

Jordi Mercader
2.7K posts

@jormercan
CEO @inbestme. Vocational entrepreneur, in finance by education, in fashion since kid. Emprenedor per vocació, financer per educació. Triathlete amateur.



FSD Supervised approved in the Netherlands 🇳🇱

Las Carteras K que ha diseñado @pablo_gx son un producto de inversión realmente cojonudo. Indexadas, con diversificación sectorial, de bajo coste y robustas. Esto último de especial interés en estos tiempos inciertos que corren






⚠️ Si te interesa la inversión de verdad, no te pierdas esta segunda parte. Tras hablar de empresa y emprendimiento, Jordi Mercader entra ahora de lleno en el mundo de la inversión. Con más de 40 años de experiencia, comparte su visión sobre: 📈 El poder real del largo plazo y el interés compuesto. 🏦 Inversión frente a banca tradicional. 💰 Cómo acumular patrimonio con disciplina y planificación. 🤖 Inteligencia artificial, Bitcoin y oro. 🧠 Fortaleza emocional en momentos de caídas. Una conversación directa sobre estrategia, mentalidad y coherencia inversora. ⬇️⬇️⬇️ Te dejamos el enlace aquí: youtu.be/mdc9X2FbUW4?si…

🎙️ Nuevo podcast con Jordi Mercader: de alto directivo en multinacionales a emprendedor fintech. Hablamos de liderazgo bajo presión, de los momentos más duros (SAP en Burberry, despidos masivos) y de cómo esas experiencias forjaron su carácter. También de inversión: por qué la indexación y los bajos costes deberían ser el núcleo del patrimonio del 95% de las personas, y cuándo (y para quién) tiene sentido invertir en acciones. Una charla sobre resiliencia, oportunidades globales, emprendimiento real y skin in the game. Imperdible si te interesa invertir mejor y construir a largo plazo. youtu.be/ZbowiUZxQA0?si…


There is unlimited demand for intelligence.

MICHAEL SAYLOR EXPLAINED HOW ANYONE CAN MAKE $1 BILLION WITH BITCOIN THIS IS A MUST WATCH!!

Game Theory Explained‼️‼️

In 1983, Steve Jobs predicted AI, 40 years before ChatGPT existed: "The problem with books was you can't ask Aristotle a question." Steve explains what makes computer programming different from television: "Television programming is very good at capturing a set of experiences and recreating them. You can watch the JFK funeral from 1963 and feel the same feelings you felt 20 years ago. Computer programming does something different. It captures the underlying principles of an experience not the experience itself, but the underlying principles. And those principles can enable thousands of different experiences." He gives an example: "There's a program called Hammurabi. Seven-year-old kids are playing this game where you're King Hammurabi of the ancient kingdom of Sumeria. You decide how much land to buy, how much to plant. If you don't plant enough, your people starve. If you plant a lot, people come from surrounding villages. It's crude, but basically these kids are playing with a macroeconomic model. They'll sit there for hours and learn. That's an interactive way of learning none of us ever had growing up." Then Steve shares his vision for the future: "When I was going to school, the thing that kept me out of jail was books. I could go read what Aristotle wrote. I didn't need an intermediary. A book got right from the source to the destination. But the problem was you can't ask Aristotle a question." He continues: "As we look towards the next 50 to 100 years if we can come up with machines that capture an underlying spirit, an underlying set of principles, an underlying way of looking at the world then when the next Aristotle comes around, maybe if he carries one of these machines his whole life and types in all this stuff, then maybe someday after that person's dead and gone, we can ask this machine: 'What would Aristotle have said about this?' Maybe we won't get the right answer. But maybe we will. And that's really exciting to me."
