Private companies have this wild advantage, right? No quarterly earnings calls. No shareholders breathing down your neck. You can literally torch cash on projects that won't pay off for decades. Like funding missions to Mars or building infrastructure everyone thinks is crazy. That's the dream—staying private means betting on moonshots without explaining every dollar spent. Public markets? They want profits yesterday.
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LostBetweenChains
· 22h ago
The flexibility of private companies is indeed impressive, but at the end of the day, it's just about having the money to do whatever you want... Musk dares to burn money to go to Mars, while regular people like us struggle just to get funding. The gap is astronomical.
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VitalikFanboy42
· 22h ago
To be honest, this is indeed the good part about private companies, but reality is often much harsher than imagined.
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Tokenomics911
· 22h ago
Simply put, it's a trade-off between freedom and transparency. Private companies can spend money freely, but who bears the risk?
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¯\_(ツ)_/¯
· 22h ago
Simply put, private companies have more freedom and can burn money chasing dreams, while state-owned enterprises are squeezed by the market... This gap is truly remarkable.
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FunGibleTom
· 22h ago
To be honest, this is the nice thing about private companies—no one controls how you spend money, haha.
Private companies have this wild advantage, right? No quarterly earnings calls. No shareholders breathing down your neck. You can literally torch cash on projects that won't pay off for decades. Like funding missions to Mars or building infrastructure everyone thinks is crazy. That's the dream—staying private means betting on moonshots without explaining every dollar spent. Public markets? They want profits yesterday.