, you know, companies will go bankrupt and this will be someone's entire life's work. And they're Picasso. And they're spending two hours telling you about
Starting point is 00:46:45 their Picasso. And you just can't, you just got to let him, you're almost like a guidance counselor walking them through, you know, maybe doing a dealer transaction and try and be as respectful as possible. The fact that this person might have just lost their life's work or their family's fourth generation business, et cetera, et cetera. So you have people in, they emotionally are in distress. So it is a tax on you, but also you need to be as respectful as possible. And I don't think. What else? I mean, I think as a small player, it's very hard. I think for me, I always say that investing isn't, I would, I wouldn't, I would, and say I'm good, I'd say I'm okay investor. I'd also say that it's a bit of a disease,
Starting point is 00:47:24 so I kind of like feel compelled to do it, even though sometimes maybe it's not the best thing for me. So I always joke that it, you know, it's kind of a disease. Like I'm looking at this stuff on nights and weekends, on Sunday morning, you know, I'm, you know, just like you might be looking, having another call of a startup that you think is interesting or trying to get on an allocation for something. Like, I'm doing the same thing with my deals. Like I'm trying to learn a little bit more and see if I can find something. So, yeah, I don't know if I answered your question. No, you did.
Starting point is 00:47:57 The second part of the question is we've been glamorizing you a little bit, but you called me, you know, before the pod and or you called Ben and you were like, hey, like, just, you know, like, if you Google me, you're going to see some stuff. I want to be able to, you know, do you guys want to ask me any questions? Do you want me to talk about that on air? Like, do you want me to clear the air about this? So, like, hey, here's an opportunity. Because if somebody Googles you, yeah, there's like a settlement.
Starting point is 00:48:18 case, I don't know what's going on with this. Like, what do you want to say about this? Yeah, so, and I, that's why I said, I said, Ben, I got, like, you haven't said anything about this and I'm wondering why you haven't, and I just want to put it out there, which is, yeah, I was involved in this receivership in Delaware, and I got a pretty nasty headlines. And I have to say, you know, as I've gone through my life, I've had a lot of ups and downs, like anybody or any entrepreneur for sure. And this was a down one, and I'm glad to have it behind me.
Starting point is 00:48:44 But basically, it was a receivership that I was in charge of. You know, we made a lot of money for the shareholders. So the court didn't like some of the way I went about, you know, my activities and sort of aggressively slap me on the wrist or maybe in the face. And I'm glad that everyone in the, it's called fun.com, is getting a good recovery and I'm glad to have it behind me. But yeah, it's like something I wanted to bring up because I didn't want to act like it was something didn't happen. Okay, but what did you do? You're like, ah, is not my best mom? What'd you do?
Starting point is 00:49:19 So the biggest thing is, so I was running this receivership. And of course, because of that, I was in charge of doing everything, whether it's like administrative work or like running the bank accounts and doing the taxes. And, you know, while I think I'm a good. Sorry, a dumb question. What is doing the receivership mean? You're taking it through bankruptcy. Is that what that is? So it's kind of like a bankruptcy, but it's a state and state court.
Starting point is 00:49:42 So this was in Delaware Chancery Court because a company was a Delaware court. And so my job was to sort of marshal all the assets. There were no assets when I showed up. So this was basically a pump and dump penny stock. I bought up 20% of the company. And then I went to Delaware because the guy who was running it actually got arrested for a different fraud that he was doing. This guy named Jason Galanis. And so because of that, I was like, oh, because I knew all along that this company likely owned the domain name fund.com.
