The mid life crisis at
28
By The Roach
Recent
studies conducted by the Roach have indicated the following
alarming trend.
The average life expectancy of a
Business School student while in Business School is only
58 years. For those of us who believe that Managerial
Stats. was a Win-Tel conspiracy, the life expectancy is
the number of years you are expected to live from the
day you were born. So if you are already an average business
school student and you are already 28, then you have reached
your (as we physicist put it) half life.
I really feel bad about this since
I have just moved from a Osaka suburb, where my next door
neighbor was a 95 year old investment banker who rode
a Harley Davidson to work and had a 23 year old Danish
girlfriend. All the more so, since it was my neighbor
who persuaded me to consider business school. If
I had known that besides leveraging my personal balance
sheet, I would also have to recognize a 35% loss in my
life expectancy I would still be in Osaka. Take
my word for it, there is nothing more dangerous than a
cold, calculating, 95ish, jealous Japanese Investment
Biker. Especially if you also have an attractive neighbor
in common!
That was Osaka. I am now on the
East Coast having a mid life crisis. For starters
I am broke. Not much in the bank off the street that I
can call my own. What I can, will be gone by the time,
this issue come out. I am unemployed, which has
its benefits, but I liked the weekly checks. I have
just signed up for a student loan that has more or less
vaporized my net worth. All of my friends are beyond
reach given the costs of long distance dialing / travelling
and my financial standing within the community.
I hate the Japanese because my Danish, Ingrid-Bergman-look-alike
neighbor chose General Togo’s mother over me. Which doesn’t
leave me feeling very young. The highpoint in my life
last week was adding moustaches to clean shaven models
in IBM’s annual report. Obviously I end up drowning
my sorrows every Thursday night along with a few hundred
other lost and confused souls. Here’s to my ample and
growing middle!
Actually if you start thinking about
it having just another 28 years to go is not that bad
an idea. There is a lot of support for us fresh MBA’s
from East Coast at the venture capital valley in West
Coast. Here is the game plan, start a venture, raise
some capital. Raise some more capital. Wait
a few months then raise yet some more capital. Make
sure that your firm has something to do with the Internet.
That is the key. Declare losses for the next couple of
years. Don’t worry! Look what that did for Yahoo,
Excite, Amazon and Ebay. Then… Here comes the killer.…
Do a Debt issue. The market will think you have
turned around. Make sure it’s zero coupon, convertible
bonds, maturity between 20 and 30 years. Go for
a few billion dollars. The higher your demand the higher
will be the valuation assumptions. The convertible option
will capture the high growth potential of your firm (ha!
ha!). The zero coupon will save current interest
payment and will pass on the risk totally to your investors
(more ha! ha! I am rolling on the floor).
That is what you are thinking, but the Pension funds will
grab the issues since you would be selling growth and
no reinvestment risk. Which is what they have been looking
for since the beginning of time. We are talking a completely
new frontier here. Which along with the strength of the
yen implies the Japanese will be in the market buying
everything in sight again for the next five years before
they realize they have been oversold again.
But remember maturity is the most
important aspect in my master plan. Make sure it’s beyond
your life expectancy. Have fun for the next ten
to fifteen years with the few billion dollars that you
have raised and then die promptly at 58. One final
touch: Ensure that my Japanese ‘friend’ underwrites the
issue. I am positive she will still be alive half a century
from now. I want the old hag left holding the bag.
In the ensuing global turmoil nobody will notice when
the Yakuza settles with her.
Too bad if you live. I guess you
can always sue the actuaries who came up with the average
life expectancy figures. That is if you have the
time before the Yakuza catches up and settles with
you.
One more thing. If you have not
taken Capital Markets and Valuations or if you have never
read Tom Clancy, You don’t need to anymore. You have just
gone through a crash course in all three. That is a 6,009.99
$ value rolled in one article. Which says a lot
about the efficient market hypothesis, or about Tom Clancy
or about the two courses (depends on how you cut up the
six thousand and loose change). This is another concept
that I missed above but I wanted to put it down if I am
ever sued for misrepresentation by the FTC.
One more thing beyond the one more
thing above! I know I said I will write more about how
to convert your summer internship offer to a firm offer
next year, next week. But I changed my mind. I was
depressed and was missing all things Danish too much and
stuffed myself on cookies and pastries. Sugar and
spice and all things nice...
May be next time.
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