Finance Lesson 2 by Martin Shkreli - Income Statements, Balance Sheets, Present Value/Discounting
MODELS AND HELPFUL FILES LINK HERE:
https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B7KHNVOBFX8qMEs1LWlKamZsRE0&usp=sharing
Comments
The reason he said that $1 contract is worth about $50 is because of the perpetuity formula (C/R). C being the $1 and R being the discount rate. We use inflation as a proxy for the discount rate. With that being said, an ideal inflation rate is 2%. $1/.02 = $50
"Trump, our future president"
everyone chuckles
This is Awesome... Martin missed his calling - he should have been a Prof.....
Thanks for making those videos! Better than my college courses.
Thank you Martin! Great help in my finance studies.
Any one wants to open up a business with me?
Hey Martin, this is some nice stuff thanks for sharing!
this is almost identical info to my accounts alevel. but with more focus on investing. it's really great stuff. Martin presents things very well, better than most lecturers. my econ finance degree had tons of theory but not much is as useful as this on the daily
Good lesson but you spent way too much time explaining Enterprise value to these dumbfucks.
Shkreli your drive is not working :/
this is amazing!
So smart bro, Inspiration for all of us
You misscalculated the value @1:20:29. It's not $5.00 * 0.97 but $5.00 / 1.03. This is very crucial!
wow these kids are so disinterested in this class, bar the indian guy
dude these fucking kids are clueless and embarrassing. they know nothing!!!
Can someone explain briefly to me what the Q115, Q215, etc.. are? I understand it correlates with the 10Q but what exactly is it? Thanks.
This is gold. Can you do another series?
Ayee I would´v known the answer to that contract. Honestly half of these people are complete idiots thats why im starting to doubt martin
I like how down to earth and realistic this is. I enjoy getting a real investment training video without the "You too can be a millionaire" Tim Skyes style bullshit while also being a little more applicable than just straight Keynesian economic theory or "the wealth of nations" that a typical college course might provide. Thank you.