The Latticework Podcast, presented by MOI Global

The Latticework Podcast, presented by MOI Global

The Latticework Podcast features wisdom and insights of selected participants in the Latticework summit, an invitation-only event hosted by MOI Global.

  • 45 minutes 57 seconds
    Josh Wolfe on Venture Investing with a Value Mindset
    Josh Wolfe co-founded Lux Capital to support scientists and entrepreneurs who pursue counter-conventional solutions to the most vexing puzzles of our time in order to lead us into a brighter future. The more ambitious the project, the better—like, say, creating matter from light. Josh is a Director at Shapeways, 3Scan, Lux Research, Kallyope, and CTRL-labs and helped lead the firm’s investments in Planet, Echodyne, Clarifai and Authorea. He is a founding investor and board member with Bill Gates in Kymeta, making cutting-edge antennas for high-speed global satellite and space communications. Josh is a Westinghouse semi-finalist and published scientist. He previously worked in investment banking at Salomon Smith Barney and in capital markets at Merrill Lynch. In 2008 Josh co-founded and funded Kurion, a contrarian bet in the unlikely business of using advanced robotics and state-of-the-art engineering and chemistry to clean up nuclear waste. It was an unmet, inevitable need with no solution in sight. The company was among the first responders to the Fukushima Daiichi disaster. In February 2016, Veolia acquired Kurion for nearly $400 million—34 times Lux’s total investment. Josh is a columnist with Forbes and Editor for the Forbes/Wolfe Emerging Tech Report. He has been invited to The White House and Capitol Hill to advise on nanotechnology and emerging technologies, and a lecturer at MIT, Harvard, Yale, Cornell, Columbia and NYU. He is a term member at The Council on Foreign Relations and Chairman of Coney Island Prep charter school, where he grew up in Brooklyn. He graduated from Cornell University with a B.S. in Economics and Finance.
    6 January 2024, 2:30 pm
  • 39 minutes 51 seconds
    Christopher Tsai at Latticework New York 2022
    Christopher Tsai at Latticework New York 2022 by The Latticework Podcast, presented by MOI Global
    6 January 2024, 2:30 pm
  • 1 hour 1 minute
    William Green with Arnold Van Den Berg at Latticework New York 2019
    William Green with Arnold Van Den Berg at Latticework New York 2019 by The Latticework Podcast, presented by MOI Global
    29 October 2019, 7:51 pm
  • 5 minutes 27 seconds
    The Early Years of Arnold Van Den Berg - Latticework 2019
    The Early Years of Arnold Van Den Berg - Latticework 2019 by The Latticework Podcast, presented by MOI Global
    15 September 2019, 1:58 pm
  • 1 hour 3 minutes
    Dave Sather, Sean Stannard-Stockton, and Felix Narhi on Compounders (with Shai Dardashti)
    Latticework New York 2018, September 6, 2018, The Yale Club of New York City
    24 June 2019, 1:36 pm
  • 1 hour 37 seconds
    Tom Russo on the Evolution of Quality Investing, with Robert Hagstrom
    Latticework New York 2018, September 6, 2018, The Yale Club of New York City
    15 February 2019, 8:33 pm
  • 1 hour 53 minutes
    Shareholder Value Creation According to Henry Singleton
    Shareholder Value Creation According to Henry Singleton by The Latticework Podcast, presented by MOI Global
    28 January 2019, 8:15 pm
  • 59 minutes 28 seconds
    Ed Wachenheim on Investing with a Contrarian Mindset (with Saurabh Madaan)
    Latticework New York 2018, September 6, 2018, The Yale Club of New York City Ed Wachenheim is Vice Chairman of the Board of Central National-Gottesman Inc., and sits on the board of the Museum of Modern Art, where he is Chair of the Finance Committee and a member of the Executive and Investment Committees, and the New York Public Library, where he was former Chair of the Executive Committee and former Chair of the Investment Committee (of which he is still a member). Ed is Trustee Emeritus of both Skidmore College, where he served as Vice Chair, and Rye Country Day School, where he was also Board President. Previously, Ed was a Trustee of UJA-Federation, New York Foundation, and Arthur Ross Foundation. He was also on the Board of Directors of Interstate Brands and several other smaller publicly owned corporations. Ed joined the WNET board in 2016. He is a graduate of Williams College. He holds an MBA from Harvard Business School, where he was a first-year Baker Scholar.
    14 September 2018, 1:54 pm
  • 35 minutes 29 seconds
    Tom Russo on Global Investing and Mental Models in a Changing World
