NETFIGO SCORE BATTLE

ORIGINAL DATA

Risk Appetite

Vitalik Buterin
8
Warren Buffett
3

Contrarian Index

Vitalik Buterin
9
Warren Buffett
7

Track Record

Vitalik Buterin
8
Warren Buffett
10

Accessibility

Vitalik Buterin
3
Warren Buffett
8

Time Horizon

Vitalik Buterin
Generational
Warren Buffett
Generational

AT A GLANCE

Vitalik Buterin
Warren Buffett
$1 billion
Net Worth
$120 Billion
Russian-Canadian
Nationality
American
Fund / Firm
Berkshire Hathaway
Generational
Time Horizon
Generational
8 / 10
Risk Score
3 / 10

INVESTING STYLE

Vitalik Buterin

Buterin''s personal investment approach is deliberately simple and aligned with his own creation. He holds primarily ETH and has been transparent about not trading actively or making complex financial moves.

He donated a substantial portion of his meme coin holdings — including the famous $1 billion in SHIB donated to the India COVID relief fund — when developers sent him tokens to increase their perceived legitimacy. He has said he does not feel entitled to wealth beyond what he needs to live and fund work he cares about.

Warren Buffett

Buffett's approach is simple to describe and almost impossible to copy. He buys great businesses at fair prices and then just...

holds them. Forever.

He calls it "buy and hold" but that undersells it — he means hold until the sun burns out. He looks for companies with a real unfair advantage over competitors.

Something that protects them from being wiped out. He calls it a "moat" — like the water around a castle.

Think Coca-Cola. Everyone knows it.

Nobody can replicate it. He puts a LOT of money into a small number of bets — usually his top five holdings make up over 70% of everything.

Most fund managers would have a panic attack at that level of concentration. Buffett calls it being convicted.

His old mentor Graham taught him to hunt for cheap, beaten-down companies and flip them fast. Charlie Munger, his business partner for 45+ years, talked him out of that.

Munger said: just buy the best businesses you can find and never sell. Buffett admits that shift made him hundreds of billions of dollars.

FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY

Vitalik Buterin

Buterin believes that decentralized systems — where no single entity can control, censor, or inflate — create better outcomes for society than centralized ones. His philosophy extends beyond money to governance, identity, and social coordination.

He has written extensively about "credible neutrality" — the idea that a system is most valuable when no participant can manipulate it for their own benefit. He is genuinely trying to build infrastructure for a more fair and open world, not just technology for technology''s sake.

Warren Buffett

Rule No. 1: Never lose money.

Rule No. 2: Never forget Rule No.

1. Buy businesses, not stocks — the distinction matters more than most investors realize.

Let compounding do the heavy lifting and get out of its way. Never use debt to invest.

Be fearful when others are greedy, greedy when others are fearful. Time in the market destroys timing the market in every long enough data set.

For most people, a low-cost S&P 500 index fund will outperform almost any active strategy, including most professional money managers — including, he's said, what most of his estate will go into after he's gone.

RISK TOLERANCE

Vitalik Buterin

Buterin''s financial risk is concentrated entirely in the crypto space — primarily ETH. He has experienced 80%+ drawdowns in ETH price multiple times and continued working regardless.

He is not a risk manager in the portfolio sense. He is a technologist whose compensation happens to be denominated in a volatile asset.

His approach to personal finances appears to be minimal engagement rather than active management.

Warren Buffett

Buffett's whole thing is: do so much homework that the risk basically disappears. He doesn't diversify across 500 stocks to protect himself — he researches 10 companies so deeply that he's more confident about those 10 than most people are about anything.

He never borrows money to invest. Ever.

He keeps a mountain of cash at Berkshire — over $100 billion sitting around doing nothing — specifically so he can swoop in when everyone else is panicking and selling cheap. He once called derivatives "financial weapons of mass destruction" back in 2002.

Wall Street laughed. Then 2008 happened and Wall Street stopped laughing.

He doesn't predict where the stock market is going. He predicts whether a business will still be dominant in 20 years.

That's it.

THE PLAYBOOK

Vitalik Buterin

Buterin lives extremely modestly for someone with a net worth exceeding $1 billion. He has stated his annual personal spending is approximately $100,000.

He rents rather than owns. He does not own a car.

He travels extensively but simply. He donated the majority of the meme coins he received to charity rather than selling them.

He has stated publicly that he does not want to become a billionaire philanthropist in the traditional sense — he wants to stay involved in technical work.

Warren Buffett

Despite a $120B net worth, Buffett still lives in the same gray stucco house in Omaha he bought in 1958 for $31,500. He drives himself to work.

Breakfast is McDonald's — he orders based on his mood: $2.61, $2.95, or $3.17. He plays bridge obsessively, often online with Bill Gates.

He drinks multiple Cokes a day (Berkshire owns a large stake in Coca-Cola; coincidence is left as an exercise to the reader). He has pledged to give away more than 99% of his wealth, primarily to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and his children's foundations.

He takes a $100,000 annual salary from Berkshire. He does not own a smartphone.

BIGGEST WIN

Vitalik Buterin

Co-founding Ethereum is the win, full stop. The network processes trillions of dollars in transaction value annually.

It enabled DeFi — decentralized finance, a parallel financial system built on smart contracts. It enabled NFTs — however one feels about them.

It enabled DAOs. It is the infrastructure layer on which most of the innovative blockchain applications since 2015 have been built.

Its market cap has exceeded $500 billion. He created this at 20.

That is the win.

Warren Buffett

Apple. Berkshire started buying Apple in 2016 — late by any tech investor's standard, from a man who spent decades insisting he didn't understand technology.

By 2023, the position had grown to over $170 billion, returning more than 800%. Buffett called it the best business he'd ever seen and admitted he should have bought it earlier.

