
Community discussions

Here’s the theoretical blueprint for insane wealth creation:
1️⃣ Build a Product
Doesn’t matter what — as long as it solves a real problem.
Example: An e-commerce platform better than IndiaMart, OLX, or Flipkart — smooth, reliable, and user-friendly.
2️⃣ Show a Profit
Smart advertising, premium features, subscriptions, value-added services.
Let’s say after 1 year, you report ₹1 Cr profit.
3️⃣ IPO at Hyper PE
In today’s hype-driven markets, a listing at PE = 1000 is plausible.
Market Cap = Profit × PE = ₹1,000 Cr.
4️⃣ Own the Company
Own 100% → valuation = ₹1,000 Cr (~$120M).
Own 50% → ₹500 Cr (~$60M).
Own full company at bigger profits → billionaire territory unlocked.
💡 Key Lesson:
Extreme P/E multiples = massive wealth multiplier.
Small profit + hype → astronomical valuation.
Reality check: purely theoretical; success depends on execution, market perception, and regulations.
📊 Takeaways:
Build → Advertise → Show profit → IPO at crazy PE → Value explodes.
Focus on simplicity, scalability, and perception.
We pay 0–50% tax or more and feed bureaucracy, but the real problem is identity, not money. Bitcoin solves money, but what about a universal ID that works everywhere?
🔹 Fact: Humans use hundreds of different IDs worldwide.
🔹 Fact: Governments spend billions tracking identity systems.
🔹 Fact: One global digital ID could make payments, verification, and services seamless across borders.
Banks that hide behind excuses — “come after lunch”, “after the audit”, “at evening”, “sorry, we can’t help” — are destroying their brands. Why would I trust them with my assets when their lending practices are terrible, staff are rude, and the UI is a nightmare? I won’t give my business to those banks, and I’m not alone — my bull and bear friends feel the same.
Even regulators aren’t inspiring confidence: when central bodies short-sell gold or say they’ll “regulate money” without giving clarity, it just adds to the distrust. People already get crypto wrong a lot — some models show humans and their forecasts fail much of the time — but that doesn’t excuse bad actors in the banking system.
Frankly, I want rotten, predatory institutions to fail — the ones that threaten customers, mis-sell products, and hide behind bureaucracy and horrible services . Let the strongest, fairest institutions survive. That’s how we get better financial services for everyone.
