Eiichiro Kuwana, Educator and Investor, on AI and Investment Education
starmagnoliacapital.substack.com
“There is no quick way to teach investing,” says Eiichiro Kuwana, regarding investment education. Eiichiro, or Eiich (like “H”), is a co-founder and the President of Cook Pine Capital LLC, an investment advisory firm based in Greenwich, CT. I have known Eiich for more than 12 years. He hired me as an analyst for Cook Pine Capital in 2006 and then cultivated me into a better investor. Not only does Eiich manage money for wealthy families globally, he also serves as a member of Phillips Exeter Academy’s investment committee, which is responsible for investing the school’s endowment. Exeter is one of the oldest secondary schools in the United States with a long heritage going back to 1781. The school’s founding charter mandates that it would “ever be equally open to youth of requisite qualifications from every quarter”. Having been thus indoctrinated, it is not surprising that Eiich firmly believes in fair opportunities and independent thinking.
Eiichiro Kuwana, Educator and Investor, on AI and Investment Education
Eiichiro Kuwana, Educator and Investor, on AI…
Eiichiro Kuwana, Educator and Investor, on AI and Investment Education
“There is no quick way to teach investing,” says Eiichiro Kuwana, regarding investment education. Eiichiro, or Eiich (like “H”), is a co-founder and the President of Cook Pine Capital LLC, an investment advisory firm based in Greenwich, CT. I have known Eiich for more than 12 years. He hired me as an analyst for Cook Pine Capital in 2006 and then cultivated me into a better investor. Not only does Eiich manage money for wealthy families globally, he also serves as a member of Phillips Exeter Academy’s investment committee, which is responsible for investing the school’s endowment. Exeter is one of the oldest secondary schools in the United States with a long heritage going back to 1781. The school’s founding charter mandates that it would “ever be equally open to youth of requisite qualifications from every quarter”. Having been thus indoctrinated, it is not surprising that Eiich firmly believes in fair opportunities and independent thinking.