Starting point is 00:50:12 Plus, they own this ownership of an ETF company called. advisor shares. So I wouldn't got myself appointed receiver. There was no assets in the company. And my goal or my remit from the court was as a receiver, almost like a bankruptcy trustee, was to marshal all the assets and then try to pay out as much to
Starting point is 00:50:29 shareholders as possible. I think I did that. The court, and I did do it, but I had a shareholder who was very unhappy with the way I was going about it. He complained to the court. The court looked into my activities. They didn't take kindly to some, you know, some
Starting point is 00:50:46 the things I did, whether it's the tax position, or how I was moving money around and the fact that I was investing the money in deals that I was doing. And so, you know, they pretty aggressively slapped me, and that's where the headlines come from. I, of course, the whole time, feel like I did my best to cooperate with the whole thing. And I'm glad to see that we have a good settlement with the new receiver of the receivership. And again, the outcome for all the shareholders who were involved is pretty darn good, which I'm glad about because at the end of the day, I didn't want it all just go to lawyers fighting over this. And, you know, that's kind of what happens. So not my brightest moment, I would say, because I feel responsible as a person in charge to do everything and do it
Starting point is 00:51:32 properly. And I don't think I'll be being in avers to have anything anytime soon. Don't think I'll be doing that again. Okay. Well, you know, sorry to make it awkward. I just had to ask, try to understand No, no, I'm glad you do. I just, and I've, you know, my thing is for me, reputationalally, as someone who does what I do, it's important that I try my best. But I think in the end, over time, I'll be able to talk about it more and more. Sam, you look highly amused by this question and answer. What are you thinking?
Starting point is 00:52:03 The headlines aren't good. Yeah, I saw the headlines. I understand why you'd want it addressed. It's not a good headline. Yeah, I'm reading it as you spoke. So did you admit? guilt is that what is that no what's implied with the settlement so the settlement is just uh well the full the settlement in addition to the fine from the court the court fined me two million dollars so
Starting point is 00:52:27 i paid two million of what they considered were constructive trust profits in plus i played for the special master that was another 750 or 800 so it's basically three million then the settlement was 3.6 million plus 800 000 that was in escrow plus about 10 million dollars a claims. So I gave them claims that they say were commingled within my personal investments. Do you, do you think you did something wrong? And there was no admission of liability. Yeah, so I don't know how to even ask this question. I can't ask this question. There's no admission of liability. Well, you can ask because you should. My only thing is I don't, I never, I'm glad that there's a good outcome for shareholders. And I wouldn't want anyone be inflamed by the
Starting point is 00:53:05 stuff I say. Like, any shareholder would be like, oh, he's not like admitting, you know, in my estimation, it's a lot more gray than the court tries to make it out to be. But, But at the same time, like, I respect the court. You know, like, I was graced by lawyers. If a court says that, you know, I don't care what you're arguing. I just agree with you. We've had a bunch of people who've come on this podcast before that I think have had stuff. I mean, I think it's fairly common in the world of business.
Starting point is 00:53:30 You do business for 30, 40 years that at some point something can, you know, it's extremely common for something to go down where you get sued or you sue somebody or whatever happens. That part's not uncommon. What is interesting, like Sam, I don't know if you remember when we had my Martin Shkreli on. And he sort of got this character, which is like he's the bad guy. And he, like, leaned into it and, like, inflamed it and, like, did a bunch of stuff, which was, like, really crazy.
Starting point is 00:53:54 And I remember when we... And then he had the issue where you got in trouble. And he was like, hey, everybody made money. And then they're like, yeah, but, like, you went to jail. So, like, you know, something happened. And he paid the price. And I remember you were telling him, you were like... And this was now, like, years later, he had, like, literally, like, done his time.
Starting point is 00:54:10 And again, he's quite a character. Like, Screlly is, like, an actual... He's an actual character. I think he plays a bit. I think he plays up that character. And I think he likes it. He likes mixing it up in that way. But I remember just thinking like,
Starting point is 00:54:24 it's so interesting how to handle something like this. It's such a tricky spot to be in. Because there's many versions of things like this. Like there's, I did something wrong not knowingly or unintentionally. I did something wrong intentionally. Then there's like the Schreli case, which is kind of like,
Starting point is 00:54:39 I did something wrong intentionally, but everybody like made money. And so who's, you know, so it all worked out, right? And even, for example, like, Elon right now, I think is getting sued in like, you know, 15 different courts by 15 different people and, like, publicly feuding with the president and Sam Alvin and others. Like, there's like, there's a lot of people just, like, constantly mixing it up. And I don't know, it's just, it's very interesting to see how that side of, that side of entrepreneurship, that side of business, that side of investing. I definitely think it has to, you know, and maybe not as aggressive as mine was, but I definitely people think, over time you're going to have scrapes with certain stuff.
