4) Of course you need more information to know!
For one, you need to know what the relationship is between that revenue and those expenses.
In particular, let's say the business grows 10x, so next year it pulls in $1B of revenue.
Do you expect $90m or $900m of expenses?
Conversation
14) Well, there is no company, really, other than BTC.
It's just a company that owns 2k BTC.
And that 2k BTC is worth $110m--you could replicate it on FTX if you wanted! So the company is worth $110m.
This gets to an odd question: what makes revenue "recurring" vs "one-off"?
Replying to
15) Revenue that's expected to recur should get a large mult (20x?); revenue that doesn't should just count towards the existing balance sheet.
So you have Weird Trick #2: find some way to make one-off revenue but make it look recurring, and sell the company for 20x it!
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21) Where, here, "you" means "the company", and "project" means "create an excel spreadsheet with large growing numbers".
You'd be surprised how many companies are already valued off of their 2025 revenue!
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24) They have to disguise it, because they're supposed to be aligned.
But they often do what they can: making unreasonably conservative assumptions, highlighting flaws, making isolated demands for rigor (slatestarcodex.com/2014/08/14/bew), and negging.
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