NETFIGO SCORE BATTLE

ORIGINAL DATA

Risk Appetite

Jordan Belfort
10
Lark Davis
9

Contrarian Index

Jordan Belfort
6
Lark Davis
5

Track Record

Jordan Belfort
2
Lark Davis
5

Accessibility

Jordan Belfort
3
Lark Davis
10

Time Horizon

Jordan Belfort
Day Trader
Lark Davis
Medium-Term

AT A GLANCE

Jordan Belfort
Lark Davis
$100 million
Net Worth
$5M+
American
Nationality
New Zealander
Stratton Oakmont
Fund / Firm
Day Trader
Time Horizon
Medium-Term
10 / 10
Risk Score
9 / 10

INVESTING STYLE

Jordan Belfort

Belfort's original "investing style" was securities fraud — buying penny stocks in bulk, artificially inflating prices through high-pressure sales, then dumping shares on unsuspecting retail investors. This is a pump-and-dump scheme, and it's a federal crime.

His current advice is more conventional. He now recommends long-term investing in quality companies, diversification, and avoiding get-rich-quick schemes — which is a bit like an arsonist giving fire safety tips, but the advice itself is actually sound.

He talks a lot about the psychology of selling — both in business and in how Wall Street sells products to retail investors. His main message: the system is rigged against retail investors, and the best defense is financial education.

He's not wrong about this, even if he was personally one of the people doing the rigging.

Lark Davis

Davis covers the full crypto market — not just Bitcoin. His content focuses on identifying altcoin opportunities, understanding new blockchain projects, DeFi protocols, and layer-2 ecosystems.

His strategy is higher risk than Bitcoin-only: he looks for early-stage projects with high upside potential and significant downside risk. He has been transparent about both wins and losses in his portfolio.

He advocates dollar-cost averaging into positions and taking profits during bull markets — lessons he admits he learned the hard way during the 2018 bear market.

FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY

Jordan Belfort

Belfort's current financial philosophy is essentially: don't do what I did. Be ethical.

Build real businesses that create real value. Invest for the long term.

Don't chase shortcuts.

More specifically, he teaches that sales skills are the most valuable financial skill anyone can develop. His argument: everything in life is a sale — getting a job, raising capital, convincing a partner to join your startup.

If you can sell, you can always make money.

He also stresses the difference between income and wealth. At Stratton, he had massive income but zero real wealth — it all went to drugs, toys, legal fees, and restitution.

Real wealth, he says, is about building assets that generate income while you sleep.

On the market itself: he thinks most retail investors should stick to index funds and avoid individual stock picking. He believes actively managed funds mostly underperform because of fees.

Coming from a guy who ran a boiler room, this is actually pretty good advice.

Lark Davis

His philosophy is that crypto represents the biggest wealth transfer opportunity of his generation. He believes in holding Bitcoin as a base position and using a portion of the portfolio for higher-risk altcoin exposure.

He has said his biggest financial lesson was not taking profits during the 2017-2018 bull run — a mistake he actively advises his audience to avoid repeating.

RISK TOLERANCE

Jordan Belfort

In his Stratton days, his risk tolerance was effectively infinite — he was leveraging illegal schemes and spending money faster than he made it. There was no risk management because the "strategy" was fraud.

Now, he describes himself as much more conservative. He's said he keeps a significant cash reserve, invests in real estate, and avoids anything he doesn't fully understand.

Prison will do that to you.

He's also said that true risk isn't financial — it's ethical. The real risk he took wasn't losing money; it was losing his freedom, his family, and his reputation.

He frames his entire cautionary tale around this idea: the biggest risk in any deal isn't the money, it's whether you can sleep at night.

Lark Davis

Davis has been public about holding altcoins that went to zero and investing in projects that turned out to be fraudulent or simply failed. He does not hide the losses.

