Investor · Former Tech Entrepreneur
I study markets, human behavior, and ideas that shape the world.
I spent years building a software services company — learning what it means to grow something from nothing, to understand clients, and to operate in real markets. When I stepped back from running the business, I stepped into something equally consuming: investing in publicly listed companies.
What draws me to markets is the same thing that drew me to psychology. Both are fundamentally about human behavior. Prices are made by people. Decisions are made by minds. Understanding what moves markets often means understanding what moves people.
I write about these intersections — investing, psychology, decision-making, and the broader forces that shape how societies think and act.
Long-term investing in publicly listed companies. Understanding business quality, valuation, and the psychology that creates mispricings in financial markets.
How cognitive biases, emotions, and mental models shape decisions — in markets, in organizations, and in everyday life.
As a certified hypnotherapist, I have a deep interest in the subconscious — how it forms patterns, beliefs, and behaviors that drive human potential and transformation.
The macro forces — cultural, technological, and philosophical — that shape how civilizations evolve and how ideas spread through populations.
I began my career in software engineering before founding and running a software services company. That decade of building — clients, teams, and products — gave me a ground-level understanding of how businesses really work.
Today I focus on investing in publicly listed companies, applying the same analytical rigor to capital allocation. I am also a certified hypnotherapist with a sustained interest in the mind's deeper architecture.
Full story →Alongside my work in markets, I hold a certification in hypnotherapy — a practice rooted in understanding the subconscious mind. I am not currently practicing professionally, but the study of how deep belief systems, unconscious patterns, and emotional architecture shape human behavior remains a central intellectual interest for me.
The parallels between behavioral finance and psychology are not coincidental. Both are, at their core, about the gap between what people think they are doing and what is actually driving them.
If you're interested in markets, psychology, investing, or just have something interesting to share — I'd enjoy hearing from you.
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