Starting point is 00:55:16 And the whole bad guy thing, and I know Skarelli did kind of lean into that, I guess. Even now, I feel like, well, I don't know if it does now, but kind of. I don't know. It's a different way to do it. For me, I kind of, like, don't view it as a good thing for me. I kind of view it as, like, something that if someone's going to be a business partner, me, I need to be able to explain. And, you know, frankly, probably more candid than on air.
Starting point is 00:55:38 But at the same time, like, try to respect the outcome of the whole thing. How long did this last? Gosh, 2022. Oh, wow. Three years. Yeah, so to know. That has to feel horrible. I've gotten in trouble before when I was in college and just like waiting to hear the verdict.
Starting point is 00:55:55 I remember like that feeling. And mine was not, I think your, your consequences are significantly worse than my consequences. And I can't imagine three years of what's going to happen. You know, for me, I try to resign myself to whatever. happen like I have to accept responsibility for that that was a big one for me so I like really was you know bracing for the worst but trying to do the best also like even even with the settlement but like way before the settlement with different things that went on in the case I was really trying my best to be constructive and cooperative with what the court wanted me to do but at the same time like
Starting point is 00:56:34 you know not everybody's going to love your decision making I guess it's like you know in a weird way it's like, you know, it's, you know, I grew up in the South where people are way too, like, I don't know, maybe, maybe sometimes, you know, maybe my upbringing was a bit to, like, people-pleasy, but this was all like, you have to do the right thing whether someone likes it or not. You have to do what you think is the right thing. So that's what I really, a lot of it, what I got out of this, and I try my best. And people might not like what you've done, but, or, you know, what you've made a decision like, oh, you're doing this, you're trying to hide this, or you're trying to do this, and you're not cooperating here. But you're still trying to, you're still trying to,
Starting point is 00:57:08 to find some millground. But it was a big one. It was a big, big one over me. I wanted to ask you, we can end with this. I want to ask you for a bit of a reading list, if I was going to try to get smarter about the stuff, what are like, I don't know,
Starting point is 00:57:25 the most influential books or blogs or people that are worth checking out. Like give me your kind of top three in no particular order. But what's your short list on stuff I would go read just if I wanted to get smarter about the stuff? So I think on the list, because I shared like a book list, of course you have people like Seth Claremont in Margin of Safety. It's a hard book to find, but if you Google around, you might be able to find a copy that you
Starting point is 00:57:50 can read. Isn't it like a $2,000 book now? Yeah, it's like a thousand plus. It's good. He talks about different stuff. I just think that he's kind of a goat in the kind of deep value. You know, bowel post and Seth Clarman are pretty influential. But, you know, an easy guy to find, you know.
Starting point is 00:58:08 Anything by Marty, not Marty Lutman, but now I'm trying to think of his name, from Third Avenue Value, he's written a few books on distressed investing, and he was the one that kind of stole the idea from him, where it's like an asset is a liability, and a liability can become an asset and a bankruptcy, and it's so true. And you think about it with a lease, if you have 50 leases and they're all below market, well, a debtor can assign a sum or reject leases. So if you're all below market rents, you can assign them, and they can become a, asset, even though leading up to the bankruptcy, you know, they can be a huge liability to make those payments. You like Kirkokorean? Sean, have you read about Kirkukorian? You've told me about
Starting point is 00:58:48 him, but I haven't read anything about him. Oh, my gosh. That's one of the best biographies of all time. Kirkacorian. Oh, you like that one? That's a really good one. Oh, my God. Yes, the gambler. That's one of the best. Basically, he's a Armenian, I think, I think Armenian immigrant. Yes. Raised in Central Valley, California, went to the army. When he got back, his first little business was a small airline, which basically just means he somehow convinced someone to lease him a small Cessna and would fly people back and forth from like, I don't even know, all around California. It sounds more glamorous than it was, but he grew that over something like 15 years and sold the business to TWA, which was the large airline company at the time.
