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It was underwriting, you know, it was like doing investmentbanking, underwriting public offerings. It was dealing with like the sort of guts of the bank and like new product development and capital and, and balance sheet. So like if you’re a fancy corporate lawyer, you wanna be an investment maker.
I work for a really senior guy in the investmentbank. We should be like, 00:06:58 [Speaker Changed] It’s 00:06:58 [Speaker Changed] A startup. And whoever the new owner of the foreign banks are, tend to say, Hey, I didn’t buy that junk. Whatever you can get for it, hit the bid. In those years.
It was between corporate law and investmentbanking. RITHOLTZ: So even back then, when it was the size that you could take a Christmas picture with everybody in one room at Goldman, they’re still doing investmentbanking. And you know, so we looked at it very hard, decided not to bid. RITHOLTZ: Oh, really?
Last fall, the company invited investmentbanks to pitch for roles in an IPO that could have valued the battery maker at US$20 billion, the FT then reported. In its bid to reassure financiers, Northvolt nixed a planned expansion of its main plant in Skelleftea in northern Sweden and, in October, replaced the factory’s manager.
What are the advantages to being an individual making single decision investments into a startup? How, how different is the UK finance from the US and start the startup mentality? 00:19:00 [Speaker Changed] I mean, that’s a well established mature, if you could say mature startup region, correct.
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