Sidney: I met my now business partner, who, as we had this idea for what became mutiny fund. We got connected over stable coins because this idea of ss callike diversification at the simplest level or like stability through volatility. Sid: If you take different returned streams, different assets, which are all volatile, but uncolatedat one another, and combine them, the return stream you produce is very stable. The example i typically use of this s there's an approach clled the permanent portfolio of the scaky mountain seventies named harry brown.
Topics:
(6:21) - What is your specific knowledge?
(7:20) - Taylor’s career
(12:38) - Transaction Cost Economics
(20:02) - The work behind Taylor’s first book: The End of Jobs
(21:20) - Was publishing that book a major inflection point in your career?
(23:53) - Taylor’s writing on the crypto space and work in investing & finance
(29:03) - Mutiny Funds
(32:57) - The Long-Volatility Strategy
(36:33) - The Thousand-Year Portfolio
(40:49) - Who is using the long-volatility strategy and how are they using it?
(43:16) - What does the strategy look like day to day?
(50:07) - Volatility Index
(55:33) - Are there future products in the funnel for Mutiny?
(57:44) - What do you look for in the hedge funds you assemble?
(1:00:20) - How long have you been building this core of knowledge?
(1:04:11) - How do you know when to shift your focus?
(1:07:11) - Are there people you look up to who are great examples of playing the long game?
(1:09:25) - What is the long game for Mutiny?
(1:12:49) - How do you maintain discipline when the world tells you to take the other path?
(1:16:22) - What mental model do you use most often?