NETFIGO SCORE BATTLE

ORIGINAL DATA

Risk Appetite

Chamath Palihapitiya
9
Anthony Pompliano
8

Contrarian Index

Chamath Palihapitiya
8
Anthony Pompliano
7

Track Record

Chamath Palihapitiya
5
Anthony Pompliano
6

Accessibility

Chamath Palihapitiya
6
Anthony Pompliano
9

Time Horizon

Chamath Palihapitiya
Long-Term
Anthony Pompliano
Long-Term

AT A GLANCE

Chamath Palihapitiya
Anthony Pompliano
$1 billion
Net Worth
$100M+
Canadian-American
Nationality
American
Long-Term
Time Horizon
Long-Term
9 / 10
Risk Score
8 / 10

INVESTING STYLE

Chamath Palihapitiya

Palihapitiya is a concentrated, long-term, thematic technology investor. He focuses on what he calls "social capital" — investments in companies addressing large, structural problems in healthcare, education, financial services, and climate.

He runs relatively concentrated positions and holds for years. He is also a very public investor — he shares his theses on Twitter, on the All-In Podcast (which he co-hosts), and in interviews, which creates its own dynamic around his picks.

Anthony Pompliano

Pompliano is a Bitcoin maximalist, full stop. His thesis is simple: Bitcoin is the only crypto asset worth owning because it has the strongest network, the most decentralization, and the best monetary properties.

He is skeptical of most altcoins. He invests in Bitcoin directly, through Morgan Creek funds, and makes early-stage bets in Bitcoin infrastructure companies.

His audience-building strategy — consistent, daily content, simple arguments, no jargon — is itself a form of investing. He built a media company before most people realized finance media was a distribution asset.

FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY

Chamath Palihapitiya

Palihapitiya's stated philosophy is that the most important investments are in businesses that address large, structural failures in society — broken healthcare, broken education, broken financial services. He believes technology is the only force powerful enough to fix these systems at scale, and that venture capital is the right vehicle for funding that change.

He has been vocal about the failures of traditional finance to allocate capital toward genuine societal problems. Whether his actual investments have matched this rhetoric is, charitably, debatable.

Anthony Pompliano

His philosophy in a sentence: Bitcoin is the hardest money ever created, and the dollar is being debased by central banks who print money at will. He argues inflation is a wealth transfer from savers to governments, and Bitcoin is the only asset that protects against it.

He says everyone will eventually figure this out — the only question is whether you figure it out before or after the price is much higher.

RISK TOLERANCE

Chamath Palihapitiya

Palihapitiya has a high tolerance for concentrated, binary bets. SPAC investing is inherently binary: the merger either works or it doesn't.

He has made multiple bets where the downside was essentially total loss for investors who followed him in at the wrong price. He is less disciplined about risk management than the hedge fund managers on this list — his approach is more venture-style, where most bets lose and a few win big.

The problem is that his most public bets have often been the ones that lost.

Anthony Pompliano

Pompliano is openly concentrated — at various points he has said more than half his net worth is in Bitcoin. He does not see this as recklessness.

His framework: if Bitcoin fails, the traditional financial system is likely also in serious trouble, so the downside of being concentrated in BTC is no worse than the downside of being concentrated in dollars. He views conventional diversification as spreading risk across assets that are all denominated in the same thing being debased.

He calls diversification "di-worsification" for people who truly understand what they hold.

THE PLAYBOOK

Chamath Palihapitiya

Palihapitiya owns an NBA team — the Golden State Warriors, about 10% — and has described it as his most expensive hobby. He owns significant real estate, travels by private jet, and has not been shy about his wealth.

He is also publicly generous with his opinions, which costs him nothing. He famously said in 2021 that he "doesn't care" about Uyghurs in China — a comment made on his podcast that prompted significant backlash and a partial retraction.

He is not someone who stays quiet and stays safe.

Anthony Pompliano

Pompliano runs his life like he runs his content: consistent, high-volume, no days off. He wakes up early, exercises, posts daily.

He is famously disciplined about time and output — he has said he treats content creation with the same structure as military training. He holds Bitcoin.

He is vocal about not keeping significant cash.

BIGGEST WIN

Chamath Palihapitiya

The early Facebook bet is the clearest win. Palihapitiya joined Facebook in 2007 when it had 50 million users and received substantial equity.

His four-year tenure as VP of Growth coincided with the company growing to 700 million users. When Facebook went public in 2012, his stake was worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

He also invested in Slack at an early stage — the collaboration tool was acquired by Salesforce in 2021 for $27.7 billion — and Box, which had a successful IPO. The Social Capital vintage-1 and vintage-2 funds performed well by any VC standard.

