NETFIGO SCORE BATTLE

ORIGINAL DATA

Risk Appetite

Cathie Wood
10
Mark Zuckerberg
8

Contrarian Index

Cathie Wood
9
Mark Zuckerberg
7

Track Record

Cathie Wood
5
Mark Zuckerberg
8

Accessibility

Cathie Wood
8
Mark Zuckerberg
2

Time Horizon

Cathie Wood
Long-Term
Mark Zuckerberg
Generational

AT A GLANCE

Cathie Wood
Mark Zuckerberg
$250 million
Net Worth
$180B+
American
Nationality
American
Long-Term
Time Horizon
Generational
10 / 10
Risk Score
8 / 10

INVESTING STYLE

Cathie Wood

Wood is a pure-conviction thematic investor. She identifies technologies she believes will fundamentally change the world — genomics, AI, robotics, blockchain, autonomous vehicles — and concentrates heavily in the companies building those technologies, often before those companies are profitable.

Her time horizon is explicitly five years. She does not care about quarterly earnings.

She cares about whether the technological trajectory is intact.

The approach is genuinely different from most of Wall Street. She is not doing DCF models on current cash flows.

She is forecasting where industries will be in a decade. When she is right about the technology and right about the timing, the returns are extraordinary.

When she is right about the technology but wrong about the timing — or wrong about which companies will win — the losses are severe. 2020 showed the first scenario.

2021–2022 showed the second.

Mark Zuckerberg

Zuckerberg does not invest in the traditional sense — he builds and holds. He controls Meta through a dual-class share structure that gives him roughly 54% of voting power with less than 15% economic ownership, meaning no board or shareholder can remove him regardless of how the stock performs.

He has made massive bets inside Meta — on mobile (right), Instagram (very right), WhatsApp (right), VR/metaverse (wrong so far), and AI (still playing out). His investment thesis is that social connectivity is a fundamental human need and whoever owns the infrastructure owns everything.

FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY

Cathie Wood

Wood's philosophy is that the market systematically undervalues disruptive innovation because traditional analysts use short time horizons and conventional valuation methods that don't apply to exponential-growth businesses. She believes five-year time horizons are necessary to capture the full value of technological change.

She also believes concentration is a feature, not a bug: if you're right about a technology platform, owning 20% of your portfolio in it is more rational than owning 1%. She has said repeatedly that she would rather be early and wrong for a period than miss the technology entirely.

Mark Zuckerberg

Zuckerberg thinks in decades, not quarters. His core belief is that the most important technology of the next century is whoever connects people at scale — first through social networks, then through AR/VR, and now through AI agents.

He is willing to absorb years of losses on bets he believes in. He says he would rather make a big bet and be wrong than be timid and miss the next platform shift.

RISK TOLERANCE

Cathie Wood

Wood runs concentrated, leveraged-conviction portfolios with almost no hedging. Her funds can hold 30–50 positions but the top 10 often represent 60–70% of assets.

She does not short. She does not hold cash as a defensive measure.

When the market declines, her funds decline more, because she owns high-beta, high-growth, often unprofitable companies that get hit hardest in risk-off environments. She is explicit about this: if you cannot stomach 50% drawdowns, ARK is not for you.

Many investors found this out the hard way in 2022.

Mark Zuckerberg

Zuckerberg spent $36 billion on Reality Labs — VR and AR — between 2019 and 2023, with little to show in revenue. He did not flinch.

He also bet Facebook's entire business model on going mobile in 2012, acquired Instagram for $1 billion when it had 13 employees and no revenue, and has held through Congressional hearings, advertiser boycotts, and multiple existential challenges from competitors. His personal financial risk is minimized by his dual-class share structure — he controls voting power regardless of what the stock does, so no board or activist investor can force his hand.

He can lose at scale for as long as he believes the thesis.

THE PLAYBOOK

Cathie Wood

Wood is a devout Christian and has spoken publicly about faith informing her long-term orientation — she genuinely believes she is investing in technologies that will improve human lives, not just make money. She is a major donor to her church and to Christian educational causes.

She lives relatively modestly for someone running a multi-billion-dollar firm. She does not appear in tabloids.

She is not known for lavish spending. What she is known for is being relentlessly, publicly bullish — even when her funds are down 75%.

Mark Zuckerberg

He wore the same grey t-shirt every day for years — he said it reduced decision fatigue. He trains MMA and Brazilian jiu-jitsu seriously, competing in actual tournaments.

He wakes up early, spends mornings with his family, and starts work at 8am. He has spoken about designing his schedule to protect creative work in the mornings.

He reportedly does not check email first thing.

BIGGEST WIN

Cathie Wood

Tesla is the defining win. Wood started buying Tesla in 2018 when the stock was around $18 adjusted for splits and the financial press was writing endless stories about whether the company would survive.

She published a price target of $4,000 (split-adjusted $800) that was mocked widely. Tesla's stock went to $400 at its peak — a gain of roughly 2,000% from her early purchases.

ARKK returned 150% in 2020 alone, driven heavily by Tesla. The fund went from $1.9 billion in assets to $17 billion in one year.

The Tesla call is one of the most accurate and most profitable individual stock calls in modern ETF history.

Mark Zuckerberg

Acquiring Instagram for $1 billion in 2012. Instagram was growing fast, potentially threatening Facebook's dominance with younger users.

