By "liquid" I mean "can reasonably direct 100M of their own capital to whatever they want." / "not fake VC valuations."
EDIT: This includes donations/money spent in a personal capacity). See comments.
@nmehndir I mean if you're counting illiquid net worth I'm p sure a bunch of atlas fellows alr have a net worth of over 1m (which will likely be liquid at some point before 2030)
@L and remember, money is just power coupons, coupons for the future repayment of debts; you hold the world's debt in your hands by retaining money. don't make a habit of holding large amounts of currencies that are based on overissued debt, like fiat or bitcoin.
Bet no because:
1) startups are probably the only way an atlas fellow can get $100m in 7 years
2) The market right now is not that good and will likely not be good for a while
3) For $100m to be liquid, an atlas fellow founded startup must be acquired or IPO
4) Acquisitions that net the founder $100m are v rare, and founding -> IPO will likely take ~7-10 years rn
5) Also, ~90%+ of atlas fellows are going to college, and out of those not going to college I think the number that are founding startups is 2-3 (correct me if i'm wrong here)
Idt the markets being down point is particularly valid - that's just the cycle and I'd be surprised if they're not at an all-time high sometime in the next 1-2 years.
The college point is p good, I don't think any fellow going to college can reasonably achieve this, this stat basically hinges on a very small number of fellows
What about early employees? We seem to only be considering the possibility of an atlas fellow founding a $300m+ company, but what about them being an early employee at a 10B company - again fairly unlikely but worth considering
@NamanPushp Re early employees, a company would have to be worth a lot more than 10b for a founding employee to get 100m bc dilution
@NamanPushp I think the college point is the weakest point. Many will make startups on the side, or graduate in 2 years.