Book Review: “Startup Game: Inside the Partnership between Venture Capitalists and Entrepreneurs” by William H. Draper

The author went through the entire history of venture capital as his dad practically started the industry. It’s almost like a family business as his son, Tim, is also involved in the venture capital business. The book is thick with good stories and anecdotes of successes and failures. It’s not a how-to book to start your business but it did have a good explanations for each role of the players (funders, team, the pitch/product/market, deal and relationship) involved in funding a start up.

The top ten avoidable mistakes of entrepreneurs serve as good lessons:
1. creating only optimistic projections about market size and customer acquisitions.
2. Underestimating timelines.
3. Trying to do everything yourself.
4. Failing to master the elevator pitch.
5. Not downsizing when necessary.
6. Being inflexible.
7. Not developing a clear marketing plan.
8. Building a board that consists of only friends.
9. Not taking action in a recession.
10. Not knowing the right way to approach venture capitalists.

What it takes to succeed: brains and education, energy and passion, expertise, vision, and integrity, and a sense of humor.

I’ve learned that venture capitalists add value to providing the advises and industry contacts, and even needed leadership talents to guide the startup to a profitable end. The end game may not always be IPO as the IPO has gotten harder due to the recent law change to merge banking with investment banking. Being bought up by a big company seems to be the norm nowadays.

I envy the author’s experiences from private venture capital investors to service public role like the Ex-Im bank, and even to fund socially-serving non-profit organizations. Very interesting journey the author has traveled – a real treat for the readers.

Book Review: “The End of Wall Street” by Roger Lowenstein

I read Roger Lowenstein’s “When Genius Failed” book before. His writing is journalistic and full of facts, unlike some other books like Michael Lewis’ The Big Short. Looks like he’s done a great deal of research in writing this book. It’s mainly about how the then-Secretary-of-Treasury, Hank Paulson, and Federal Reserve Chief, Ben Bernanke, and New York Federal Reserve Bank President, Tim Geithner dealt with the financial crises and the aftermath throughout the year 2007 and 2008. He went to great details about how the crisis – mainly the subprime mortgage came about, its development and its end result.

I learned about how the rescue didn’t take root in the beginning because Benanke was trying to fix the liquidity problem rather than the capital problem. Bernanke was blindsided by his familiarity with the historical ill of the Great Depression in 1930’s. Hank Paulson was hamstrung by his principle of moral hazard – the reckless assumption of risks knowing there’s an insurance or safety nets – the bailout. The logic of letting Lehman die but rescuing Morgan Stanley and AIG was not rational but it was the best the government could do without causing a meltdown and ripple effect across the entire economy.

Whether the Wall Street learned this lesson and the Federal government has re-instated enough regulation to avoid this kind of crisis in the future remains to be seen. I doubt the future generation of the people in Wall Street will remember this hard lesson. History is bound to repeat in the future unless the government comes up with a better set of regulation to control the leverage and risk without overburdening the firms. The author wasn’t optimistic either because the financial instruments being invented were simply too exotic for the government to gauge and the excessive compensation in the Wall Street firms attract envies of the unscrupulous.

So many people were harmed and continued to be harmed by the repercussions of the financial tidal wave of the 2008. One thing people should always remember. When there is too much a good thing like easy credit, no-down-payment mortgage, high-flying stock market (like the tech bubble), something or a bubble is being built up that will eventually bust. Let the common sense rule: when it’s too good to be true, it’s probably so.

The few weeks leading to September 2008 were made for a cliff hanger movie. Most people were too busy to survive financially to pay attention to the drama on the Wall Street and yet it’s where it all started. It’s simply amazing to me how few people (probably no more than a hundred) can cause so much damage. In a way they are the financial terrorists that triggered the financial weapon of mass destruction. Amazing.

Book Review: “The Quants: How a New Breed of Math Whizzes Conquered Wall Street and Nearly Destroyed It” by Scott Patterson

This is the story of the Quants, the PhD Mathematicians who turned the financial market into a gambling casino. They made an obscene amount of money but ended up wrecking the market they helped to create. The players are: Peter Muller (Morgan Stanley), Ken Griffin (Citadel), Cliff Asness (AQR Capital Management), Boaz Weinstein (Deutsche Bank), Jim Simons (Renaissance Technologies), Aaron Brown, Paul Wilmott (foretell the meltdown), Benoit Mandelbrot (warned of the danger), and finally Ed Thorp, who started it all with the books “Beat the Dealers” and “Beat the Market” books.