Facebook bought it. It now generates an estimated $40-60 billion in annual revenue.

Many consider it the best acquisition in tech history on a return basis — $1 billion in for what became a $100B+ asset.

BIGGEST MISTAKE

Cathie Wood

The 2021–2022 collapse is the biggest mistake — or more accurately, the biggest risk that came due. After ARKK's extraordinary 2020, Wood did not meaningfully de-risk or trim winners.

She continued buying high-growth, unprofitable tech companies into 2021 as they became more expensive. When interest rates rose in 2022, those companies — which depend on cheap money to fund future growth — were hit extremely hard.

ARKK fell approximately 75% from its February 2021 peak. Investors who bought near the top lost three quarters of their money.

Wood maintained conviction and bought more on the way down. Whether that turns out to be smart or stubborn will depend on what happens to these technologies over the next five years.

Mark Zuckerberg

The metaverse bet. From 2021 to 2023, Meta spent over $50 billion on Reality Labs — its VR and metaverse division — and generated minimal revenue.

The division lost $16 billion in 2023 alone. Meta's stock fell nearly 75% at its 2022 trough.

Zuckerberg was widely mocked, called the metaverse a disaster, and faced enormous internal and external pressure. He then pivoted hard to AI and the stock recovered.

The metaverse losses remain one of the most expensive executive vanity projects in corporate history.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

Cathie Wood

Cathie Wood grew up in Los Angeles, the daughter of Irish immigrants. She studied economics and finance at the University of Southern California under Arthur Laffer — yes, the Laffer Curve guy — who she credits as a formative influence on her thinking.

She started her career at Capital Group in 1977 as an assistant economist, then moved to Jennison Associates where she spent 18 years managing equity portfolios.

In 2001 she joined AllianceBernstein as chief investment officer for global thematic strategies. There she developed the early framework for what would become ARK: thematic investing around transformative technologies.

She pitched the idea internally. They passed.

In 2014, at age 58, she left and started ARK Invest from scratch with $6 million of seed money. That is either inspiring or terrifying depending on how old you are and how risk-tolerant you are.

Mark Zuckerberg

Mark Zuckerberg launched Facebook from his Harvard dorm in February 2004. By the end of 2004, the site had 1 million users.

He turned down a $1 billion acquisition offer from Yahoo in 2006. By 2012, Facebook went public at a $104 billion valuation — the largest tech IPO in history at the time.

The stock immediately fell 50%. It then recovered to become one of the most valuable companies in the world.

In 2012, Facebook acquired Instagram for $1 billion (now worth over $100 billion). In 2014, it acquired WhatsApp for $19 billion.

In 2021, he rebranded the parent company to Meta to signal a pivot to the metaverse — a move that cost over $50 billion in investment and destroyed significant shareholder value before the company course-corrected toward AI.

COMPANIES & ROLES

Cathie Wood

ARK Invest is the company she founded in 2014 and the vehicle through which all her major positions have been run. ARK operates several actively managed ETFs, the most famous being ARKK (ARK Innovation ETF), which holds concentrated positions in companies she believes are driving technological disruption.

At its peak in February 2021, ARKK had over $27 billion in assets under management. By 2022 that had fallen below $7 billion as the fund declined roughly 75% from its high.

Her major individual positions have included Tesla (she was buying when it was under $20 adjusted; it went to $400), Coinbase, Roku, Zoom, Teladoc, and Palantir. She publishes all her trades publicly every day — unusual for an active manager — and shares her full investment theses openly.

She also hosts a weekly podcast, runs a public research blog, and appears on television regularly.

Mark Zuckerberg

Meta Platforms (CEO and controlling shareholder — holds majority voting control through supervoting shares). Key acquisitions: Instagram (2012, $1B), WhatsApp (2014, $19B), Oculus VR (2014, $2B).

Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (co-founded with wife Priscilla Chan — philanthropic LLC).

EDUCATION

Cathie Wood

University of Southern California, BS in Economics and Finance, 1981. She studied under Arthur Laffer, the economist behind supply-side economics, who she credits with shaping her long-term, structural view of markets.

She has said the Laffer Curve and its implications about incentives and growth informed how she thinks about technology and innovation.

Mark Zuckerberg

Harvard University — studied computer science and psychology. Dropped out in 2004 to move Facebook to Palo Alto.

BOOKS & RESOURCES

Cathie Wood

The Innovator's Dilemma by Clayton Christensen

The intellectual foundation of everything ARK does. Christensen's argument — that successful companies fail because they optimize for existing customers rather than disruptive new technologies — is the analytical framework Wood applies to every sector she covers. If you want to understand how she thinks, read this first

ARK publishes free research at ark-invest.com, including their Big Ideas annual report, which is a genuinely useful survey of disruptive technology trends with supporting data

It is free and more substantive than most paid research. Regardless of your view on ARK's funds, the research is worth reading

As an Amazon Associate, Netfigo earns from qualifying purchases. Book links above may be affiliate links.

Mark Zuckerberg

The Muqaddimah by Ibn Khaldun (cited as a key influence on his thinking about civilizational cycles).

The Hard Thing About Hard Things by Ben Horowitz

He has cited Augustus Caesar as a historical figure he studies closely

As an Amazon Associate, Netfigo earns from qualifying purchases. Book links above may be affiliate links.

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