His risk management has evolved directly from those mistakes: he now advocates taking partial profits at every major price milestone, maintaining Bitcoin as a core position, and treating altcoins as a speculative sleeve rather than a primary strategy. The lesson he repeats most often from 2018: not taking profits during euphoria is itself a high-risk decision — most people just don't recognize it as one until prices have already collapsed.

THE PLAYBOOK

Jordan Belfort

During the Stratton years, Belfort's spending was legendary and absurd. He owned a 167-foot yacht (originally owned by Coco Chanel) that he sank off the coast of Sardinia.

He had a helicopter he crashed while high on Quaaludes. He owned multiple mansions.

He spent an estimated $700,000 per week on drugs alone. He literally threw money around.

Post-prison, his lifestyle is more restrained — but still comfortable. He lives in a beachfront property in Manhattan Beach, California.

He drives luxury cars. He dresses well.

He travels for speaking gigs constantly.

He still owes restitution — $110 million to the victims of his fraud. He's paid back roughly $14 million as of the most recent public records.

The movie deal alone reportedly earned him over $1 million. His victims have pointed out, with some justification, that he's profiting from the story of how he robbed them.

Lark Davis

Lives in Thailand with low overhead costs. Has spoken about the power of geographic arbitrage — earning in dollars and crypto while living somewhere with a lower cost of living.

He exercises consistently, says a healthy body supports a clear financial mind, and advocates for a simple, mobile lifestyle. Does not flaunt luxury publicly.

BIGGEST WIN

Jordan Belfort

The movie deal is probably the biggest "win" of his post-prison life. Selling the rights to Scorsese and having Leonardo DiCaprio play you is a level of rehabilitation that most convicted felons can only dream of.

The film made $392 million globally and turned Belfort into a household name — in a weirdly aspirational way.

At Stratton, the raw numbers were staggering: he was reportedly earning $1 million per week at the firm's peak. But since most of that money was obtained through fraud and was subsequently seized or spent, it doesn't really count as a "win" in any legitimate sense.

His Straight Line Selling system is a legitimate post-prison success. He built a multimillion-dollar training business from a prison cell, essentially monetizing the one skill that was genuinely his: the ability to sell anything to anyone.

Lark Davis

Building one of the largest crypto education YouTube channels in the world during the 2020-2021 bull run. His coverage of DeFi and altcoin projects during that period — when those sectors exploded in value — brought him the majority of his audience and income.

His Wealth Mastery community grew substantially during that period.

BIGGEST MISTAKE

Jordan Belfort

The whole thing. Stratton Oakmont defrauded roughly 1,500 investors out of approximately $200 million.

Belfort personally pleaded guilty to securities fraud and money laundering. He was sentenced to 4 years in federal prison (served 22 months), ordered to pay $110.4 million in restitution, and was banned from the securities industry for life.

He lost everything — his money, his first marriage, his freedom, and very nearly his life (he overdosed multiple times during the Stratton years). His 167-foot yacht sank in a storm off Italy.

His helicopter was destroyed when he tried to land it on his lawn while high.

The lesson he teaches now: "I was the richest man I knew, and I was the most miserable. Money made through dishonesty isn't wealth — it's a ticking bomb." Whether you believe his redemption arc is genuine or just another sales pitch is up to you.

Lark Davis

In 2021, Davis faced significant controversy when it emerged he had been paid to promote certain crypto projects to his audience without clearly disclosing the payments. He issued an apology and said he had followed what he believed were disclosure norms at the time, but the episode damaged his reputation and became one of the most-cited examples of undisclosed crypto influencer promotions.

He also, like most altcoin-focused analysts, saw his portfolio take brutal losses in the 2022 bear market.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

Jordan Belfort

Jordan Belfort grew up in Queens, New York. His parents were both accountants — middle class, nothing flashy.

After high school, he briefly tried selling Italian ices on the beach (made $20,000 in one summer, which gave him the taste) and then went to dental school at the University of Maryland. He dropped out on the first day after a professor told the class that the golden age of dentistry was over.

