The Richest Americans Ever, SpaceX's Mega Merger, and Regret Investing Too Conservatively – Episode 175
Thu Feb 05 2026
In this episode of The Liquidity Event, Shane is joined by John Owens to dig into wealth, concentration, and how quickly the winners in American capitalism can change. They start with a look at the richest Americans in history, adjusted for inflation, and why names like Rockefeller and Carnegie still matter when thinking about today's tech billionaires. The conversation explores why extreme wealth is often built through concentration, why staying on top is so hard, and what the constantly shifting list of the largest U.S. companies tells us about diversification and long-term investing.
From there, they unpack Elon Musk's blockbuster move to merge SpaceX with xAI, creating the largest merger in history and setting the stage for what could be the biggest IPO ever. They discuss orbital data centers, AI infrastructure in space, and whether rolling multiple companies together is about innovation, valuation, or investor cleanup. The episode wraps with a thoughtful Reddit question from a listener regretting not investing aggressively enough earlier in life, and why hindsight bias, career twists, and steady saving matter more than chasing a perfect past.
Key Timestamps (00:00) Welcome to Episode 175 and what's on deck
(01:20) The richest Americans in history, adjusted for inflation
(06:40) Rockefeller, Carnegie, and why power isn't the same as wealth
(08:20) Why the biggest companies change and diversification still matters
(10:24) Trivia: the only top-10 company still standing after 20 years
(13:00) SpaceX acquires xAI in the largest merger ever
(14:30) Orbital data centers, AI compute, and space infrastructure
(17:00) Rolling companies together, IPO strategy, and investor outcomes
(22:00) Maltbook and what happens when AI agents talk to each other
(27:15) FIRE Reddit: regret, risk tolerance, and investing too conservatively
(32:25) Why this listener is doing better than they think
(35:05) Final thoughts and wrap-up
🔔 Subscribe to The Liquidity Event on YouTube: YouTube Channel
🌐 Learn more about Brooklyn FI financial planning: brooklynfi.com
✍️ Leave us a voicemail question for a future episode: memo.fm/theliquidityevent
📱 Follow Brooklyn FI:
LinkedIn: / brooklyn-fi
Instagram: / brooklyn_f.i
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In this episode of The Liquidity Event, Shane is joined by John Owens to dig into wealth, concentration, and how quickly the winners in American capitalism can change. They start with a look at the richest Americans in history, adjusted for inflation, and why names like Rockefeller and Carnegie still matter when thinking about today's tech billionaires. The conversation explores why extreme wealth is often built through concentration, why staying on top is so hard, and what the constantly shifting list of the largest U.S. companies tells us about diversification and long-term investing. From there, they unpack Elon Musk's blockbuster move to merge SpaceX with xAI, creating the largest merger in history and setting the stage for what could be the biggest IPO ever. They discuss orbital data centers, AI infrastructure in space, and whether rolling multiple companies together is about innovation, valuation, or investor cleanup. The episode wraps with a thoughtful Reddit question from a listener regretting not investing aggressively enough earlier in life, and why hindsight bias, career twists, and steady saving matter more than chasing a perfect past. Key Timestamps (00:00) Welcome to Episode 175 and what's on deck (01:20) The richest Americans in history, adjusted for inflation (06:40) Rockefeller, Carnegie, and why power isn't the same as wealth (08:20) Why the biggest companies change and diversification still matters (10:24) Trivia: the only top-10 company still standing after 20 years (13:00) SpaceX acquires xAI in the largest merger ever (14:30) Orbital data centers, AI compute, and space infrastructure (17:00) Rolling companies together, IPO strategy, and investor outcomes (22:00) Maltbook and what happens when AI agents talk to each other (27:15) FIRE Reddit: regret, risk tolerance, and investing too conservatively (32:25) Why this listener is doing better than they think (35:05) Final thoughts and wrap-up 🔔 Subscribe to The Liquidity Event on YouTube: YouTube Channel 🌐 Learn more about Brooklyn FI financial planning: brooklynfi.com ✍️ Leave us a voicemail question for a future episode: memo.fm/theliquidityevent 📱 Follow Brooklyn FI: LinkedIn: / brooklyn-fi Instagram: / brooklyn_f.i