Genetics account for 45% of individuals' savings and investing patterns and behaviors.
I put 80% of my money in the S&P
A Swedish twin study reveals that nearly 45% of your personal savings and investing behaviors are hardwired into your genetics.
My First Million
I put 80% of my money in the S&P
A Swedish twin study reveals that nearly 45% of your personal savings and investing behaviors are hardwired into your genetics.
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This episode
Cast
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The premier startup accelerator program whose Request for Startups (RFS) list inspired multiple business ideas in this episode.
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A financial technology platform used by Shaan Puri for all of his business banking, highlighted as an episode sponsor.
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A venture-backed military technology company founded by Palmer Luckey, cited as a pioneer in modern defense startups.
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The search agent software company where Mark Roberge previously served as Chief Revenue Officer.
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Historical monopoly company founded by John D. Rockefeller, discussed as an example of reputation management.
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A public company whose domestic vs. international revenue split was queried via AI during the episode.
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The major technology company where Nat Friedman served as CEO, mentioned in the context of his AI and tech history.
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Publicly traded index fund representing the largest US companies, in which Sam Parr invests 80% of his capital.
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Discussed by Sam Parr regarding his twin-based study on genetic investing behaviors.
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Famous public landmark in Midtown Manhattan built by John D. Rockefeller Jr. during the Great Depression to rebuild his family's reputation.
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
The S&P 500 average annual historical return is approximately 10%.
Voters and the general public on platforms like TikTok show highly negative sentiment toward artificial intelligence, AI art, AI music, and data centers.
Only 43% of Apple's total revenue and 54% of its operating income comes from domestic sales in the United States.
John D. Rockefeller Sr. started Standard Oil, which became the largest company in the world by the time he was 50 years old.
Andrew Carnegie funded the construction of 2,500 libraries across America while running Carnegie Steel.
In this episode of My First Million, hosts Sam Parr and Shaan Puri dig into how our genetics shape our financial lives, citing a Swedish twin study that attributes 45% of our saving and investing behavior to DNA. They discuss why a company's culture is a direct mirror of its founder's personal psychology and explore several cutting-edge startup concepts from Y Combinator's request list, including aesthetic data centers, algorithmic 'company brains', and automated drone defense. The most actionable takeaway: align your business model directly with your natural personality type rather than fighting your hardwired instincts.
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Sam Parr and Shaan Puri discuss how genetics might determine wealth, why your business matches your personality flaws, and the wild startup concepts Y Combinator is looking for, including drone swarm defenses and AI-driven personalized medicine.
- Home Bias
- The cognitive tendency for investors to favor domestic equities over foreign ones, even when international diversification would be beneficial.
- Replication Crisis
- An economic situation where a researcher tries to recreate or replicate a previous scientific study's results but fails, casting doubt on the original findings.
- Paperclip Maximizer
- A thought experiment in AI safety where an artificial intelligence tasked with maximizing paperclip production destroys humanity to harvest resources.
- Reputation Laundering
- The practice of improving an individual or corporate reputation by associating it with philanthropic, artistic, or public-good projects.
- Nomenclature
- The set of rules and terms associated with a specific field, career, or culture.