Starting point is 00:59:28 And he made a little bit of money, but he parlayed that into buying the, what would now become the Las Vegas strip. And then he partly laid that to buying this other thing, this other thing, this other thing and he works his way all the way up from being a nobody poor no running water immigrant to owning uh what was the car chrysler and i think he also owned uh warner did he own warner but he for sure owned chrysler uh mgm i believe sorry mgm and uh the biography is basically his thinking he's very calm he's very methodic he's very like kind of traditional immigrant like where he was like straightforward it is what it is i don't stress about it but he was a total kind of degenerate gambler and he died with a net worth of something like 15 or 10 billion
Starting point is 01:00:13 dollars sounds about right well you know what i actually love because you were asking about book john it's like i actually think the entrepreneur like biographies either autobiographies or biographies can be amazing there's one um called zekendorf which is by a guy who's like a big real estate guy in york who like made a billion lost a billion uh there's like one it's like how to lose a hundred million dollars and other valuable advice by Arthur Little. Like there's all these kind of like entrepreneur books that are like some are out of print, some are still out there. And of course there's like, you know, special sit investing, Joel Greenblatt, you can be a start market genius. These are these are great books. We're talking about securities markets. But I actually think the best investors
Starting point is 01:00:53 of people you've like never heard of. Because, you know, they make a 100 million bucks and then they're like, I'm out piece. Like, you know, you might. And there, there are stories aren't recorded. I think I put EP Taylor in there. So you want to hear the EP Taylor. story real quick that was a really great one so e v taylor during the prohibition he would go up and buy up breweries and his whole thesis was like one day this is going to be done like we're not gonna we're all gonna start drinking again so you would go around and buy up like uh you know manufacturing distribution bottling that was a play on that and he would roll them up because the capacity was so low he could buy him for peanuts and that was it was this one trade like you know of course it
Starting point is 01:01:37 It took him 20 years to work to trade out. But, you know, he minted himself with some serious dough. And then he wrote a book about it. So I think these guys, you know, you can do. Is the book, the biography of Edward Plunkett Taylor? Is that him? Yeah, that's him, Edward Plunkett. And he found out of the Life or Key Club.
Starting point is 01:01:55 I don't know if guys ever been down there, but it's like a famous club in the Bahamas. Like Primlotsa. And while San Bankman Fried was across the thing in a place called Albany down in the Bahamas. But did you ever, do you ever bump into Sam Bankrupt Fried? Any, any good SBS stories? Do you know what's funny is like, so I was in crypto,
Starting point is 01:02:14 and then Sam became like this like Rockefeller of crypto, like John D. Rock, for crypto. And I was like, who the hell is this guy? Like, I never even really, I never really ran across him in passing. And a lot of people that worked for him were like, you know, whatever EA or EI, effective altruism. Yeah, EA people. So you had a lot of EA people around him.
Starting point is 01:02:32 I just didn't know any of those folks. They weren't like hardcore crypto people. Yeah. It was kind of a weird thing When I saw him coming up But I was like Man how did I miss this? Where did this guy come from?
Starting point is 01:02:42 We had Robert Green From 48 Laws of Power On the pod like two weeks ago Or something like that And he kind of We have you read 408 Laws of Power It's like the book I own the book
Starting point is 01:02:52 I think a breeze through it I read all of it 48 laws on acquiring power or whatever It's very sociopathic But that's like kind of the point Which is like it's the sociopathic But it's real And one of the laws
Starting point is 01:03:03 Is like to reinvent yourself And also, and we had talked to him. We were like, when you have social media, you can, like, talk to your people, talk to your audience, like, while you're on the toilet, like, any, any hour you can tweet anything. How do you deal with that? And he was, like, basically, like, you want to have, you want to have planned silence. So, you like, you know, the best way to be loud and in everyone's face sometimes is to just
Starting point is 01:03:26 shut up and not say a word. Disappear for a while. And disappear for a while. And he was talking all about, like, powerful people who kind of come out of nowhere. John Rockefeller is one of these guys who, uh, he was one of the richest men in the world before everyone, like, no one had seen a photo of him. And it was all part of a plan, I think. And it sounds like, uh, Sam Beckman-Fried, we didn't give him enough credit because when, at least when I saw him coming up, I was like, oh, he's just an autist and he's just this typical Silicon Valley type of like,
Starting point is 01:03:54 he just doesn't know, he doesn't have any manners. This is all, but it turns out it was probably all planned where he was like, I want to appear as though I slept on this bean bag. I want to appear as though while I'm playing video games while I'm talking to Sequoia over a $200 million deal. And it was straight out of Robert Green's 40 laws of power, which is pretty funny. I mean, I met a ton of people that work there, of course, and a ton of people that were, like, in the orbit. And it's kind of crazy to see the different, I guess, like, Munger does it best, right? The Lollapalooza effect of, like, the whole thing. Like, everybody's getting drunk off the money.
