One Day More
Another day, another destiny
This one has literally one day left before it expires so either do this now or miss it.
Deposit $2,500 in Ivy Bank via Finder
A small thing certainly happens within days and a big thing might happen within years.
The small: you get $200 for signing up.
The big: if Ivy Bank’s owner demutualizes, you could get first dibs on cheap stock.
An illustrative order of magnitude is getting a chance to buy five or six figures (this works well for couples who can typically buy more per household with two separate individual accounts) of stock for $10 that often pops a few bucks on the opening trade. I have done this many times in the past from $200k to $9 million with pops from 10-50% on day one and often more in the subsequent 1-5 years.
Billionaire Dan Loeb recently mentioned that this is how he got his start:
In 1989-1991, I traveled the country putting deposits in mutually held S&Ls. At the time my net worth was under $10,000. I put the better part of my life savings in passbook accounts and CDs in the expectation that they would one day go public and that I would have the capital to participate in the IPOs which usually allow for investments of $250k-500k A number of them went public during my days at Jefferies (JEF) working for Rich Handler.
in ‘91-‘94 allowing me to make enough (along with some generous bonuses from my employer) for my grub stake which funded the GP capital to launch Third Point on June 1, 1995. 35 + years later I have maintained all the accounts and periodically participate in the offerings to this day.
I’m emphasizing this one over other superficially similar opportunities because of three components that make it particularly conducive to sharing.
There is a short-term bonus that pays you for the bother of setting it up.
The setup process is quick and easy. I did it with no problems in <5 minutes.
There is a real upside here. You get a deposit that is a call option on Cambridge Savings Bank IPOing within the next several years. That could be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars of profit for tying up $2,500.
Not to overly dramatize this but…