    Thomas A. Russo joined Gardner Russo & Gardner LLC as a partner in 1989. In 2014, he became the Managing Member of the firm. Gardner Russo & Gardner LLC is a registered investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, and is not associated with any bank, security dealer or other third party. Mr. Russo serves as Managing Member of Gardner Russo & Gardner LLC and of Semper Vic Partners GP, LP, which oversees two “global value”, long-only, equity investment partnerships, the first of which Mr. Russo founded in 1983. Mr. Russo oversees more than $12 billion distributed between Semper Vic partnerships and separate accounts managed in parallel fashion. Mr. Russo looks for companies with strong cash-flow characteristics that generate large amounts of “free” cash flow. These industries typically have included branded food and beverage, tobacco, and advertising-supported media. Mr. Russo’s portfolio companies tend to produce high rates of return on their assets and have strong balance sheets. The challenge comes in finding these obviously desirable investments at compelling valuations. Mr. Russo commits capital to leading global consumer products companies whose brands enjoy growing market shares in parts of the world undergoing economic growth and enjoying increasing political stability. He prefers companies with sufficient cash flows from existing operations, combined with balance-sheet strength, to underwrite investments designed to activate emerging markets. Mr. Russo backs rare management teams willing to invest to secure robust future returns even when such investments burden current reported profits. Mr. Russo believes that managements of family-controlled companies have the “capacity to suffer” when investments intended to build long-term wealth are ill-received by short-term focused Wall Street analysts. Mr. Russo believes that such “capacity to suffer” leaves family-controlled companies often uniquely well positioned to bear short-term burdens on reported profits in pursuit of long-term gains in intrinsic value. Accordingly, he often invests in public companies where founding families still retain control and significant investment exposure, to reduce management agency costs and to align owner interests. Mr. Russo’s goal is one of an absolute return rather than a relative return. He pursues a long-term investment objective of compounding assets between 10 and 20 percent per year without great turnover, thereby deferring capital gains tax on unrealized gains. Thomas Russo is a graduate of Dartmouth College (BA, 1977), and Stanford Business and Law Schools (MBA/JD, 1984). Memberships include Dean’s Advisory Council for Stanford Law School, Dartmouth College’s President’s Leadership Council, and California Bar Association. Mr. Russo is a charter member of the Advisory Board for the Heilbrunn Center for Graham & Dodd Investing at Columbia Business School. He serves on the boards of the Winston Churchill Foundation of the U.S., Facing History and Ourselves, and Storm King Art Center. In May 2017, he was awarded The Graham & Dodd, Murray, Greenwald Prize for Value Investing.
    24 August 2017, 3:29 am
  • 21 minutes 58 seconds
    Elliot Noss on Intelligent Investing in a Changing World
    Under Elliot Noss, Tucows challenged how software was distributed in the 1990s and how domain names were offered and managed in the 2000s and is challenging how mobile phone service and fixed Internet are provided today. For nearly twenty years, Elliot has loved and championed the Internet as the greatest agent of positive change the world has ever seen. Through his role at Tucows, his involvement in ICANN and his personal efforts, he has lobbied, agitated and educated to promote this vision and protect an Open Internet around the world.
    26 July 2017, 4:44 pm
  • 22 minutes 27 seconds
    David Pakman on Disruptive Innovation and Mental Models in a Changing World
    David has been a Partner at Venrock since 2008 and focuses on early stage consumer and enterprise internet companies. Before Venrock, he spent 12 years as an internet entrepreneur. David was the CEO of eMusic, the world’s leading digital retailer of independent music, second only to iTunes in number of downloads sold. Prior to joining eMusic, David co-founded Myplay in 1999 in Redwood City, CA, which introduced the “digital music locker” and pioneered the locker category. In 2001, Myplay was sold to Bertelsmann’s ecommerce Group. Before Myplay, he was Vice President at N2K Entertainment, which created the first digital music download service. He also was the co-creator of Apple’s Music Group and worked at Apple for five years. David is a graduate and a former Overseer of University of Pennsylvania’s School of Engineering and Applied Science where he received a BSE in Computer Science Engineering. He serves on the Board of Part Of The Solution in The Bronx, loves tennis, and plays drums. In 2017, David was named one of the Top 100 Venture Capitalists by CB Insights.
    26 July 2017, 4:41 pm
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