It’s hard to tell with certainty what really caused the meltdown. The author seemed to point the finger at Allen Greenspan’s low-interest policy that started the housing bubble and his lack of oversight of investment bankers and hedge funds industry. If this were true, one should argue that Greenspan’s long tenure at the helm may be to blame for his insufficient understanding of the risk takings going on under his nose.

I learned a lot on how the Quants make money by hedge one bet against another bet in search of easy money or “sure” thing or the “truths.” There are the frequency trading to arbitrage values, and there are the hedging bets – all done with a huge amount of leverage and precision. Of course, those trades broke down when the market turned illiquid, which caused the melt down. In principle, all the algorithms should all work but when everything is linked from one another. A small change can cause a tsunami of ripple effects. Now they know.

The stories of the rich Quants’ spending their new-found wealth on such luxuries as $80M paintings, and luxurious homes, vacation homes, fancy cars, really excited my resentment and many tax payers who ended up paying for their mess. It’s not different than the Internet bubble that brought on the rise of greedy people and their excesses. The destructive ending was the same except they were bailed out by the government instead of the reduced wealth of the over-exuberant investors.

This is a reasonable good book that tells the stories of these Quants people but more importantly, it revealed the mentality and the motivations of these people. They thought they were doing goods to rid the market of inefficiencies and making lots of money along the way. Whether or not they realized the danger of the leverages from their bets is hard to know. But it’s like a drug addiction, you may know it’s bad for you and the society; it’s hard to break away from it. Ultimately, it’s the failing of the human nature and greed that did them in, dragging the society and world to the brink of a financial collapse. How the government can craft a good policy to prevent a similar collapse from happening in the future remains to be seen.

Book Review: “The Book on Writing: The Ultimate Guide to Writing Well” by Paula LaRocque

This book is similar to William Zinsser’s “Writing Well” book. This one goes into more details on techniques. The rules can be complicated but the spirit of writing should be preserved to be clear and concise for the reader to experience the messages/stories/contents. The book was a little hard to read but the contents are rich.

The 12 guidelines:
1. Keep sentences short, and keep to one main idea per sentence.
2. Avoid pretensions, gobbledygook and euphemisms.
3. Change long and difficult words to short and simple words.
4. Be wary of jargon, fad, and cliche
5. Use the right word.
6. Avoid beginning with long dependent phrases.
7. Prefer active verbs and the active voice.
8. Cut wordiness.
9. Avoid vague qualifiers.
10. Prune prepositions.
11. Limit number and symbol.
12. Get right to the point. And stay there.

There are other tips on storytelling, description, use of metaphors, similes, analogy, allusion, foreshadowing like in “you won’t believe what happened next”), irony, and word play. The authors dived into the sound effect via the use of euphony, rhyme, internal rhyme, alliteration, resonance, consonance, assonance, onomatopoeia, cacophony, and etc.

On Pace, write fast and edit slow, avoid speedbumps (often arise from intrusions and obtrusion), logic and speed reading.

Dispelling myths: avoid split infinitives when it gets in the way of grace and precision and split away when it preserves grace and precision. Split verb phrase is not wrong, but is seldom unattractive. Use contractions where it makes sense. Use of ‘a’ and ‘an.’ “None” and “couple” can be singular or plural.

Book Review: “Tuesdays with Morrie: An Old Man, a Young Man, and Life’s Greatest Lesson ” by Mitch Albom

This is the 2nd time I read this book, the first time being a few years ago. I too watched the movie and still remembered the stellar performance of Jack Lemon. I particularly enjoyed the flashback to author’s early days in school – his relationship with his coach and the Morrie’s own early life – discovered his mother’s death via a telegram at age of 8, growing up with his young brother David, who contracted polio at early age, his step-mother, Eva’ influence, and identified his father’s body at the morgue. In addition, the author shared his relationship with his brother, who was fighting cancer remotely on his own in Spain. It helps to re-read this book every few years as we get closer and closer to the end line. A few lessons I learned:

If you must feel sorry for yourself, give yourself a good cry (limit your self-pity) and then concentrate on the good things that are still happening in your life.

