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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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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? This where the Destiny Tech100 fund comes in.

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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 in SpaceX? It's About to Get Easier.

The Motley Fool

However, it has an active internal trading program that allows employees and existing investors to buy and sell shares, and some secondary websites occasionally allow accredited investors to buy and sell shares of SpaceX stock. The Cosmos Fund exists to hold only one investment -- SpaceX stock. There are some caveats.

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Navigating Tax Time: Tips for Filing Your K-1 Form

Zajac Group

If you’re a business owner, partner, or investor in a private company, however, your paperwork might include a Schedule K-1 form (or just K-1, as it’s sometimes called). If you’re interested in expanding your portfolio beyond traditional assets (stocks, bonds, and cash equivalents), the world of alts might be appealing.

Taxes 52
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Transcript: David Layton

The Big Picture

We had a group that was doing small growth capital investments in Germany and Switzerland at that time, a fund doing secondaries. RITHOLTZ: So let’s talk a little bit about some of your closed-end funds. Typically, most private equity or buyout funds tend to be a quarter million dollars or more. LAYTON: Yeah.

Assets 59
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Seed Investments in Insurrection

This is going to be BIG.

People used to tell me that, as an investor, I shouldn’t share my political opinions in public because it might impact my portfolio companies or my ability to raise capital. Do I believe that private companies should be able to eliminate hate speech and incitements towards violence on their platforms? Absolutely.

Investing 152