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Of course, I don't think it's a direct analogy. But it seems that partly what makes YC successful is also what makes BH successful.

BH also has an extra 50 years on YC, so of course the models don't match up. And I'm not Sam, so I can't speak to whether not YC's ownership or investment models will change over the next 50 years (and yes, I think there's a good chance YC will be around in 50 years). YC is focused on testing and validating its thesis across other industries, but the thesis started in one area. Very much the same with BH.

In other words, if BH's only value is that they can successfully help grow a candy company, an insurance company, and a train shipping company, and YC is able to help grow a fusion company, a hotel industry company, and a home cleaning company, then they are both doing something right. It seems they are both heavily driven by focused principles.

Another great point is that YC and BH don't have traditional competition. See pg 31 starting

"Berkshire has one further advantage that has become increasingly important over the years: We are now the home of choice for the owners and managers of many outstanding businesses."



I guess I just don't see how YC's trajectory takes them to the place where BH is. An investment fund for startups seems sort of like the opposite of a conglomerate of predictably-returning big companies.


> Of course, I don't think it's a direct analogy. But it seems that partly what makes YC successful is also what makes BH successful.

In what way? Yes, they both invest in companies, and the investments represent people trying to figure out how to make money and beat their competitors. But there are a lot of differences in the details (Buffet has a source of stable income that people trust him to reinvest; Y Combinator makes money sporadically when other investors decide to buy their companies). They're about as similar -- to me -- as football and bowling. Sure, both sports have balls, but there are a few relevant differences.


I feel like I should add http://www.econ.yale.edu/~af227/pdf/Buffett%27s%20Alpha%20-%... (alpha is supposed to measure how much better a manager does compared to the market, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_%28investment%29 ).

Compared to ordinary investors, Buffet's alpha is consistently high. He looks like a genius. But if you change the definition of alpha based on his strategy, his alpha ends up being much lower. Personally, I don't think that diminished Buffet in any way: he came up with the strategy, after all; but it does show that his investments work because he's doing something different than the competition.

And, again, Y Combinator is also doing something different than the competition (or at least, different from what the competition was doing when YC launched), but it's also doing something wildly different from Berkshire Hathaway. BH invests in a small number of mature companies, YC invests in many small and risky companies. I would be interested to see what kind of personalized alpha YC manages to get (and, even, what kind of generic alpha they have). I don't know if they publish their investment numbers, so I don't know if it would be possible to calculate.


It takes good hand-eye coordination to throw a touchdown and bowl a strike.




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