Our culture doesn’t encourage us to think about the most important things in our life – our family, relationships and friendships. We’re so wrapped up with “egotistical things” (career, having enough money, meeting the mortgage, and etc.)

Once you learn how to die, you learn how to live. Ask the little bird, “Is today the day? Am I Ready? Am I doing all I need to do? Am I being the person I want to be?” “Everyone knows they’re going to die, but nobody believes it.”

The great poet Auden said, “Love each other or perish.” “Without love, we are birds with broken wings.”

Embrace your emotion and experience it fully. Then detach from it.

Aging is not just decay. It’s growth. It’s more than the negative that you’re going to die, it’s also the positive that you understand you’re going to die, and that you live a better life because of it. If you have found meaning in your life, you don’t want to go back. You want to go forward. You want to see more and do more. If you’re always battling against getting older, you’re going to be unhappy, because it will happen anyhow.

“Money is not a substitute for tenderness, and power is not a substitute for tenderness.” “The day he learned that he was terminally ill was the day he lost interest in his purchasing power.” “Devote yourself to loving others, devote yourself to your community around you, and devote yourself to creating something that gives you purpose and meaning.” “If you’re trying to show off for people at the top, forget it. They will look down at you anyhow. And if you’re trying to show off for people at the bottom, forget it. They will only envy you. Status will get you nowhere. Only an open heart will allow you to float equally between everyone.” “Do the kinds of things that come from the heart. When you do, you won’t be dissatisfied, you won’t be envious, you won’t be longing for somebody else’s things. On the contrary, you’ll be overwhelmed with what comes back.”

“Love is how you stay alive, even after you are gone.” On marriage, it’s important to respect each other, compromise, talk openly about what goes on between the two, have a common set of values. The biggest set of value is your belief in the importance of your marriage.

On culture: “No matter where you live, the biggest defect we human beings have is our shortsightedness. We don’t see what we could be. We should be looking at our potential, stretching ourselves into everything we can become.” “Invest in the human family. Invest in people. Build a little community of those you love and who love you.”

Forgive others but most importantly forgive yourself.

“It’s not contagious, you know. Death is as natural as life. It’s part of the deal we made.” “We aren’t waves; we’re all part of the ocean.” “There is no formula to relationships. They have to be negotiated in loving ways, with room for both parties, what they want and what they need, what they can do and what their life is like.”

Here are the Youtube Videos with Ted Koppel: 1, 2, 3, 4, ….

Movie Review: “Charlie Wilson’s War”

This movie is about this Texas Congressman, Charlie Wilson, who took on the side of the Afghanistan people after seeing the refugee camp near Pakistan. He worked with the help of wealth doner (Julia Roberts) to get $1B to fund the rebels against the Russians, who invaded the country in the ’80’s. The simple goal of shooting down Russians’ helicopters with bazookas turned into a key strategy that drove the Russian back. Of course, at the end US lost the war because we failed to fund their schools to educate the people and plants the seeds of democracy, though the costs were way smaller than the costs of the war of fighting the Al Queda that eventually took over the country.

Both Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts performed well. I didn’t recognize Phillips Seymour Hoffman until I saw the credit. All are very credible in the movie. Later I googled Charlie Wilson and found that he passed away in 2010 last year at 76. Tom Hanks does resemble him somewhat. Good to see a playboy congressman has so much passion helping people many thousands of miles away. Rare.

Firefox’s New Tab Stops Working

For a while, the new tab (the +) button and the Ctrl-T shortcut for my Firefox 3.6.13 no longer worked. This happened suddenly and I didn’t remember what new software I installed to cause the problem. It was frustrating to have a non-functional button/command that I was so used to be using. I tried re-reinstalling Firefox but it didn’t help. So I decided to disable all the extensions and plugins at once. And it did the trick to bring the New Tab function back on. Of course, Firefox wouldn’t be too good without all the extensions and plugins. So now I had to figure out which one of the 20+ extensions and plugins is the culprit.

After 30 minutes of trials and errors, I finally root caused the problem to the Yahoo Tool Bar that came with the Java Standard Edition. By disabling the Yahoo Toolbar and enabling all others, I was able to bring my Firebox back from its handicapped state. I think Yahoo needs to do more software testing before releasing the software that adds more griefs than benefits.

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