Anthony Pompliano

Being early and public on Bitcoin. He was bullish on BTC when it was under $10,000, never backed down through the 2018 bear market, and held through the 2020-2021 run to $69,000.

His Morgan Creek Digital fund was among the first institutional vehicles that allowed pension funds and endowments to gain Bitcoin exposure.

BIGGEST MISTAKE

Chamath Palihapitiya

The SPAC era is the obvious answer. His SPACs — particularly Clover Health (which he backed strongly and which dropped from a peak of around $17 to under $3) and Open Door (which fell similarly) — caused significant losses for retail investors who bought in based on his endorsement.

A short-seller report alleged that Clover Health had undisclosed problems, and the stock never recovered. His broader SPAC portfolio has dramatically underperformed.

The criticism is specific: he was paid significant sponsor fees and promote shares at the time of SPAC launch, giving him economic incentives that differed from the retail investors who followed him in.

Anthony Pompliano

Being loud enough about Bitcoin that his credibility is permanently attached to its performance. When Bitcoin drops 70%, Pompliano drops with it in public perception — every bear market brings screenshots of his old price predictions.

He has also faced criticism that some of his early crypto venture bets, outside Bitcoin, did not perform.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

Chamath Palihapitiya

Palihapitiya was born in Sri Lanka in 1976 and moved to Canada with his family when he was six. His father struggled with alcoholism and the family relied on government assistance.

He studied electrical engineering at the University of Waterloo, graduating in 1999. He joined Winamp's parent company, then moved to AOL during the dot-com boom.

When that era collapsed, he joined a small startup called Facebook in 2007 as VP of User Growth.

His work at Facebook was instrumental. He oversaw the team that grew the platform from 50 million to 700 million users, designing the growth loops and viral mechanisms that made Facebook the dominant social network.

He left in 2011, reportedly unhappy with Facebook's direction on privacy and user data — something he has discussed publicly since, including saying on a podcast that he had "tremendous guilt" about what social media had done to society. After Facebook he founded Social Capital in 2011 as a venture firm, then pivoted it dramatically.

Anthony Pompliano

Anthony Pompliano served in the U.S. Army, did tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, then came home and built a career in tech.

He worked at Facebook briefly in 2016 — reportedly fired after two weeks for allegedly raising concerns about user metric accuracy. He then co-founded Morgan Creek Digital Assets in 2018, one of the first traditional asset managers to offer crypto funds to institutional investors.

His podcast "The Pomp Podcast" became one of the most downloaded finance shows in the world. He built a Twitter and newsletter following of millions by making simple, direct, bullish arguments for Bitcoin when that was still an edgy position.

COMPANIES & ROLES

Chamath Palihapitiya

Social Capital, founded in 2011, started as a traditional venture capital fund and invested in companies like Slack, Box, and SurveyMonkey. Several of those early bets did well.

But Palihapitiya grew frustrated with the traditional VC model — the fund-of-funds structure, the LP relationships, the consensus decision-making — and in 2018 he converted Social Capital into a family office structure.

He then became the most prominent figure in the SPAC boom of 2020–2021. SPACs — Special Purpose Acquisition Companies — are shell companies that raise money through an IPO and then use those funds to merge with a private company, taking it public.

Palihapitiya launched several, including IPOD, IPOE, and IPOF (yes, those were the actual tickers). His SPACs took public companies including Clover Health and Open Door.

Both suffered steep declines after going public. His basket of SPACs collectively destroyed significant investor capital.

Anthony Pompliano

Morgan Creek Digital Assets (co-founder, 2018). The Pomp Podcast / "Best Business Show." Pomp Investments (early-stage venture fund).

Newsletter: "Pomp Letter" (millions of subscribers). Previously: Facebook (briefly), Snapchat (growth team), Earlyshares.

EDUCATION

Chamath Palihapitiya

University of Waterloo, BASc in Electrical Engineering, 1999. He has spoken about the Canadian university system being accessible regardless of family wealth, crediting it as the mechanism that made his career possible.

He does not come from Harvard or Stanford — something he occasionally references as a point of difference from the VC mainstream.

Anthony Pompliano

West Point graduate (Bachelor's in economics). MBA: Babson College, Olin Graduate School of Business.

BOOKS & RESOURCES

Chamath Palihapitiya

Palihapitiya does not have a book but the All-In Podcast is one of the most substantive public forums for understanding how he thinks about markets, technology, and policy

The episodes where he discusses healthcare and education reform are particularly revealing about his stated investment thesis

Zero to One by Peter Thiel

The closest intellectual frame to how Palihapitiya thinks about technology: build something genuinely new, not a marginal improvement. He has cited Thiel's work in interviews

The Hard Thing About Hard Things by Ben Horowitz

Essential reading for understanding the Facebook growth era he was part of

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

Anthony Pompliano

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

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