NETFIGO SCORE BATTLE
ORIGINAL DATARisk Appetite
Contrarian Index
Track Record
Accessibility
Time Horizon
AT A GLANCE
INVESTING STYLE
Jeff Bezos
Bezos's investment style is long-term and patient to an extreme degree. He built Amazon by deliberately losing money for years, reinvesting every dollar into infrastructure, logistics, and new businesses.
He told shareholders repeatedly that he would sacrifice short-term profitability for long-term market position. AWS was not a profit center for years — then it became Amazon's most profitable business unit.
Through Bezos Expeditions, he was an early investor in Google (1998, before the IPO), which alone made him hundreds of millions. He also invested early in Airbnb, Uber, and Twitter.
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
Jeff Bezos
His core philosophy is customer obsession combined with long-term thinking. He says most companies optimize for the next quarter.
He optimizes for the next decade. He invented the concept of "working backwards" — writing the press release and FAQ for a product before building it, to ensure the team starts from the customer's perspective.
He also invented the "two-pizza rule": if a team needs more than two pizzas to feed, it is too big.
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
Jeff Bezos
Bezos told shareholders in 1999 that Amazon would lose money for years. He said the same in 2001.
He meant it. His risk tolerance comes from a framework he calls the "regret minimization framework" — imagining himself at 80 looking back — which weights the risk of not trying far more than the risk of failing.
The risk he manages carefully is existential: through all of Amazon's early loss years, he kept debt manageable and liquidity intact so that survival was never in question. He takes huge bets on the thesis, but he protects the foundation.
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
Jeff Bezos
Bezos lived frugally in the early Amazon years — he famously built his own desk from a door laid on sawhorses to keep costs down. The "door desk" became a symbol at Amazon.
He became extraordinarily wealthy but for years retained a modest personal style. Post-divorce and especially post-CEO, he moved to Miami, bought massive properties, and began a much more public lifestyle with partner Lauren Sanchez.
He exercises in the morning before checking his phone.
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
Jeff Bezos
Amazon Web Services. AWS was an internal tool that Amazon began selling to external companies in 2006.
By 2023, AWS generated $91 billion in revenue and accounted for the majority of Amazon's operating profit. It is the dominant cloud computing platform in the world — Microsoft and Google are still playing catch-up.
Bezos had the idea when Amazon was already a massive retailer. He added an entirely different trillion-dollar business on top.
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
Jeff Bezos
The Washington Post acquisition is the most common answer. He paid $250 million for it in 2013 and has poured money into it since.
The Post has struggled commercially and faces the same headwinds as all legacy print media. Separately, his rocket company Blue Origin has consistently lagged SpaceX in capability and ambition — Blue Origin's New Shepard is basically a tourist ride compared to SpaceX's reusable orbital rockets.
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
Jeff Bezos
Jeff Bezos graduated from Princeton in 1986, worked at several finance firms, and became the youngest-ever senior vice president at D.E. Shaw hedge fund by age 30.
In 1994, he quit to drive cross-country with his then-wife MacKenzie, writing the Amazon business plan in the passenger seat. He started selling books from his Bellevue garage, moved operations to Seattle, and launched Amazon.com in 1995.
What followed is one of the greatest compounding business stories in history: books to everything, retail to cloud computing (AWS), a logistics network that rivals national postal services. Amazon's revenue in 2023 was $574 billion.
Bezos stepped down as CEO in 2021 to focus on Blue Origin, his space company. He also owns The Washington Post (acquired 2013 for $250 million).
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
Jeff Bezos
Amazon (founder, executive chairman). Blue Origin (founder).
The Washington Post (owner). Bezos Expeditions (personal investment vehicle — early backer of Google, Airbnb, Twitter, Uber, and many others).
Previously: D.E. Shaw (SVP).
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
Jeff Bezos
Princeton University — Bachelor of Science in electrical engineering and computer science, summa cum laude, 1986.
Anthony Pompliano
West Point graduate (Bachelor's in economics). MBA: Babson College, Olin Graduate School of Business.
BOOKS & RESOURCES
Jeff Bezos
Sam Walton: Made in America (Bezos studied Walmart obsessively)
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.

