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From its inception, Robinhood was designed to profit by selling its customers’ trading data to the very sharks on Wall Street who have spent decades—and made billions—outmaneuvering investors. In fact, an analysis reveals that the more risk Robinhood’s customers take in their hyperactive trading accounts, the more the Silicon Valley startup profits... See more
Jeff Kauflin • Error PageSecurity Violation (403)
The Fund: Ray Dalio, Bridgewater Associates, and the Unraveling of a Wall Street Legend
amazon.com
FIGURE 10 (9) Board Composition and Meetings: Investor Favorable: The size of the Company's Board of Directors shall initially be set at [three]. The holders of the Series [A] preferred, voting as a separate class, shall be entitled to elect two members of the Company's Board of Directors, the holders of the Common Stock shall be entitled to elect
... See moreAlex Wilmerding • Term Sheets & Valuations: A Line by Line Look at the Intricacies of Term Sheets & Valutions (Bigwig Briefs)
Ramsey Beirne pitch to take on a search assignment, say he would consider it, then disappear for a few days before returning with an answer. The CEO’s of these small companies were consulting someone else, and that someone else, upon investigation, turned out to be the venture capitalist who sat on the company’s board of directors.
Randall E. Stross • eBoys: The First Inside Account of Venture Capitalists at Work

Farley conceded that there are “a lot of underwater bonds in the banking system and that can pose financial stability risks because banks are leveraged institutions. If it’s levered 10 to 1 and you have a 10 percent loss, all the equity is gone.” Which, of course, is exactly what happened to Bear Stearns, which at times was levered 50 to 1, meaning... See more
The BofA $136B Dynamite Stick
Rolex Forums - Rolex Watch Forum
rolexforums.com
It’s he—always a he—who leads decisions related to its infamous two-tiered stock structure, by which Class A common shares with no voting power are offered to the public, while privately held Class B stock, which does carry voting power, is available only to members of the Times’s controlling family.