He drifted into Wall Street in the late 1980s. His first job was at L.F.

Rothschild, where he was trained as a stockbroker. He was literally on the job for his first day when Black Monday hit — October 19, 1987, the biggest one-day market crash in history.

He was immediately laid off.

So he pivoted to selling meat and seafood door to door on Long Island. No joke.

He was good at it — reportedly earning $3,000–$4,000 a week. But the stock market kept calling.

In 1989, he co-founded Stratton Oakmont, a brokerage firm in Lake Success, Long Island.

Stratton Oakmont became one of the most notorious boiler rooms in Wall Street history. The firm specialized in penny stock fraud — buying huge blocks of cheap, nearly worthless stocks, then having an army of aggressive salespeople call investors and push the price up through manipulation.

Once the price was inflated, Belfort and his partners would dump their shares. Classic pump-and-dump.

At its peak, Stratton Oakmont had over 1,000 brokers and was moving millions of dollars daily. Belfort was making an estimated $1 million per week.

The office was famous for its insane culture — drugs, parties, dwarf-tossing contests, and an atmosphere that made a frat house look like a monastery.

The SEC and FBI were circling for years. Stratton was shut down in 1996.

Belfort was indicted in 1998 for securities fraud and money laundering. He cooperated with the FBI (wore a wire to help catch other fraudsters), pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to 4 years in federal prison.

He served 22 months at a minimum-security facility in Nevada.

After prison, he reinvented himself. He wrote two memoirs — "The Wolf of Wall Street" and "Catching the Wolf of Wall Street." Martin Scorsese turned the first one into a movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio in 2013.

The film grossed $392 million worldwide and turned Belfort from a convicted felon into a celebrity. He now runs a sales training company and charges $50,000–$100,000 per speaking engagement.

Lark Davis

Lark Davis is a New Zealand-born crypto educator who built his brand primarily on YouTube, starting around 2018. He focuses on cryptocurrency analysis with an emphasis on altcoins, DeFi, and emerging blockchain projects — not just Bitcoin.

His channel "Crypto Lark" grew to over a million subscribers, making him one of the most followed retail crypto educators in the world. He also built a paid subscription community, Wealth Mastery, where he publishes deeper research.

He has lived in Thailand for years, part of a wave of digital nomad crypto educators who operate internationally.

COMPANIES & ROLES

Jordan Belfort

Stratton Oakmont was the main act — a brokerage firm that was really a fraud factory. At its peak, it employed over 1,000 stockbrokers and took dozens of companies public (most of them worthless or nearly so).

The firm was shut down by regulators in 1996 after years of violations.

His current company is Jordan Belfort Global — a sales training and motivational speaking business. He teaches his "Straight Line Selling" system, which is essentially the sales methodology he developed at Stratton, minus the illegal parts.

He sells courses, coaching, and live events.

He's also been involved in crypto promotion — he's given talks and endorsements for various blockchain projects, which is ironic given that his original crime was essentially selling worthless assets to unsuspecting buyers. He's been criticized for this, and he's pushed back by saying crypto itself isn't a scam, just some of the projects are.

Lark Davis

Crypto Lark YouTube channel (1M+ subscribers). Wealth Mastery (paid research subscription).

Books: "Cryptocurrency Revolution" (authored). Based in Thailand.

EDUCATION

Jordan Belfort

Belfort attended American University in Washington, D.C., where he earned a degree in biology. He then enrolled in the University of Maryland School of Dentistry but famously dropped out on the first day.

No MBA, no finance degree, no Series 7 at the time — he got into Wall Street purely through hustle and the ability to sell.

Lark Davis

Largely self-taught in crypto and financial markets. No formal finance credentials.

BOOKS & RESOURCES

Jordan Belfort

Influence by Robert Cialdini

For understanding the psychology of persuasion — ironic, given that he used those same principles to defraud people

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

Lark Davis

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

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