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I — I loved math, but really, I was going to go down that literature route more than anything else and — and study Spanish literature. And so, there’s definitely a pre and post. BITTERLY MICHELL: Yeah, we definitely need to get into — to pizza. RITHOLTZ: Applied Mathematics, Quants, those guys, yeah.
As you’re based in Washington, how has the pandemic affected your business plan and the way you communicate with clients? What have you learned and changed about the way you communicate with clients if there have been changes? Definitely a stretch goal for me haha. I’m very excited about what 2023 has in store.
It’s not a strategy for everyone, but if you’re into crypto and looking to capitalize on short-term trades, this is definitely a way to go. Skills needed: Communication, management, market analysis, negotiation, and vision. Skills needed: Listening skills, empathy, vision, honesty, and good communication skills.
One, one is true and I’ve always said is that I wanted people to stop, ask if I could doing math. And no one asked me if I can do math anymore with a degree from Booth, particularly in econometrics and statistics. So people really ask you, you take French and can you do math. But it’s definitely a challenge.
When I think back to some of the most painful moments over a 20-year career, that is definitely one. There’s definitely some ways to save money. It’s much deeper than math. And that really hurt. RITHOLTZ: Because everything in the world is free. You should work for free. Media subscription should be free.
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SEIDES: And I’ll tell you a story that’s fun about the communication of it too. the experience of investors is asset weighted by definition. SEIDES: So keep in mind the only definitive information about the bet was in Carol’s two page piece. ” It wasn’t that they didn’t communicate that.
Barry Ritholtz : you were head of strategy, product marketing, communications, like is that one job, is that four jobs? The corporate communications function at Vanguard today, you know, has evolved considerably from back in the early days. 00:26:16 [Speaker Changed] Yeah, well, definitely not my vision alone.
I took a lot of math classes. I couldn’t give up math in computer science. Because there you have bespoke transactions and you can definitely earn a premium versus what you get even in the corporate bond space. I think it was just the way it was communicated, right. But for me, this was not an option. at Wellesley.
I was a, I’m a rural guy, kind of grew up in a, you know, farm town in Illinois and in Texas, which is in Dallas, but not really a farm town, but it, you know, more rural, definitely more Midwestern southern even. And so it’s, it’s sort of managing that, all of those different constituents with communication.
DAVIS: We definitely saw a number of clients who started embracing money markets. So investors and savers are definitely eating into that safety net, which over time as that continues to decline should slow the economy down to some degree. You definitely want to be more of an investor versus a speculator.
SARA GRILLO: Awesome, so be… Let’s just start with a real quick definition, what is IUL? I’m excited to talk about index tools should be good, and this topic needs transparency, so I’m sure I have a great conversation about it. BOBBY SAMUELSON: Not it probably is. SARA GRILLO: I do. They find that publication.
And so the idea of this product was you plug the game cartridge, they had a communications capability, a modem built in, and you could download video games, almost like having an in-home arcade, like a Netflix for video. RITHOLTZ: We’re definitely going to talk about the JOBS Act and some of the public service you’ve done.
00:23:57 [Speaker Changed] You know, it’s, it’s definitely a challenge, but one that Orion spends a lot of time and effort on so that our clients, enterprises and RIAs don’t have to do that on their own. We wanna be sure that our communications tools leverage large language models so they can be highly personalized.
There was XO Communication and McLeod. That’s a pretty good run of the general trend is lower, and you have equity markets from 80 at least through ‘21, rising pretty substantial, even with the 2000s being a pretty — KLINSKY: It’s definitely been a 40-year secular bull market. RITHOLTZ: I recall. KLINSKY: Yeah.
RIEDER: Yeah, it was definitely dumb luck. Today, it’s a little bit different because now we’re approaching the end of — by the way, it’s not definitive, but we’re probably approaching a point where the Fed is going to pause, Europe still got a bit more to go. RITHOLTZ: — everything blew up.
Sander Gerber : Well, actually I was good at math. Barry Ritholtz : I definitely can see that, you know, the concept, I dunno if I’m stealing this from Zen Buddhism, but it’s the water flows, but the rigid tree breaks in the storm. Barry Ritholtz : So let’s start a little bit with your background.
I started out math and, and physics, and in high school I was a rock star in math and physics. We, we definitely tilt into corporates. Now, I participated in some of that as a research analyst by looking at companies like Total Access Communications that tie wireless company, PL dt, Philippine, long Distance Telecom.
And I, and I really like the application of math and statistics and computer science to markets. Yeah, 00:10:11 [Speaker Changed] That’ll, that’ll definitely wake, 00:10:12 [Speaker Changed] Wake you the ice you up coffee. You learn the math that can help you with, with market making operations.
Yeah, you have to, you know, the conceit of finance is that basically the math is all there is to it. So you mentioned half math, half Shakespeare. Let’s talk about the math side. Ivanka said, oh no, you don’t have to be able to do math to do real estate 00:20:13 [Speaker Changed] Or investing for that math.
I mean, you’re talking about, I don’t, I could do the math, it’s like a 10,000% return in like three weeks. RITHOLTZ: The communication was bad also. And that’s sort of the math. RITHOLTZ: Squishy? HOFFMAN: Yeah, it felt too squishy. RITHOLTZ: Really interesting. He was right on the thesis.
They kept the reputation intact by communicating with their investors. RITHOLTZ: Definitely, right. So this is the math that I applied. So think about this, do the math. LINDZON: But that math, if you really put it in a calculator … RITHOLTZ: Becomes a problem. So these people were beat up, but they were all smart.
Colin Camerer : So I, some of it was when I was in college at Johns Hopkins, I, I studied physics and math. And there was people, Physics didn’t have, people, psychology didn’t have math, economics was kind of the right mix. The math doesn’t math. That was too abstract. Yeah, I’m gonna vote.
And when I went there I was gonna be a lawyer and I was gonna major in mathematics and I took my freshman year math and that all went great. And it turned out that half of that class had been the US National Math team and they had all competed internationally and they knew stuff I didn’t. I’m not trying to mess that up.
You’re doing a lot of math in your head on the Fly. I’m doing, I’m doing an awful lot of math in my head on the fly. You know, I also had, you know, my, my chief of staff, my chief of communications, Ashley Hickeys, she, she was over the top amazing. She left there, she became a crisis communications expert.
But when we came out, we’re really lowest — definitely lowest cost of all, I think, the fundamental weighted indexes. SCHWARTZ: It’s definitely on Saturday. SIEGEL: Oh, definitely. It definitely impressed me. RITHOLTZ: The research department in the FOMC don’t seem to communicate.
A good example of that is like you take something from a cognitive reflection testy or something — like — I’ll make it real simple so we don’t have to like do the weird math on this. And so, there’s a little bit of that. And so, he said, what if we just went and ask people. And so they did the exact same thing again.
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