Billionaireism describes both the pathology that affects you when you are so wealthy that you're effectively above consequences and above moral consideration for others, and the pathologies that having a society dominated by such people inflicts on the rest of us.
"This is a system shock," says Nigel Green, CEO of deVere Group. "You have a material energy supply disruption and a structural shift toward fragmentation."
A SpaceX IPO promises to be one of the biggest Wall Street events of the year, with several investment banks lining up to help raise tens of billions to fund Musk's ambitions to set up a base on the moon, put datacenters the size of several football fields in orbit and possibly one day send a man to Mars.
"I'm in favor of not having any rules against insider trading. I would like all the information out there as soon as it's available. Because look, as a society, we are better off knowing as soon as possible anything that is knowable."
The street's ultra-luxury towers - from the first generation of supertalls west of Sixth Avenue that shaped the skyline, to mixed-use developments eastward 'driving the next phase of growth' - offer a dense concentration of cultural and lifestyle capital, paired with direct access to Central Park.
Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Jensen Huang, and Michael Dell saw a combined $26 billion wiped off their net worths in one day, the Bloomberg Billionaires Index shows. Their fortunes shrank because their respective stakes in Tesla, Meta, Amazon, Nvidia, and Dell slid in value. The stock prices of those first four companies fell by around 2% on Thursday, as investors grew increasingly concerned about the immense costs of building out AI infrastructure and whether they'd see a return on their spending.
Like snow falling quietly overnight, wealth has a way of sneaking up: steadily increasing salaries, 401(k) contributions, stock options, rising home equity, inheritances. It accumulates while you're busy living. If your financial identity hasn't kept pace-understandably shaped more these days by inflating prices, competing tugs on your discretionary dollars, and that familiar feeling of " I'd be comfortable if I made more"-you're not alone.
Ellison has seen his personal wealth slump by an unrivaled $47 billion to $200 billion as of Tuesday's close, reflecting a 23% plunge in Oracle stock year to date. Investors have grown more skeptical about the database giant's AI infrastructure buildout, particularly as big names such as Michael Burry of "The Big Short" have warned the strategy won't pay off.
That said, when looking at truly world-class investors with exposure to single-stock names, I thought I'd look for one non-Magnificent-7 stock I think may be intriguing for investors to consider. I think I have it. I'm going to discuss why Costco ( NASDAQ:COST) appears to be so widely-owned in the world of wealthy investors, and why this stock may also be perfect for a small retail investor as well right now.