Honorable mention: American Express in 1963 during the Great Salad Oil Scandal, when he put 40% of the Buffett Partnership into AmEx at distressed prices while the rest of Wall Street was running away.

BIGGEST MISTAKE

Vitalik Buterin

The DAO hack of 2016 is the most consequential crisis Buterin has navigated. The DAO — a decentralized autonomous organization built on Ethereum — was hacked for $60 million in ETH shortly after launch.

Buterin helped lead the decision to hard fork the Ethereum blockchain to reverse the hack, which was philosophically controversial: the entire point of "code is law" in blockchain is that transactions are irreversible. The fork split the community, creating Ethereum Classic as a separate chain.

It was the right pragmatic decision and the wrong philosophical one — a tension Buterin has never fully resolved.

Warren Buffett

Buying Berkshire Hathaway. He bought it in 1962 as a cigar butt — a cheap, dying textile company — and then kept it instead of winding it down into a clean insurance holding company.

The C-corp structure meant decades of tax drag. He has estimated this single mistake — triggered partly by spite after the owner tried to lowball him on a buyout — cost Berkshire and its shareholders roughly $200 billion over 50 years.

He also admits missing Google and Amazon, both of which he understood well enough to buy and simply didn't.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

Vitalik Buterin

Buterin was born in Kolomna, Russia, in 1994 and moved to Canada with his family at age six. His father was a computer scientist, and Buterin showed early mathematical gifts.

He discovered Bitcoin at 17 through his father and became obsessed — writing for Bitcoin Magazine starting in 2011 as a teenager, developing a reputation as one of the most thoughtful analysts of the nascent blockchain space.

He proposed Ethereum in a 2013 whitepaper, arguing that Bitcoin''s scripting language was too limited and that a more general-purpose blockchain — one that could run arbitrary programs called smart contracts — would unlock far more value. He was 19.

Bitcoin''s developers declined to implement his ideas, so he built Ethereum separately. He received a Thiel Fellowship in 2014 and dropped out of University of Waterloo to launch the project.

Ethereum launched in 2015. It became the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap and the foundation of DeFi, NFTs, and most blockchain applications built since.

Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett was born in Omaha, Nebraska in 1930. He bought his first stock at age 11 — three shares of a company called Cities Service.

He paid $114. He was eleven.

By 14, he owned a 40-acre farm and had filed his first tax return. He applied to Harvard Business School and got rejected.

Best thing that ever happened to him, honestly. He ended up at Columbia instead, where he met Benjamin Graham — the guy who basically invented the idea of buying undervalued stocks.

After graduating in 1951, Buffett started his own investment partnership in Omaha with $105,000 from family and friends. He turned that into something much bigger, compounding at around 30% per year for over a decade.

Then in 1969, he shut it down and quietly took over a dying Massachusetts textile company he had bought partly out of spite. That company was Berkshire Hathaway.

What happened next is the greatest investing run in history — and it started with a grudge.

COMPANIES & ROLES

Vitalik Buterin

Ethereum Foundation is the non-profit organization that funds core Ethereum development. Buterin is the most prominent figure associated with it but is not its CEO — he functions more as its chief architect and public intellectual.

He has no formal ownership of Ethereum the network; it is decentralized. He holds Ethereum tokens (ETH) that he has accumulated since the genesis block.

He has also written extensively for the Ethereum blog and his personal blog (vitalik.ca), which covers cryptography, mechanism design, social coordination, and political philosophy. His blog posts are read by thousands of researchers and developers.

He serves on the boards of several organizations in the blockchain space.

Warren Buffett

His main vehicle is Berkshire Hathaway — a company he took over in 1965 when it was a dying textile mill. He basically gutted the textile business and turned the whole thing into a giant money machine that owns other businesses.

Today it's one of the most valuable companies on earth. On the stock side, his biggest bet is Apple — worth over $175 billion at its peak.

He also owns huge chunks of Bank of America, Coca-Cola (since 1988 — he really doesn't sell), American Express, and Chevron. Then there are the companies Berkshire owns outright.

GEICO, one of the biggest car insurers in America. Burlington Northern Santa Fe, a massive railroad.

Dairy Queen, See's Candies, Duracell. Basically a random collection of boring, cash-generating businesses that he loves precisely because they're boring.

His first fund — Buffett Partnership Ltd. — ran from 1956 to 1969.

He returned around 30% per year while the market did 8.6%. Then he shut it down, said he couldn't find enough cheap stocks, and walked away at the top.

EDUCATION

Vitalik Buterin

University of Waterloo, Computer Science — dropped out in 2014 after receiving a Thiel Fellowship. He has said the fellowship gave him the financial runway to work on Ethereum full time at a moment when the project would otherwise have been impossible to pursue.

Warren Buffett

University of Nebraska–Lincoln (B.S. in Business Administration, 1950).

Columbia Business School (M.S. in Economics, 1951) — the only school that mattered, where he studied under Benjamin Graham and got his only A+.

He also spent two years at the Wharton School before transferring. Harvard Business School rejected him.

He's described that rejection as one of the luckiest things that ever happened to him.

BOOKS & RESOURCES

Vitalik Buterin

Buterins own writing is the essential primary source

His blog at vitalik.ca covers cryptography, game theory, mechanism design, and political philosophy with a depth and clarity that most academic papers do not match. His Ethereum whitepaper (2013) is the founding document of the smart contract era

The Bitcoin Standard by Saifedean Ammous

Provides the monetary philosophy that preceded Ethereum — reading it helps understand what Buterin was both building on and departing from

Cryptoassets by Chris Burniske and Jack Tatar provides the investment framework for understanding Ethereum as an asset rather than just a technology.

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

Warren Buffett

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

MORE COMPARISONS