
โThereโs this thing called alpha, which is returns driven by skill not market return. And when you start to think about what does that mean, skill means youโre doing something that other people arenโt. You have to be different from the average. What can drive that? How are you going to have that be positive expected value? You need to have unique information, unique insight, unique access, or get uniquely lucky.” โ Jacob Miller
Jacob Miller is the Co-Founder and Optoโs Chief Solutions Officer, a key figure in its leadership team and central to its growth strategy. He spearheads initiatives for Opto’s fiduciary partnerships and the systemization of institutional-quality private markets investment techniques and programs.
Before co-founding Opto, Miller spent nearly five years as an investor at Bridgewater Associates. Miller has a passion for sensible long-term investing, systematizing investment processes, and distilling complex market dynamics into clear, logical linkages that help people better understand their investments. Having managed money for family and friends since he was 16, Miller is a certified market junkie. While he has a background in macroeconomics and high-yield debt, he finds the challenges and opportunities in the private markets space far more interesting and important, both for investors and society.
You can find Jacob on his socials here:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jacob-m-08b32967/
Listen to the episode onย Apple Podcastsย andย Spotify. You can alsoย watch the episode on YouTube here.
OUTLINE:
[00:00] Intro
[01:49] Why did Jacob start investing at 8 years old?
[07:20] The fallacies of storytelling
[08:49] Inputs, framework, and outputs
[09:21] Jake’s mental framework for alpha
[12:31] Pete Soderling’s unique access
[13:49] Jacob on defense tech VCs
[14:57] How does Jacob underwrite relationships in defense?
[16:30] How do you know if someone’s been preaching a story before it became a story?
[20:16] The difference b/w an opinion and an insight
[23:07] Why does Jacob write?
[25:42] Running with Joe Lonsdale at 8:30AM
[29:12] 2 wildly different billionaires
[31:48] What does Jacob want for the world?
[36:23] What keeps Jacob humble?
SELECT LINKS FROM THIS EPISODE:
- Opto
- Joe Lonsdale
- Matt Reed
- Bridgewater Associates
- LEGO
- Civilization (game)
- Risk (board game)
- Seneca
- Stoicism
- Seneca Moral Essays: Volume I
- Pete Soderling
- Data Council
- Peter Walker
- Carta
- McKinsey & Company
- Ray Dalio
- Zach Rivkin
- 8VC
- Palantir
- Addepar
- Alvin Toffler
SELECT QUOTES FROM THIS EPISODE:
โA jack of all trades is a master of none, but oftentimes better than a master of one. โ William Shakespeare
โIf you didnโt have stories or branding, it would take you four hours to choose which cereal to get based on solely merit โ if you did cost comparison versus ingredients, nutrition, et cetera. You need the story to make a decision in two seconds rather than six hours.โ โ Jacob Miller
โYou need to know what are the assumptions that underpin those stories so you can know if and when theyโve been invalidated.โ โ Jacob Miller
โYou have inputs; you have a framework; you have outputs. The story is the output. You can be wrong on your inputs. You can be wrong on your framework. Better to be wrong on your inputs than your framework. Because if you were wrong on your frameworkโand itโs garbageโ itโs garbage in, and garbage out.โ โ Jacob Miller
โThereโs this thing called alpha, which is returns driven by skill not market return. And when you start to think about what does that mean, skill means youโre doing something that other people arenโt. You have to be different from the average. What can drive that? How are you going to have that be positive expected value? You need to have unique information, unique insight, unique access, or get uniquely lucky.
โAs investors, we probably donโt want to bet on getting uniquely lucky. And access and information counts as insider trading in public markets. And so if youโre going to a public market asset manager who claims to have alpha, you need to be defending why you have unique insight. Why can you take information that everyone else has and derive conclusions that other people wonโt, which is a very high bar. […]
โBut in private markets, we can look to what are unique sources of access and information. Are you in founder networks that other people are not in? How can you show me you see deals before other people do? Do you have benefits as an LP or GP that you can bring to founders that might lead to preferential pricing that would lead to them choosing you first? Do you have a reputation that will attract the right kind of talent? And then on top of that, do you have really insightful frameworks about what makes a great founder, about how to assess TAM, about how to help a company scale through product-market fit to expansion and et cetera? I always start a private market analysis with: โLetโs talk about access and information. What do you see that others donโt? What do you know that others donโt?โ โ Jacob Miller
โToo much source-citing is honestly a red flag for me. This should be stuff youโre learning in the market thatโs evidence of your unique access to information.โ โ Jacob Miller
โThe illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.โ โ Alvin Toffler
โThat which Fortune has not given, she cannot take away.โ โ Seneca

