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3 Surprising Ways to Hedge Against Inflation

The Motley Fool

Private equity Have you ever read about a company that makes an interesting or compelling product only to learn that you can't invest because it's still private? Generally speaking, investing in private companies is off limits to most investors.

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3 Surprising Ways the Ultra-Wealthy Invest Their Money

The Motley Fool

Investing in private equity, on the other hand, is only available to institutional investors and accredited investors who have an annual income of at least $200,000 for two consecutive years and/or a net worth of $1 million or more excluding their primary residence. What is private credit?

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Want to Invest Like a Billionaire? This ETF Lets You Buy SpaceX, OpenAI, Stripe, and Other Unicorns for Less Than $50.

The Motley Fool

Private equity and venture capital firms typically have access to investments that are not available to everyday investors. Well, to put it simply, these funds raise capital from ultrahigh-net-worth individuals called accredited investors. What's in the fund?

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Transcript: David Layton

The Big Picture

So if you’re an institution investing $100 billion today, or $50 billion, or $10 billion, private markets is already a big part of your portfolio. But for individuals, historically, there have not been great options to invest into private companies. It’s been one of the best performing asset classes for decades.

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Seed Investments in Insurrection

This is going to be BIG.

Do I believe that private companies should be able to eliminate hate speech and incitements towards violence on their platforms? Absolutely. First off, it’s the morally right thing to do, if you care about, you know, people, society, etc., and the idea of “do no harm”.

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