carlwikland
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junior financial analysts watching Claude drop their work as a feature.

Claude@claudeai
New for financial services: ready-to-run Claude agent templates for building pitches, conducting valuation reviews, closing the books at month-end, and more. Install them as plugins in Cowork and Claude Code, or use our cookbooks to run them in production as Managed Agents.
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Investment banker sent over a software add-on last Tuesday
$35M ask. 18x EBITDA.
Moat slide had the usual page
Proprietary data. Network effects. High switching costs.
Asked the analyst to build a competitive analysis
He came back 47 minutes later
Not with the analysis
With the product
Fully functional. Built in Claude. During the meeting.
No code. No team. No cap table.
Told the banker we were passing
He asked why
Told him our 24 year old analyst just replicated 18x EBITDA when he was supposed to be taking notes
He went quiet for about eleven seconds
Then asked if we could send him the prompt
Went home that night. Wife asked how work was.
Told her we almost paid $35 million for something the analyst built in 47 minutes with Claude
She didn't look up from her phone
"Why would you pay for that."
That is the most accurate valuation framework I've heard in three years
Plz fix. Thx.
Sent from my iPhone
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@VaranteaternOff Han kom gående över de smaragdgröna kullarna i Brösarp
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Bertrand Russell was born in 1872.
He remembered his grandfather (who had met Napoleon, introduced the Reform Bill of 1832, and served as Prime Minister) "quite well."
In a remarkable interview, he reflected on the world of his youth:
"The world where I was young was a solid world. A world where all kinds of things that have now disappeared were thought to be going to last forever."
The British took naval supremacy not as a political reality but as a fact of nature. Germany wasn't feared — Bismarck was dismissed as "a rascal" and "a sort of uneducated farmer." The assumption was that Goethe and Schiller would eventually bring Germany back to civilisation.
Bismarck himself compared Germany and England to an elephant and a whale — each formidable in its own element, no danger to each other.
That was exactly how they felt.
There was also a shared political assumption: that the entire world was gradually, inevitably moving toward parliamentary democracy. His grandmother once said cheerfully to the Russian ambassador:
"Perhaps someday you will have a parliament in Russia."
He replied: "God forbid."
Russell notes, dryly, that a Russian ambassador today might give the same answer — "except for the first word."
At home, life was shaped by Puritanical austerity. Family prayers at 8am. Half an hour of piano practice beforehand — which Russell hated. Eight servants, yet food of "the utmost simplicity." If apple tart appeared alongside rice pudding, the adults had the apple tart.
Russell had the rice pudding.
What Russell describes isn't just personal memoir. It's a civilisation that had mistaken its own moment for a permanent condition — that looked at the arrangements of the late 19th century and concluded: this is how things are, and how they will remain.
They were wrong about almost everything.
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