I was interested in investor philosophy.
I once believed that ‘investor philosophy’ represented the pinnacle of modern thought—a sophisticated toolkit for mastering complex systems. However, I’ve become disillusioned with this framework. While capital flows are at an all-time high, they haven’t translated into social utility or genuine efficiency.
Instead, we see widening inequality and a market culture that prizes ‘boosted’ nominal prices over intrinsic worth. The system feels disconnected from reality, stagnant and underbalanced. This leads me to a deeper set of questions: How do we navigate a world where value has become so detached from price? And more importantly, where does the most meaningful thought reside today?
Most of mistakes come from our decision making.
Unfortunately, most of value destructive actions are justified in the longer term than we think it might endure.

