anon_pici said in #4966 7d ago:
Experts are generally speaking horrible at making predictions. Their personal biases and lens through which they view the world leads to extremely precise and extremely wrong predictions.
Superforecasters, by contrast, take in disparate information sources, make predictions that are consistently better than average that start from a base rate, biased with new information.
The important implication: one could spend 30 years studying geophysics and refinery crack spreads, raising $100mm to launch a commodity hedge fund attempting to predict oil prices. However, they would be in competition with thousands of other analysts trying to predict oil prices. A better approach would be to use superforecasting skills to predict real world events.
The next implication was the most electrifying: instead of competing with Bridgewater for investment alpha and Bridgewater for investment talent, why not create a residential program for bright, aimless, young men and train them
to be superforecasters.
I call it a Prediction Group House. Basically a monastery in a rural area with a dormitory, gym, kitchen, shooting range, shrine, library lecture hall, and workshop.
Young men would:
Study diligently in the art of Superforecasting
Engage in group fitness
Hit the gym
Learn sparring and grappling
Eat together
In exchange they would be given:
Room and board, a minimal stipend, and once they had mastered the basics, they would be given a grubstake to trade on the prediction markets.
Young men would be given a slope like at a hedge fund, in the beginning, they invest zero percent of their own capital, but earn 10% of their profits. As they acquire a track record of successful predictions, they would be given a greater share of the profits from their trading. As they gain even more experience, they could buy into the partnership and thus earn a share of all of the house profits.
The goal would be for young men to leave the house mentally, physically, spiritually and financially better off than 99% of other young men, perhaps going on to launch new houses (potentially grubstaked by the first house).
Let me know if you see any major flaws of this idea
referenced by: >>4970
Years ago, before th