Starting point is 01:04:29 Were they straight? Like, straight-laced? Yeah, like, almost every. All the people, all these employees, they didn't know anything that goes around. They weren't like in the five-in-a-circle. They're just normal. Nerds. They're just normal workers.
Starting point is 01:04:39 Just normal. They weren't part in. You don't think they. No. I mean, like, I met the lady. She was ahead of payments. And she was like an expert to getting like payment licenses. So basically like banking licenses around the world.
Starting point is 01:04:54 And she had worked for somewhere. And then she got, then CZ pulled her over to, to, to, to Binance. And then he, he, She got poached by Sam. She was just the best. Of course, he had to pay her like she was the best. She was making millions of dollars a year. But, like, some of their contracts were insane.
Starting point is 01:05:12 I mean, Sam was giving out 10-year contracts to people. Guaranteed 10-year pay contracts, you know, like million-dollar contracts to, like, salary employees. A little bit like the, you know, like AI, you know, meta thing. I mean, it's a little bit like that because he had so much money coming in from VCs. And, of course, he had an unlimited, you know, well, not unlimited. but he had a big customer base to dip into. So between that, I mean, he was making unbelievable, like what everyone would call it,
Starting point is 01:05:42 unconscionable contracts to. Dude, just to put this in perspective, I think Zuck, I think the news about this stuff kind of came out, you know, let's just call it even three, four months ago. Okay, so let's just say this has been going on for three, four months, the researcher stuff. If you go look, so four months ago, the stock was at about 500, let's even, let's go April 1st, so 586.
Starting point is 01:06:08 Today the stock's at 784. So he's spending this money or he's making these offers, which has a, you know, multiple effects, right? First, it raises the price for all of his competitors. So he's like, cool, even if they don't take my offer, now they have to pay 100x what they were paying for talent before, like way to screw up their business. in his own business, the stock since then, it's now at 784, so it's up 33%. So what's 33% of it?
Starting point is 01:06:36 It's almost a $2 trillion stock. $600 billion or $500 billion. And he's basically offered the equivalent of $20 billion for this talent, right? Maybe $40 billion max. And so he's basically said, cool, I'll put out offers and try to spend $20, 30, $40 billion, already made back $600 billion in the market just in that. that time with by strengthening my story of us being all in on AI right like it's not like the facebook business changed that much in four months where it's up 600 billion dollars because of the
Starting point is 01:07:11 actual you know like user base growing or or even even revenue or earnings yeah they beat they beat by like you know a small small like maybe 8% beat or something like that but the reason it's up is because everybody believes AI is the future and who do you think is going to win an AI and you get punished if people think you're not going to win. Apple stock is like going down right now because people are like, Apple has no AI strategy. They're going to lose. And then somebody like, you know, meta, at least the story is Zuck is all in going
Starting point is 01:07:40 to win, poaching great talent. We'll see, you know, and so there's a believability to it. So it's crazy that you can spend so much and somehow net out way ahead like he did. It's crazy. It's crazy. That is conquer the market. Hey, Tommy, we appreciate you doing this, brother. Oh, guys.
Starting point is 01:07:57 Thanks for him. Thanks for having me on. It's good to meet you guys in chat. All right, that's it. And we appreciate you. That's the pod. I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to.
Starting point is 01:08:09 I put my all in it like no days off. On a road, let's travel, never looking back. All right, let's take a quick break because, as you know, we are on the HubSpot Podcast Network, but we're not the only ones. There's other podcasts on this network, too, and maybe you like them. Maybe you should check them out.
Starting point is 01:08:21 One of them that I want to draw your attention to is called Nudge by Phil Agnew. And whether you're a marketer or a salesperson and you're looking for the small changes you could make, the new habits you could do, the small decisions you could make that will make a big difference. That's what that podcast is all about. Check it out.
Starting point is 01:08:35 It's called Nudge, and you can get it wherever you get your podcasts.

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